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The skills in demand for next year’s jobs market

Annual report says digitally savvy talent will be in demand, along with emotional intelligen­ce. Nada El Sawy reports

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As optimism slowly returns to the UAE jobs market, employers are concerned about cash flow management and are struggling to attract and retain talent for 2020, a new study found. On the flip side, technology savvy employees with “soft skills”, such as critical thinking and emotional intelligen­ce, will be the most in demand and secure the largest pay rises.

Cash flow management is the top concern for 52 per cent of chief financial officers interviewe­d in the UAE, and talent attraction and retention came in second with 47 per cent, according to the 2020 Salary

Guide from global recruitmen­t consultanc­y Robert Half.

“Good candidates are always going to be in strong demand, whether that be across multinatio­nals and SMEs,” says Gareth El Mettouri, associate director of Robert Half UAE.

The annual report identifies hiring trends based on several Robert Half surveys, including 75 interviews with chief financial officers and 200 responses from hiring managers across the UAE. It also documents average salaries, based on placements made by the recruiter and actual starting salaries paid by clients in five sectors: accounting and finance; financial services; technology; human resources and administra­tion and legal.

Positive factors influencin­g hiring in the UAE include a perceived return to optimism in the GCC, government initiative­s that have increased the ease of doing business for foreigners and an entreprene­urial boom.

“The future is looking bright for the GCC region, as oil prices, retail and infrastruc­ture investment­s bolster optimism in business leaders,” the report says.

Last week the Internatio­nal Monetary Fund revised the UAE’s gross domestic product growth forecast downwards to 1.6 per cent from 2.8 per cent in line with revisions in global growth figures. However, the projection for 2020 is 2.5 per cent, higher than the 1.7 per cent growth in 2018 and the paltry 0.5 per cent growth in 2017.

The fund assumes that the average price of oil will be $61.78 per barrel in 2019 and $57.94 per barrel in 2020. That is again much higher than prices between 2014 and 2016, when it fell below $30.

A series of UAE government initiative­s, such as 10-year long-term residency visas, have also helped to spur new businesses and encourage foreign investment. “It has given confidence to employers setting up here,” says Mr El Mettouri.

The UAE has also experience­d significan­t growth in e-commerce and FinTech start-ups. E-commerce transactio­ns in the UAE are forecast to reach $16 billion (Dh59bn) in 2019 and grow 23 per cent annually between 2018 and 2022, according to a joint study by Dubai Economy and global payments company Visa. The number of FinTech start-ups in the Mena region is expected to multiply to around 250 by 2020 from six in 2005, according to a report by Mena Research Partners.

Here are some of the insights for the UAE jobs market in 2020:

Salaries

Last week, Mercer published its annual Total Remunerati­on Study, forecastin­g a 4.5 per cent increase in overall base salaries in the UAE in 2020. However, there are a couple of caveats to this forecast. First, the previous report had predicted a 4.8 per cent increase in 2019, but the actual increase was 4.5 per cent. Second, the percentage increase is only on the base salary.

“Depending on the pay mix between base salary [which typically varies between 50/50 and 70/30, although there are certainly outliers], the real fixed salary increase for most individual­s would vary somewhere between 2.2 per cent and 3 per cent,” says Ted Raffoul, career products leader for the Middle East and North Africa at Mercer.

Ian Giulianott­i, executive director of recruitmen­t and executive search at Nadia Global, says the Gulf recruiter found the “absolutely highest base salary rise was 2 per cent” in 2019. “The justificat­ion [from employers] was that rents are going down by as much as 20 per cent,” he says. The salary increase is still higher than inflation, which the latest IMF report estimates at minus 1.5 per cent in 2019 and 1.2 per cent in 2020.

The percentage also depends on the type of company. Nadia Global’s client base reflects the make-up of the UAE market, which is primarily small and medium enterprise­s. Of the 500 companies included in Mercer’s study, the majority are multinatio­nals and large employers with an average headcount of 520 employees.

Employers have to pick and choose which jobs warrant a salary increase. Mr El Mettouri says the positions that have earned a pay rise include chief financial officers within industry and commerce; financial planning and analysis roles; compliance and risk roles within banking; chief digital officers within technology; heads of recruitmen­t and learning and developmen­t roles within HR and heads of legal and English-Arabic bilingual lawyers within legal.

Hiring strategies

“Although many larger organisati­ons still have hiring freezes in place, there are plenty of opportunit­ies in the growing start-up community, most notably among FinTech companies,” according to the Robert Half report.

Mr El Mettouri says some companies have had hiring freezes in place for “about the past 12 to 18 months”. There are signs, however, that capital expenditur­e is increasing, which could mean adding headcount.

“Within multinatio­nals, we are still seeing roles being replaced when people leave. But we are also starting to see capex spend coming back to these multinatio­nals, so they are starting to open up to hiring again,” he says.

More local hires

The Mercer report found that the voluntary turnover rate, meaning the percentage of people voluntaril­y leaving their jobs, increased to 7 per cent in 2019 from around 5 per cent in the past couple of years. Meanwhile, the involuntar­y turnover rate, the percentage of people being forced to leave their jobs, decreased from 8 per cent in 2016 to 4.5 per cent this year.

These percentage­s signify an active job market, but also more local hiring. Robert Half and Nadia Global have noticed the same trend. “A lot of our clients are wanting candidates with local experience,” Mr El Mettouri says. “We’re not seeing as many clients relocating talent into the market, so that drives movement. We’ve seen it more in the past 12 months.

“Ninety nine per cent of employers in the GCC will want people who are currently resident in the country that they’re hiring,” Mr Giulianott­i concurs.

Digital transforma­tion

As more businesses, such as banks, undergo digital transforma­tion “a lot of clients are now really focusing on the digital and technology skill set of talent when they’re hiring”, says Mr El Mettouri.

Nearly two thirds (63 per cent) of UAE business leaders said technologi­cal understand­ing is the top skill needed.

Robert Half’s research found that soft skills, such as communicat­ion, strategic thinking and adaptabili­ty “will rise to prominence in the next few years as workforces change to meet the challenges that technology presents”.

For example, in HR and administra­tion, the soft skills in demand include change management, emotional intelligen­ce, leadership and critical observatio­n.

Flexible working

Hiring managers unable to offer a higher salary are attracting top talent by adding on benefits, including flexible working.

“Flexible working can mean different things to different people.” says Mr El Mettouri. “It can mean starting work early, finishing early. For a parent, it can mean finishing at lunchtime, doing a school run and logging back on at home. We are seeing a lot more employers offering it as a benefit to attract and retain the current talent in the workforce.”

With the competitio­n for talent and concerns over cash flow, employers are having to be more creative.

“Candidates are not only moving for increase in salary,” says Mr El Mettouri. “They’re moving for stability, they’re moving for opportunit­y, they’re moving for personal growth developmen­t.”

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 ??  ?? Workers at the Dubai Internatio­nal Financial Centre. The Robert Half report paints a rosy picture for employment in the GCC
Workers at the Dubai Internatio­nal Financial Centre. The Robert Half report paints a rosy picture for employment in the GCC
 ??  ?? Gareth El Mettouri of Robert Half UAE
Gareth El Mettouri of Robert Half UAE

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