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Expat cap strikes back

by This email address is being protected from spam bots, you need Javascript enabled to view it on Monday, 18 August 2008
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Posted on Saturday, 23 August 2008

Wake up to the real questions



The 2 issues at hand can be summerized as follows:
1. What about our culture?
2. What about our jobs?
The questions raised would be ... What culture? we need to bring our culture to the front .. we need to strengthen our culture to survive in the globalization world.
Cultures are a function of the famous law : Survival of the fittest. Else, many cultures that dissolved historically would be here today. Many tried to save them ... However, they did not succeed because another culture was more fit to stay.
for The second part, let us think if GCC are built with the limited population in mind? UAE is built for more than it's population and cannot survive and prosper with the limited number of nationals.
Anyone with 2 eyes can see this.... but what can a city of executives and professionals do without the skilled and semi skilled labor? will they do their own services , deliver their own stuff, build and fix their own homes?
The main question would be how is the GCC countries survive the pressure that is going to build in the future to give citizenship to people who spent their life in the GCC?
It is coming and there is no way to evade it as I could see. Otherwise, we will have to give up our lifestyle to overcome it.

 

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Posted on Tuesday, 19 August 2008

culture erosion?



Right, here's a FEW steps to curb all this culture erosion these misguided "ministers" keep going on about:

1. Close down all bars and restaurants.
2. Close down all the bling bling shopping malls.
3. Implement a strict dress code policy where everyone is fully covered.
4. Ban all media that displays Western entertainment (cable and local TV, radio, magazines, concerts...you get the idea).

Regaining & retaining culture - sorted.

 

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ex pat cap proposal



Planners are overlooking three influential factors.
1. The more reliable economic forecasts call for an increase in ex pats, in skilled and unskilled sectors. This is due mainly, to ongoing high liquidity and growth.
2. Education systems NOT turning out employable young people. Made worse by limited employment scope for females. There is a cultural resistance, in some cases, to introducing a modern curriculum. Example: resistance to teaching English at primary level.
3. Skilled specialist ex pats have no corporate scope to train up local employees. Many companies have poor training programs or none at all.
Therefore, planning and finance must go into education, training and having specialist skill ex pats working with trainees.
End goal? Local talent must be able to compete for jobs and win them against the best ex pat talent.

 

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Capping Expats



The Gulf countries have been built on the back of immigrant expat labour. These fine countries need maintenance now, a task that locals are unwilling to take. Will the locals do this? I do not think so. If you want to see the future, visit Kuwait and see sewerage lines on top of the ground because of the lack of capacity to keep the infrastructure running and look at the lack of cleanliness. Visit a Saudi airport and compare the cleanliness of airports (even with expats dong the work) because the local management do not supervise or understand how to supervise tasks. If you want a nice country, then let the expats retain their meagre salaries and keep the Gulf in a nice condition!

 

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Expat Cap



You cannot be the CEO as a new graduate and this is the expectation of young nationals. They do not know - what they do not know as they lack experience from the entry level upwards. Mentoring young nationals is also difficult as they think they do have the skills upon graduation and some do not take this opportunity seriously. If you have a nanny for each child, do not pick up your own trash, wash your own dishes, do your own laundry, do not have to pay for university on your own and more, how do we expect any one of the nationals to work at McDonalds drive through or Pizza Hut delivery. Saudi has tried for years unsuccessfully to nationalize. Until nationals pay and earn their own way from childhood on and are not handed the golden spoon, things will remain the same. A sense of entitlement to the nationality verses a sense of commitment to work in the community and grow from entry level upwards in any company business - we hope the choice is the latter.
Preservation of Culture is a totally different discussion.

 

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Unskilled Labourere life limit



We need to establish an understanding of what is employment in our young nationals. It is sad to see that every one feels they can become CEOs but not really work or contribute attitude. It is very evident that they feel that skills are achieved after a degree. Education and knowledge is not the same. Ability to perform a job doesn't come from the highest of a degree only.
Why is the word ''unity'' and ''care'' missing in a lot of things. If you can teach to care for something you dont have to worry for its tomorrow. Unfortunately this feeling of we need to care for our country is missing. Expats do not feel they can treat this country as their home. Their biggest motivator unfortunately becomes money and the attitude of earn as much as possible and leave. Which is sad. End of the day when a lot of them feel that way, my opinion is that the product is neglected. This country has its own identity. It is wonderful if we let common sense prevail.

