NEWS
Robert Walters Publishes
Asia Job Index for Q3 of 2011
Malaysia:
Consumer facing roles in demand
30
Jan 2012
Singapore
| Robert
Walters, the international recruitment consultancy, published
in early December 2011 its Asia Job Index for the third quarter
of 2011. The Robert Walters Asia Job Index tracks advertisement
volumes for professional positions across the leading job boards
and national newspapers in Singapore, Hong Kong, China, Malaysia,
Japan and Korea.
KEY
FINDINGS
Regional: Consistent job levels for Q3 compared to Q2
• Levels of job advertisements remained largely consistent
in the second quarter, with companies choosing to hold off on
hiring new staff following a strong second quarter
• The financial turmoil in the Eurozone and in the US has
inevitably had an impact on international companies, particularly
in the financial services sector in regions such as China and
Hong Kong
• Accountancy and finance have been impacted and similarly,
recruitment within IT services has declined as companies delay
implementing new systems until there is greater economic visibility
Singapore:
Increased recruitment activity in medical and legal services sectors
• The number of jobs advertised in Singapore in Q3 remained
largely in line with the previous quarter, growing by 5% over
the quarter and by 7% from Q2 to Q3
• Sectors proving more resilient to the economic uncertainty
included medical services and legal services, which have seen
numbers of job advertisements rise over the quarter by 19% and
17% respectively
• To meet regulatory requirements, pharmaceutical companies
continued to invest in clinical assistance, research and development,
whilst companies also increased headcount within legal departments
to prepare for incoming financial regulations such as Basel 3
Hong
Kong: Recruitment activity subdued for Q3
• Recruitment advertising activity in Hong Kong during Q3
slowed down by 2% from July to September following a particularly
strong second quarter
• Hong Kong’s position as one of the world’s
leading financial services centres means it has inevitably been
affected by ongoing global economic concerns
• Candidate confidence levels are muted with many unwilling
to leave current positions to enter an uncertain market
Malaysia:
Consumer facing roles in demand
• Due to the uncertain economic outlook, companies have
reassessed recruitment needs across a range of sectors such as
human resources as well as art and design, resulting in both sectors
seeing a fall of 35% over the quarter
• A notable trend for HR was for companies to use the services
of recruitment firms to hire as these positions are generally
deemed to be confidential
• Demand for general management roles
continues, with job advertisements increasing in sectors such
as property management, up 8%, as companies look to hire in- house
facility professionals to manage properties
China:
Cautious hiring sentiments as companies review budgets
• Levels of total job advertisements in China in Q3 dipped
minimally by 1%. This follows the trend evident in Q2, when the
rate of growth in advertising began to slow from previous levels
• This slowdown was driven in part by companies suspending
hiring in the wake of headcount reviews and budgetary discussions
and employees awaiting end of year bonuses
• Recruitment within IT services and merchandising and purchasing
is indicative of this cautious tone, revealing respectively 12%
and 4% declines in job advertisements, in these traditionally
market sensitive industries
Download
the full report.
METHODOLOGY
The Robert Walters Asia Job Index tracks the number of job advertisements
on a daily basis across the executive appointments sections of
key newspapers and leading online job boards in Singapore, Malaysia,
Japan, Korea and Hong Kong. In China, job opportunities are largely
advertised online via job portals and as such, the index will
only track online job advertisements for this market. View
the complete listing of the publications and job boards included
in their findings.
Source
: Robert Walters