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- The new passage to India, business class Level 1 Elementary Key words 1 Find the information 2
retail lifestyle expat booming salary
rare skill average chain experience 1. If you have a ____________, you can do something really well. 2. If you have ____________, you have a lot of knowledge about a job or activity because you have done it for a long time. 3. Your ____________ is the way you live your life. 4. Your ____________ is the money you earn for your work. 5. ____________ is the process of selling goods direct to the public. 6. An ____________ is someone who lives and works in another country. 7. If a country is ____________, its economy is very successful. 8. A ____________ of businesses is a group of businesses which belong to the same person or company. 9. If something is ____________, it doesn’t happen very often. 10. If one person earns $10,000, another $20,000 and a third $30,000, their ____________ salary is $20,000. The new passage to India, business class Level 1 Elementary Key words 1 Find the information 2 Look in the text and find this information as quickly as possible. 1. How many stores will Mr Levermore’s company open? 2. What percentage of managers in India are expats? 3. What percentage of pilots in India are foreign? 4. How much can senior managers expect to earn in India? 5. How many students graduate from university each year in India? 6. What is the average salary increase in India each year? 163 The new passage to India, business class • Foreign executives pour in as salaries soar • Shortage of local talent for booming economy Randeep Ramesh in New Delhi June 13, 2007 Andrew Levermore is a business manager who specializes in retail. Mr Levermore has worked in both South Africa and Britain. Three years ago someone offered him a job in India. He said no. He thought the country was too poor and disorganized. Now a powerful Mumbai business family has asked him to manage India’s first western-style hypermarket. This time he said yes. “I changed my mind when I saw their plans. They are very serious people. Yes, I had to change my lifestyle a bit but this was a really good opportunity for me. Of course the pay is good compared with the UK.” His company will soon be opening another 28 stores and Mr Levermore, 44, is inviting two more expats to leave their jobs in the west and work with him in India. Mr Levermore is part of a new movement of business people to India. The Indian economy is booming but there are not enough qualified and experienced middle managers so more and more western expatriates are taking senior positions. Some Indian experts say Indian workers are asking for so much money that it is often cheaper to give jobs to foreigners. “It’s happening very quickly now,” says Kris Lakshmikanth, chief executive of Headhunters India. “Expats are filling more than 15% of management and skilled positions. Hotel management requires a rapid improvement in quality and we can only get that from abroad. In the airline industry, 50% of pilots are foreign. A few years ago only 5% of pilots were foreigners”. Salaries for chief executives have doubled in the past few years and now chief executives can earn from £125,000 to £600,000. Senior managers can expect £100,000 a year. The head of public relations at an Indian corporation earns £40,000. Bharti Airtel, the country’s biggest mobile operator, says foreign managers used to be rare in India but they are now as good value as Indian staff. Sunil Bharti Mittal, the company’s founder, told reporters last month his company had begun to give jobs to “expats who cost less than Indian managers”. Andrea Stone, head of marketing at Bharti’s software company Telesoft, joined on a local contract in 2005. She said her salary was “good enough to live well in Delhi”. “I brought skills they did not have. One was that I had worked in Britain, Hong Kong, Japan and Germany and knew how to work with clients from other countries. The other was motivating teams of young dynamic people.” Ms Stone says that she only has problems when she leaves the office. “You can’t walk outside easily. It’s too hot and there are not that many parks. Also Delhi does not have a public transport system, which is a problem. You can’t just go round the corner to Marks and Spencer to buy food. But you can live.” Living in a country like India might be difficult for some expats but they can earn good money there. Foreign companies are also bringing their best managers to India. Cisco Systems, the US technology giant, moved seven top managers to its Bangalore office this year. The head of Anglo- Dutch multinational Unilever in the country is a South African. The boss of Goldman Sachs is an American. 3 million Indian students graduate from university each year but Indian industry says that only 15% are good enough to find work in multinational companies. Finding and keeping skilled Indian workers is becoming more difficult and more expensive than ever. Salaries are increasing faster in India than anywhere else in Asia. According to a study by human resources company Hewitt Associates, the average salary increase each year in India is more than 14% a year, compared with about 8% in China and a little less in South Korea and the Philippines. Download 7.3 Mb. Do'stlaringiz bilan baham: |
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