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Do locals deserve to earn more?

1 April 2008

Paul Clarke

Banks are splashing the cash on locals as they struggle to meet nationalization targets within a limited talent pool. But what do they really think about this?

The government in the UAE has decreed that in all firms 40% of employees should be locals, which is no mean feat when you consider that only 20% of the population are Emiratis. Add niche banking skills to the mix and it becomes even harder to attract the right candidates.

It’s no surprise that banks are playing against each other for talent, and as a result packages for locals are heading northwards.

Hani Hirzallah, head of human resources (GCC) at Barclays, which has grown from 100 employees to 900 in the last year in Dubai, and won two awards for its Emiratization programme, says: “We tend to review all staff salaries on an annual basis, but it is necessary to do it on an ad hoc basis for UAE candidates, such is the competition for positions.”

Salaries for locals in the UAE come in at around a third higher, or banks will reward them in other ways.

Tim Knight, head of compensation and benefits at the National Bank of Abu Dhabi, adds: “We have expats and locals on the same grade, but pay our nationals a more generous allowance based on the qualification they have – cost of living allowance or bonuses. It makes it easier to manage, and costs don’t go to the bottom line.”

Elsewhere in the GCC locals don’t enjoy such a hallowed status. Alison Abu, executive director/head of human resources at Gulf Finance House in Bahrain, says: “Nationalization is on the agenda here, but we don’t have such an obligation to fulfil the quota. Generally, those from Western Europe get paid more than locals because they have better skills and experience. And you have to pay expats more to attract them here.”

Dr Ramakrishna Mowa, acting head of HR at Emirates Bank, reckons the number of locals in the bank varies at different levels. At associate level, 60% are UAE nationals, in middle management the figure’s 30-40%, and at the senior management end it shoots up to 70%.

He adds: “Expat employees are an integral part of the talent pool, and mixing it up helps internal competition and raises the performance bar.”

Comments (2)

  • expats does not have the right to compare themselves with UAE citizens, this is our country and if you dont like the idea, you are free to leave at once. This country has made generations of expats live with dignity & created a very safe and comfortable life which they never dreamed of. expats are well paid here. your countries did not pay you third of what you get on this land. Have some respect for those who feed, teach, protect you &  your children. be polite with your host. thats the least you can provide to payback the favor. in all countries, priority is for the citizens and citizens ONLY. You Have To live with it.

    Emarati 09 Jun 2008

    RECOMMEND Recommended 0 times | Alert Moderator

  • it is about talent and performance. a nationality earning more than others is illegal in the west and amounts to nothing more than racism.

    dontlike arab 03 Apr 2008

    RECOMMEND Recommended 0 times | Alert Moderator

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