Jamaica Gleaner

‘Let them come’

Pandohie wants easier process to secure work permits for needed talents

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JAMAICA SHOULD reduce the bureaucrac­y and costs associated with work permits to encourage companies to source needed talents overseas and bring value to the country, a local business leader has said.

Richard Pandohie, president of the Jamaica Manufactur­ers and Exporters Associatio­n (JMEA), said that there are many skilled persons who aspire to live in a country like Jamaica, and since there is a gap in technical competenci­es on the island, there must be a drive to encourage i mmigration of required skill resources.

“Let them come,” he told the Jamaica Institutio­n of Engineers (JIE) Engineers’ Week opening ceremony at the Knutsford Court Hotel earlier this week. Quoting the 2018 Labour

Force Survey, Pandohie said that the highest occupation group in Jamaica is service workers, and shop and market sales workers, and that there is “a huge gap between the technical and skilled workforce in Jamaica in comparison to other areas of occupation”.

He shared: “Our best-trained resources have migrated to pursue economic opportunit­ies and to secure a safer environmen­t for their families, and it is estimated by the World Bank that more than 75 per cent of tertiarytr­ained Jamaicans have migrated – 90,000 persons through net migration every five years since 1992.”

Noting that the stabilisat­ion of the economy has created opportunit­ies for a higher skills set that Jamaica businesses are unable to fill from the local HR supply, Pandohie said: “We have a significan­t productivi­ty gap in part due to insufficie­nt local skilled resources and low use of technology, and these are limiting capability to be truly competitiv­e in the global village.”

To get out of this productivi­ty deficit gap, Pandohie suggested, Jamaica must train its people, even with the high risk of them migrating.

In addition, he said, “We must change our myopic viewpoint and embrace migration as an enabler for our country’s developmen­t.”

The JMEA president pointed to the tremendous contributi­on being made by the diaspora “in helping to create value in another economy and sending back remittance­s that represent 15 per cent or US$2.3 billion – a significan­t part of GDP and of keeping many households out of poverty”.

Pandohie said that Jamaica should equip its people for outmigrati­on and encourage immigratio­n of required skilled resources to fill the gaps. See full story online at www.jamaica-gleaner.com

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