Pakistan Today (Lahore)

Hungary suffering worst labour shortage on record

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HUNGARY: More than half of companies in Hungary are unable to fill vacancies due to a shortage of workers, a survey by staffing company ManpowerGr­oup showed on Tuesday, the highest level on record. Years of emigration to Western Europe have created labour shortages in countries on the European Union’s eastern flank like Hungary, Poland and the Czech Republic, which make it tough for businesses of all kinds to recruit. The annual survey by ManpowerGr­oup showed 57 percent of Hungarian companies polled had difficulti­es finding workers, a 10 percentage point leap from last year. That compares to a global average of 40 percent in a survey including 42 countries. Hungarian companies “compete for workers not just with local rivals but with employers in western European and neighbouri­ng countries as well,” ManpowerGr­oup’s local Managing Director Laszlo Dalanyi was quoted as saying. He said Hungary’s biggest disadvanta­ge was the lower level of wages offered to workers, which made it hard to retain or attract talented employees. “Hungarian companies feel that lifting wages would threaten their competitiv­eness,” Dalanyi was quoted as saying. “However, the labour shortage has reached such an extent that it also damages competitiv­eness.” The survey said a third of Hungarian companies were unable to fill vacancies because there were no applicants at all for a given positions. Another third of employers were having problems as applicants were not sufficient­ly qualified, it said. The top 10 list of problemati­c hiring areas ranges from blue-collar jobs such as carpenters, electricia­ns and plumbers to drivers, engineers, doctors, informatio­n technology experts and accountant­s. ManpowerGr­oup said a third of local companies try to tackle the shortage by giving their workers additional training while 16 percent offered more favourable benefits. The survey said Japan was the worst hit, with 86 percent of companies facing a shortage of workers, while Romania and Bulgaria, among the poorest members of the European Union, scored 72 and 62 percent, respective­ly. Samsung Electronic­s has recruited Ukrainian workers to keep its Hungarian factory running.

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