Curves_back
Saturday, July 05, 2008
| Search For Venues | Search:
Topics

show top ten
show top 100
Topics
venue logo
meeting planners
venue owners
Subscribe
Subscribe free of charge to receive a daily e-mail with the headline news from TravelDailyNews International. Just type your e-mail and click the check-marked button.

Member of :



TMS Asia - Pacific
Asian Travel Industry must offer flexibility in order to meet future staff needs
Tuesday, July 10, 2007
TMS Asia-Pacific (TMS) has pointed Asia’s staff-strapped travel industry employers towards a potential new source of much needed personnel the recruitment specialist said “demands full consideration” if the industry is to overcome its current staffing crisis.

TMS General Manager Asia, Andrew Chan said the part time, job share, work from home and casual talent pool offered a huge new wealth of untapped talent to industry employers prepared to consider this section of the workforce as a viable source of potential employees.

“The population continues to age and this, combined with record low unemployment figures, (Singapore’s unemployment rate for example stood at 2.9 per cent as of May 2007*) points towards a situation where less people are entering the workforce than leaving,” he said.

“This is creating significant challenges for employers right across the region and needs to be addressed with significantly more onus placed on work place flexibility.”

Mr. Chan referred to KPMG Property Advisory, US Census Bureau research findings which forecast the working age population of several Asian countries will begin contracting into negative growth over the coming 10 years.

These include South Korea which will reach the negative growth point in 2015 followed by China in 2016 and Singapore in 2017.

The report also forecast similar negative growth scenarios for Thailand by 2025 and Indonesia by 2035.

“In client facing roles, the challenge has always been the question of how part-time, job share, and flexible hours will impact on the client relationship,” Mr Chan said.

“Job share, where the employees are well matched in terms of their competencies, combined with well structured operational procedures, can provide a solution to this challenge.”

*Source Singapore Government, Ministry of Manpower statistics released 15 June 2007.
Theodore Koumelis - Tuesday, July 10, 2007
0 recommendation(s) , 52 print(s), 867 views, 0 comment(s)
Recommend Print Comment

Bookmark with:

Delicious Delicious Digg Digg Reddit reddit Facebook Facebook Stumbleupon StumbleUpon
Related_articles
Red_dot
TMS urges China’s travel/hospitality industry to address labour issues
Michael Verikios - Tuesday, November 20, 2007
Red_dot
TMS Asia-Pacific steps up China presence
Michael Verikios - Tuesday, August 21, 2007
Red_dot
Australian governemnt to combat tourism industry staffing crisis
Theodore Koumelis - Wednesday, June 20, 2007
Interview
Research
Featured_events
Article
Exhibitions_calendar
Poll
How will the currently developing financial crisis and oil prices rally affect the tourism industry?.

they will have temporary and minimal effect and the situation will stabilize in a year or two

we should be looking at a restructuring in the international tourism movements and trends

it is still too early to access the impact on world tourism, medium or long term

we will see more tourism closer to home, and less international travel

Stats All Polls