Khaleej Times

harnessing the power of the local job market

KT special coverage EMIRATISAT­ION PUSH IN PRIVATE SECTOR A STEP IN THE RIGHT DIRECTION

- Ashwani Kumar

T he UAE government on Tuesday made a big-bang push to Emiratisat­ion in the private sector.

Saqr bin Ghobash Saeed Ghobash, Cabinet Member and Minister of Human Resources and Emiratisat­ion, said on Tuesday that the ministry’s aim is to employ 1,000 Emirati jobseekers within 75 days, targeting 250 private firms to begin with.

The new drive is a part of a pilot project launched late last year to incentivis­e private companies to hire more UAE Nationals. Ghobash said a mechanism has been laid down to put into effect Article No (14) to guarantee that the article will be well implemente­d, which would boots job opportunit­ies to qualified Emirati jobseekers at targeted profession­s, and at the same time maintain the interests of employers.

He pointed out that the ministry had prepared a bundle of new policies and programmes that offer employers at the private sector many advantages in order to prompt employers, who are showing cooperatio­n, to recruit Emirati jobseekers.

These advantages will have great positive effects on the institutio­ns, establishm­ents, and companies of the private sector, especially companies that are located in the remote areas and outskirts of the major cities, Ghobash clarified.

Many private sector industries have positively responded saying they are willing to throw their weight behind the government.

Sonya Wells, consultant at Robert Murray and Associates, said: “If large local private companies or multinatio­n organisati­ons implement the government’s quota system of employing UAE nationals or even start their own quota system and recruit at least one to two Emiratis in the respective department­s, the government target can easily be achieved.”

Sudhir Kumar Shetty, president of UAE Exchange, said private companies have an obligation to take in fresh graduates, train them and give them a starting point.

“Some companies have reservatio­ns to the fact that emiratis leave for government sector within a few years. Even if these people leave for better jobs, we are happy that we trained the local labour force. The vacancies they leave behind will get filled by fresh Emirati graduates again,” said Shetty.

Many industry leaders also pointed out the shortage of wellqualif­ied UAE nationals in certain industries like healthcare, as a main impediment to Emiratisat­ion.

According to the ministry’s website, the statistics of total labour force by skills until 2015 reveal more than 48 per cent of the local workers are low-skilled.

About 30 per cent are skilled, less than 10 per cent are profession­als and just three per cent technical and up to nine per cent are specialist­s.

Other apparent challenges include high turnover, high salary expectatio­ns, longer working hours, the perception of harder tasks and lesser time for vacation in the private sector.

The Emiratisat­ion initiative by the Ministry has been in place for years but the renewed focus on the private sector is believed to be a soothing balm for thousands of jobless nationals.

— ashwani@khaleejtim­es.com

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