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Ho says Macau needs ‘appropriate’ number of non-local talents

2020-10-22 03:09     Comment:1

In a closed-door meeting with 11 local deputies to the National People’s Congress (NPC) earlier this week, Chief Executive Ho Iat Seng said that the government would need to comprehensively consider the employment of local residents when determining an appropriate number of non-local talents allowed to work in Macau, adding that they should be hired in a way that would help the city’s economic diversification, according to a Government Information Bureau (GCS) yesterday.

Macau has 12 deputies to the nation’s top legislature.

According to the GCS statement, Ho met the 11 local NPC deputies at Government Headquarters on Tuesday where he listened to their opinions and suggestions on the drafting of his 2021 Policy Address, which he is slated to deliver next month.

According to the statement, the 11 local NPC deputies who attended Tuesday’s meeting comprised José Chui Sai Peng, Kevin Ho King Lun, Iong Weng Ian, Kou Hoi In, Lai Sai Kei, Lao Ngai Leong, Paula Ling Hsiao Yun, Lok Po, Ng Siu Lai, Si Ka Lon, and Dominic Sio Chi Wai. NPC deputy Ho Sut Heng did not attend Tuesday’s meeting. She had met the chief executive last week when she presented her views and proposals about next year’s government policy programme in her capacity as chairwoman of the influential Macau Federation of Trade Unions (commonly known as Gung Luen – its name in Cantonese).

According to the statement, the 11 local NPC deputies raised a raft of topics such as the city’s economic diversification, the hiring of non-local talents, public administration reform, flooding in the city’s low-lying areas, public project investment, consumption subsidies, the gaming sector’s sound development, housing policies, taxation, education development, COVID-19 prevention work, Macau’s participation in the development of the Guangdong-Hong Kong-Macau Greater Bay Area (GBA), and the development of the Guangdong-Macau Intensive Cooperation Zone in Hengqin.

During Tuesday’s meeting, Ho, a former president of the Macau Legislative Assembly and member of the elite NPC Standing Committee, said that the government will seriously study the suggestions raised by the 11 local NPC deputies, adding that he will tell his five policy secretaries to draw up their respective policy guidelines for next year in reference with the suggestions, according to the statement.

Underlining that the government is always pushing ahead with Macau’s economic diversification, Ho said that the government will now place special emphasis on developing the city’s traditional Chinese medicine (TCM) industry. Ho said that the government was drafting a bill on a TCM licensing system, to be submitted to the Legislative Assembly (AL) for debate and vote “as soon as possible”.

Ho said that the development of the finance industry would be another new source for Macau’s economic growth, adding that the government planned to draft a number of relevant laws in support of the sector’s constant development. Ho also said that if the local business sector introduces good projects, the government would “certainly” provide the necessary support.

Ho also said that the government was studying possible improvements to its system of assessing the feasibility of employing non-local talents. Ho said that the government’s policies on the hiring of non-local talents must be formulated in line with the need for the city’s economic diversification and social development.

‘Real’ contributions

Ho said that non-local talents allowed to work in Macau have to make “real” contributions to the city, adding that only an appropriate number of non-local talents should be imported into Macau after a “comprehensive” consideration of the employment of local residents first.

The statement said that concerning public administration reform, Ho said during the meeting that the various current issues in the public administration system have accumulated over a long time, adding that therefore its reform would be a “complicated” project so that it would be impossible to complete the reform within one or two years. Instead, the public administration reform could only be carried out gradually, Ho said.

Ho also pledged that the government will certainly increase its investment in public projects, with the aim of creating a string of new job opportunities.

All the five policy secretaries and Ho’s Chief-of-Office Hoi Lai Fong attended Tuesday’s meeting, according to the statement.

Ho has been meeting a raft of civic leaders over the past few weeks to listen to their views and proposals about what the government should do next year.


Chief Executive Ho Iat Seng (centre) poses at Government Headquarters on Tuesday with 11 of Macau’s 12 deputies to the National People’s Congress (NPC), his five policy secretaries and his Chief-of-Office Hoi Lai Fong (right, front). Photo: GCS


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