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 08.30.2010

Employment of older workers worldwide

How are senior workers faring worldwide? Which countries have implemented best practices, and which ones could use them as role models? An overview of best practices in five countries affected by the aging population.

By Severine Degallaix08.27.2010

Holiday time!
Oh no, not again time for another article on vacations—the motherhood and apple pie message that you should disconnect completely, turn off your cell phone and leave your portable computer behind! We know this, and we get it; there’s no need to repeat it to make people feel even guiltier. Enough is enough—the problem lies elsewhere. “You pay for your vacation a week before and two weeks after” should no longer be heard, because it is too high a price for a week off.

By Nathalie Francisci08.20.2010

Recruiting firm gets cooking

Feel like spicing up a recruiting firm website? Barbara Personnel has found the way...

By Severine Degallaix08.18.2010

59% of Canadian employees satisfied with their health care plans

The results of the sanofi-aventis Healthcare Survey released at the end of July reveal that employer engagement is a good investment.

By Severine Degallaix08.12.2010

All ages looking for job security 

According to a recent study by staffing firm Robert Half, the more things change, the more different generations of workers are similar.

By Priscilla Franken08.10.2010
 08.07.2010
 08.06.2010
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By Priscilla Franken - Oddly enough of Jul 22, 2010

Chinese firms hiring “white guys” to make themselves look good 

Some Chinese employers have taken to hiring expats for token roles in order to impress their investors, customers and local authorities. During these short-term, lucrative gigs, expats are attributed fake titles and responsibilities. Their true role is to act as foreign employees during certain events, such as inaugurations or speeches, for instance.  

Mitch Moxley, who gave it a go, tells the story of his experience as a fake quality controller in an article for The Atlantic magazine. He was paid $1,000 a week, and put up in a nice hotel in Dongying, an industrial town in Shandong province. Every day, like six other fake employees, he went to the job site, toured the facilities. . . and then spent hours in the office twiddling his thumbs. The purpose of the charade is to enhance the employer’s image—having a few foreigners on the payroll is apparently a symbol of prestige, wealth, and strategic business connections.  

Such “professional opportunities” are primarily pursued by actors and models in search of a job, as well as expatriates seeking to make some extra cash on the side. The advantage is that the selection criteria are relatively easy to meet: you just need to be white, not speak Chinese and act as though you just stepped off the plane!

  
 
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