Guest
workers struggle to find jobs in their professions
Thousands of guest workers are tussling to find gainful
employment after returning to Vietnam following a stint working overseas
despite having good skills and experience, say job placement executives.
“Take Nguyen
Hieu Dong from Ha Tinh Province for example,” said one such executive.
Mr Dong had worked as a ship welder in the Republic of
Korea (RoK), but now toils at odd jobs throughout the province to earn his
daily bread. Upon return, he spent the better part of a year searching
for a job as a welder, to no avail.
“I really want to work for a foreign-invested
manufacturing company in the steel or sheet metal industry that would allow
me to fully use the skills and experience I acquired when working in the
RoK,” said Mr Dong recently.
Mr Dong is not alone, as friends of his returning from
the RoK find themselves in similar circumstances. Most of them can’t find a
job in their chosen profession either and must therefore work at odd jobs
just to make ends meet.
“Then there is the case of Nguyen Bich Ha from Phu Tho
Province who worked in the electronics field in Japan,” said the
executive.
Miss Ha returned to Vietnam in 2015 and she too, like
thousands of others in a similar predicament, has been unsuccessful in
finding a fitting position.
“Every year roughly 100,000 guest workers go abroad,”
said Nguyen Lan Huong, former head of the Institute of Labour Science and
Social Affairs in a recent interview with the media.
“Most of them, approximately 56%, find unskilled manual
labourer jobs requiring only muscles and a strong back while the remainder
find occupations requiring higher skills and advanced training,” said Mr
Huong.
“The obstacles these skilled workers are encountering,
is that when they return home after their assignment is up, they can’t find
equivalent work that fully harnesses their skillsets and abilities.
Vietnam is sitting on an underused gold mine of diverse
talent. As more and more foreign invested companies look to do business in
Vietnam these guest workers are invaluable national assets, said Mr Huong.
Many skilled workers arrive home armed with an
impressive résumé as a result of their overseas employment, said Mr Huong,
only to learn that their foreign credentials are not needed by employers in
Vietnam.
To avoid this rude awakening, we need governmental or
non-governmental organizations to do pre-assessments on prospective guest
workers so they will know before accepting the job if their education and
work experience will transfer back to the local market.
"In other cases it’s because of the lack of an
adequate job search mechanism to match prospective employers and adequately
trained employees,” said Mr Huong. Many employees simply don’t know what jobs
are out there.
In a vast number of situations, employers also don’t
know how to connect with prospective employees and precisely the numbers and
qualifications of employees seeking employment.
"There currently is no real way of fully knowing
the biases employers have in the employment selection process,” said Mr
Huong. “We do know that many employers shy away from hiring Vietnamese
workers because of their deficient foreign language skills.”
When employment recruiters are asked to explain biases
in hiring guest workers, they respond that foreign employers often treat
guest workers as a sign that the applicant may lack critical language or
social skills for the job.
The only sure way to ensure that guest workers talent
is fully utilized for the benefit of the worker and the nation— is to set up a
comprehensive national program to ensure guest workers are adequately trained
in fields the economy needs and workers are chosen equitably.
VOV
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Thứ Ba, 19 tháng 4, 2016
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