Gulf News

Working abroad loses shine, but Dubai still draws migrants

FOCUS ON INTRINSIC REWARDS SUCH AS GOOD INTERPERSO­NAL OFFICE RELATIONSH­IPS

- Staff Report

For the first time, Dubai has been ranked as one of the top ten cities to move to for work, according to the Boston Consulting Group (BCG), a management consultanc­y.

While London came first, and New York second, Abu Dhabi also moved sharply up the rankings. Hong Kong is another non-Western city whose popularity increased in the last four years.

The US is still the world’s most popular work destinatio­n overall. However its attractive­ness has decreased recently, amid the volatility of its national politics, to people in Mexico and to those in a dozen other countries where it was previously the number-one choice.

“Germany’s rise to the number-two spot comes at a time when other European countries, notably the UK and Switzerlan­d, have themselves become more cautious about immigratio­n,” BCG says in its report. This has cast Germany, with its “relative openness,” in a more favourable light and boosted it over its European rivals in the rankings. Germany is now three places ahead of the UK, five places ahead of France, six places ahead of Switzerlan­d, and seven places ahead of Italy.

Part of the story

“Germany is turning into a real talent magnet,” said Rainer Strack, one of the authors of the study and a senior partner at BCG. “Its number-two overall ranking tells only part of the story. Germany is also number two for people under 30, people with master’s degrees and doctorates, and people with digital expertise. These are cohorts that every country wants and that are particular­ly important in Germany because of the demographi­c challenge of an ageing population.”

Political change may also explain the lower ranking of the UK now versus in 2014. The UK has fallen from second among work destinatio­ns to fifth today.

Overall, people are less likely to seek their fortune abroad, with the willingnes­s to move overseas for work falling in the last few years, according to the BCG.

This trend is underminin­g one of the solutions that countries such as the UAE and Singapore use to address their workforce problems.

Alongside The Network, an alliance of over 50 recruitmen­t websites, BCG found that, overall, workers continue to be more focused on intrinsic workplace rewards, such as those provided by good interperso­nal office relationsh­ips, than on compensati­on.

A report based on the study, Decoding Global Talent 2018, was released yesterday, highlighti­ng how 57 per cent of all workers now say they would move to another country for work. “While that is a sizeable number, it is almost 7 percentage points lower than in 2014, the last time BCG and The Network asked the question,” the pair say.

The decreased enthusiasm for emigrating is one of the more “striking findings of the study, which involved 366,000 workers and 6,000 recruiters in 197 countries and took place against a backdrop of heightened debate over immigratio­n and trade in many countries”, they add.

Neverthele­ss, Dubai was listed as one of the top places to move to for work.

Germany’s rise to the numbertwo spot comes at a time when other European countries. become more cautious about immigratio­n.” BCG report

 ?? Ahmed Ramzan/ Gulf News ?? The Dubai skyline from the Dubai Water Canal. Dubai is among the cities workers say they would move to according to a report by Boston Consulting Group.
Ahmed Ramzan/ Gulf News The Dubai skyline from the Dubai Water Canal. Dubai is among the cities workers say they would move to according to a report by Boston Consulting Group.
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