 

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Posted on Monday, 18 August 2008

Stealing jobs



Yeah, expats are stealing the jobs of Emiratis. We hide behind bushes until we see an Emirati go past and then we burst out, shouting "Look! There's an Emirati! Let's steal his job!"

Let's put things in perspective. Expats are prepared to work longer hours for less money than an Emirati. Want to know why Dubai is so successful? It's because people who are actually prepared to work for a living for a pittance of wage do all the work. How on earth will the UAE benefit from 'Emiratisation'? Judging by the sterling performance of the public sector, the main employer of Emiratis, we'd see the the UAE getting left behind the rest of the world within days of such a policy.

Until Emiratis can be convinced to build towers, collect rubbish, drive taxis and, let's be fair, work an 8 hour day, the UAE will need expats. Yes, it would be great if the UAE could boast a majority Emirati workforce. But there aren't enough locals to do the jobs, and they're not prepared to. The choices are either work within the status quo to ensure that good jobs for Emiratis remain, or to shut down the entire country for a few decades.

We're not stealing jobs - we're picking up the crumbs that Emiratis can't be bothered to pick up for themselves. Stop blaming us for your unemployment problem.

 

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ummm



So how often has one seen a local staying at a same post or say even the same firm for two years?
I know people personally who jump every 6 months or so!
I guess this is another one of the backward steps some of the countries in question are taking, i'm so used to this!

 

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what will happen to me?



I have been living in this country for last 26 years. I know only this country and I am not a manager, doctor or a lawyer. Yes I work hard and I am able to survive better here than from where I come. there are many many others like me.

 

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By all means



limit expats' stays. In Dubai over 90 percent of private sector workers are expats. They are stealing the jobs of Emiratis. Send them home and let the Emiratis have the jobs. Dubai will benefit greatly from Emiratisation.

 

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common sense is becoming rare...



These sort of ridiculous rules are not going to stop the erosion of anything. Cultural erosion starts at home and in social gatherings regardless of how many years your secretary has been in the country. These rules are just going to make it harder for companies to find replacement for staff that has been trained over the years on certain jobs that GCC nationals will never take, such as office boys or even house maids. thousands of families will suffer trying to find maids they can again trust with their kids after 6 years. For what? So they can get another one from the same country? There is no common sense being used here. A quick fix of the sort will only have dire consequences for the future of GCC economies. A lot of GCC nationals are unemployed because they don't really want to work - this is a sad truth. A lot of youngsters want to be CEOs fresh out of university or nothing. The cultural issues need to be fixed within the local GCC societies as the world becomes a smaller place. You can't stop globalisation but you can embrace the changes in harmony with your traditions, with the full pride of your national identity yet in a world with great diversity.

 

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Discriminating & unfair!



America & Europe have opened their doors to many other nationalities & cultures & yet they are able to keep their local cultures alive other the years?!? One cannot only have the cream from the top! If you want to have a thriving economy, foreign investors etc. - you have to accept that many people from all walks of life will come to your country. Instead of shunning their cultures, invest in and show off your culture.

And by the way - this plan will only work if the GCC nationals will accept to do the hard and minimal paid work that all these poor people are doing. Which I highly doubt as they are not even willing to serve people but be served.

 

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Catastrophy waiting to happen



Implementing this in a growing economy would only lead to disastrous consequences, and the only ones to pay the penalties are the expats.
Considering the direction the region is heading towards, it is about time someone puts the thinking cap on.

 

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..unskilled labourers life limit..



"stem soaring unemployment among nationals"..after limiting the entry of unskilled, would the locals take up the labour work in the hot hours of the emirates.
Doubtful. Locals would NEVER take up such a job.
It's no use manipulating the fate of such poor people with laws like these.

 

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