UAE hiring starts to pick up after sharp coronavirus fall

Reuters

Dubai - Hiring activities on LinkedIn, which counts around 4 million users in the UAE out of a professional working population of around 5 million, fell 40-44% year-on-year for the March to May period.

Read more...

By Lisa Barrington/Reuters

Published: Thu 11 Jun 2020, 9:52 PM

Last updated: Fri 12 Jun 2020, 12:21 AM

Hiring in the UAE has started to recover from a steep fall due to the coronavirus pandemic, according to data from Microsoft Corp's professional networking site LinkedIn.
The number of people on LinkedIn saying they had secured a new job in the UAE fell sharply from early March but started to rise again from early May.
"We are seeing a cautious recovery. Hopefully the worst is behind us," Ali Matar, LinkedIn's head of Mena and emerging markets in Europe and Africa, told Reuters.
As a regional business and tourism hub where expatriates make up around 80per cent of the population, the UAE has been hit hard by restrictions to slow the virus' spread.
Thousands appear to have lost jobs, had their pay cut, and returned, or intend to, to their home countries.
Hiring activities on LinkedIn, which counts around 4 million users in the UAE out of a professional working population of around 5 million, fell 40-44 per cent year-on-year for the March to May period, Matar said.
Retail vacancies posted on the site during the period fell 63 per cent year-on-year, with recreation and travel vacancies down 50 per cent, media and communication down 30per cent and construction, which was already showing signs of weakness before the pandemic, down 15 per cent.
Technology and software job postings have increased the most, by 66 per cent, accelerating a trend in place before the pandemic, Matar said, while healthcare vacancies rose 28 per cent.
The UAE's non-oil private sector contracted for the fifth consecutive month in May, although at a slower pace than in April and March - which saw the biggest contraction on record.
"There is a recovery but it is going to take time," Matar said.
Restrictions are slowly being eased in the UAE, which has reported almost 40,000 cases of the new coronavirus and 283 deaths. - Reuters

Lisa Barrington/Reuters

Published: Thu 11 Jun 2020, 9:52 PM

Last updated: Fri 12 Jun 2020, 12:21 AM

Recommended for you