Cambodia suffering a lack of depth in skilled-worker pool
Kouch Pheng, president of Advanced Glory Logistics Group
(Cambodia), is in the business of overcoming obstacles. His Phnom
Penh-based freight-forwarding company handles a daily dose of pot-holed
roads, unscripted shipping delays and Kafka-esque government red tape –
yet still manages to deliver its client’s cargo shipments on time.
But keeping his business running smoothly requires a skilled team of
highly resourceful individuals. And filling the roster can be a daunting
challenge.
Logistics and supply-chain management are not on the Cambodian
curriculum, and the Kingdom’s shallow skilled labour pool can be far
more difficult to navigate than any logistics snafu, says Pheng.
“When talking about the skill and development of Cambodian human
capital, I believe that in any industry there is a need for hard and
soft skills,” he explains.
Bobby Fajardo, executive assistant manager of the Intercontinental
Hotel in Phnom Penh, faces a similar staffing dilemma. While the hotel
encourages local hires, it has had to import skilled foreign talent to
fill its top-tier positions. Cambodian applicants fall far short in
terms of management skills and experience, he says.
Fajardo, a Philippine national who has worked in a number of
different tourism markets, says that while Cambodians often gravitate to
the hospitality sector, applicants can lack the skills that define the
industry’s professionalism.
“You need technical skills, logic and patience, and you’re expected
to make quick – but correct – decisions and [excel] at problem solving,”
he explains.
In an effort to bridge this skills gap and develop its human capital,
the Intercontinental Hotel has established a training program for its
new local student hires.
“We expose them completely to the food and beverage side, front
office side [and other aspects of the hotel], and then after six months
they decide which area they want to continue in,” he said.
Studies have shown that rapid economic growth and an influx of
foreign investment are creating job opportunities in Cambodia, but many
local youth lack the required skill set for these positions.
A report released last month by the Asian Development Bank (ADB)
noted that four out of every 10 Cambodian youth lacked sufficient
education to adequately perform their jobs.
“Low secondary and higher school enrolment and quality has led to a
mismatch between the skills young workers have and those employers
seek,” the report, Cambodia: Addressing the Skills Gap, said.
The lack of skills inhibits economic diversification and restricts
investment, which will consequently suppress Cambodia’s overall growth,
it warned.
In looking for the root causes of this skills gap, the report’s
authors found that many Cambodian children exit the school system
prematurely so that they can work and support their family financially
or help out with household chores. The decision is a result of families
being ill-informed of the long-term economic returns of investing in
secondary education.
“A household facing economic hardship may decide to take some
children out of school so they can contribute immediately to household
income,” the report said, adding that parents are more likely to do this
if prospects in the labour market seem limited.
The report also cited the poor quality of education as a primary
reason for the country’s skills gap, noting that “only a tiny” fraction
of primary school teachers have completed secondary school themselves.
Heng Sour, director general for administration and finance at the
Ministry of Labour and Vocational Training, said the government must
work together with the private sector to encourage youth not just to
stay in school but to pursue in-demand skills. He said students too
often study subjects that are not applicable to the job market.
“For example, technical skills are highly needed and highly paid for
but, maybe because of [students’] mindsets, they do not go into those
skills,” he said. “Instead they go into social sciences because they
think it’s fancy and that they can sit in an office or something like
that.”
Overall, he says, Cambodia needs to put a stronger emphasis on
education and vocational training if it is to move beyond an entry-level
economy.
Din Virak, director of V Capital Institute, which provides corporate
training services, insists the motivation is there, as Cambodians
themselves aspire to job security and higher disposable income. He says
youth are increasingly transferring out of low-paying agricultural and
home-based jobs into more technical jobs that come with more
entitlements.
“Before, there were many people who worked in the household, and now
those people don’t want to work in the household anymore,” Virak said.
“They go to work in a factory and get an employment card, social
security, et cetera. In doing so, they move from the informal sector to
the formal sector.”
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