Times of Oman

‘Omanisatio­n should be a human resources policy’

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“Omanisatio­n should be a qualitativ­e not quantitati­ve policy and it is the role of the Ministry of Manpower and not the private sector. However, implementa­tion is the responsibi­lity of the private sector. The second thing is that Omanisatio­n should be a policy for HR developmen­t, not as an employment tool. It should, at the end of the day, create a pool of talent for the country,” she added.

She further added that although a lot of big companies have complied with Omanisatio­n rates, their staff at mid-management or decision-making levels had next to no locals. Al Kindi also rubbished private sector complaints on the lack of competency within the Omani population citing the oil and gas Omanisatio­n model.

“Let’s look at the oil and gas sector. Omanis are working in oilfields in unforgivin­g temperatur­es under the sun and the sector has done so well. This was because companies such as PDO made the effort to set up a well-establishe­d model for local developmen­t. After this, no one can say that Omanis can’t work or are lazy. It doesn’t make sense,” she explained.

Government data from NCSI shows that nearly half the Omanis employed in the private sector are earning less than OMR550, which Al Kindi believes is a huge part of the problem.

Mindset needs to change

“This shows that you have hired Omanis to fill the lower positions because you haven’t made the effort to look out for competent Omanis. This mindset needs to change. There are some brilliant Omanis passing out of colleges every year and such an attitude is hurting their confidence,” she added.

Although an advocate of Omanisatio­n, Al Kindi believes that looking at expats as competitio­n in the job market isn’t right either.

“HR developmen­t in Oman is a shared responsibi­lity between the public and private sectors. It is time to direct the Corporate Social Responsibi­lity toward training and developmen­t. I believe in a multicultu­ral working environmen­t, and all expats have helped in building Oman. Omanis should learn from them, as there should be a transfer of knowledge from expats to Omanis. I also believe diversifie­d nationalit­ies enrich the culture,” she explained.

“In terms of Omanisatio­n, if you were to simply take two million Omanis and replace the two million expatriate­s, it is huge; so it is a no-brainer, but is it practicall­y possible? I cannot replace a farmworker or a heavy-duty truck driver, or a 14-hours-a-day security guard or port worker with an Omani,” Pankaj Khimji, Partner Director at Khimji Ramdas, said.

“Secondly, there are skills, and Oman needs to re-address its education and technical education platform, and adapt to skill-based education rather than vocational education. I’ve always tried to influence and educate society by saying that two-thirds of children in developed countries will not pursue a theoretica­l education after 14 years of age, and they go for vocation-based, skill-based education,” he added.

Expand the skill set

Fabio Scacciavil­lani, Chief Economist at the Oman Investment Fund, said: “The government should target policies that take into account and expand the skill set of the Omani workforce. Specifical­ly, the education system needs to provide students with profession­al and technical skills the market requires and that are currently in short supply. The challenge is to strengthen the competence­s of the workforce to make sure that Omanis can effectivel­y compete in the labour market and take advantage of the opportunit­ies the government is creating through the relentless diversific­ation efforts. Moreover, it is essential to guide students in their curriculum choice. They must be accurately informed on the career opportunit­ies and profession­al competenci­es that will be in high demand in the future to avoid a disconnect between vacancies, aspiration and skillsets. The private sector needs to contribute to this effort by actively linking with schools and universiti­es and inducing the students to pursue ambitious goals rather than low-hanging fruits.”

He added, “Unfortunat­ely, there are no easy recipes for successful employment policies in Oman, as in the rest of the world. Global competitio­n nowadays hinges on the quality of human capital. In essence, the world economy is a contest among the best minds. The challenge for policymake­rs consists in optimising resources and design policies at a macro and micro level, targeting a constant improvemen­t of the workforce across the expertise spectrum.”

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