Eleven of China's largest State-owned enterprises (SOEs) will
open legal consulting vacancies to the public, the third round of
public recruitment this year, the regulator of the country's 166
central SOEs said yesterday.
"The move is an important step to strengthen legal risk
management in the SOEs," said an official with the State-owned
Assets Supervision and Administration Commission (SASAC).
"The legal consultants will play a vital role in the reshuffling
and shareholding reforms of the companies as well as in financing
and investment," he added.
It is the third round of recruitment this year after 10 SOEs
opened up top management positions to the public in June. SASAC has
been pushing public recruitment since 2003 to help SOEs gain
outstanding executives from the labor market and enhance their
global competitiveness. Top management positions were formerly
appointed directly by the government.
Although foreigners are welcome to compete for the positions,
none have yet been successful, Fan Changgang, a SASAC official in
charge of recruitment, told China Daily. He declined to disclose
how many foreigners had submitted applications.
"Cultural concerns are the major reason foreigners fail in the
job hunt," an analyst told China Daily, citing the Shenzhen
Development Bank (SDB) as an example.
Jeffrey Williams, the president of SDB, resigned after a
13-month stint at the Shenzhen-based lender in February this year.
He was the first foreign president of a Chinese bank.
The previous two SOE recruitment campaigns this year attracted
896 applicants for 15 vacancies; the SASAC established that 269
were qualified for the positions.
Over half of the applicants had postgraduate qualifications or
higher, and around 13 percent had studied or worked overseas, while
88 percent were aged under 45.
The evaluation process consists of an interview, written
examination and a group discussion.
(China Daily August 25, 2006)