Answers to the staffing, recruiting, hiring, employment questions related to China

People’s Republic of China?

Filed under: Recruiting — Tags: , , — @ 4:22 pm December 7, 2005
china staffing
Chairman_Mao asked:


CHINA
PEOPLE’S REPUBLIC OF CHINA

Head of state: Hu Jintao
Head of government: Wen Jiabao
Death penalty: retentionist
International Criminal Court: not ratified

An increased number of lawyers and journalists were harassed, detained, and jailed. Thousands of people who pursued their faith outside officially sanctioned churches were subjected to harassment and many to detention and imprisonment. Thousands of people were sentenced to death or executed. Migrants from rural areas were deprived of basic rights. Severe repression of Uighurs in the Xinjiang Uighur Autonomous Region continued, and freedom of expression and religion continued to be severely restricted in Tibet and among Tibetans elsewhere.

International community
Before China’s election to the new UN Human Rights Council, it made a number of human rights-related pledges, including ratification of the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights and active co-operation with the UN on human rights.
http://thereport.amnesty.org/eng/Regions/Asia-Pacific/China

Temp Staffing in China

Globalization is good for the poors?

Filed under: Recruiting — Tags: , , — @ 5:25 am
china staffing
zhongguofever asked:


The booming economies of India and China have lifted 200 million people out of abject poverty in the 1990s as globalization took off. Tens of millions more have catapulted themselves far ahead into the middle class.

In the next eight years almost 1 billion people across Asia will take a Great Leap Forward into a new middle class. Other reforms let the Chinese create 22 million new businesses that now employ 135 million people who otherwise would have remained peasants like the generations before them.Since the reforms started, $600 billion has flooded into the country, $70 billion of it in the past year. Foreigners built hundreds of thousands of new factories as the Chinese government built the coal mines, power grid, airports and highways to supply them.

In Beijing 54 Starbucks shops thrive, paying servers $6 for an 8-hour day. That looks exploitative until you peek inside a nearby Chinese-owned teahouse where the staff works a 12-hour day for $3.75!

What do you think about that?
Wages in factory boomtowns in southern China can run a few bucks a day, scandalously low in the eyes of the protesters, yet up from pennies a day a generation ago and far ahead of increases in living costs. Middle-class Chinese families now own TVs, live in new apartments and send their children to private schools.

So, still angry against all these evil corporations?

Temp Staffing in China

Is it ‘legal’ to import counterfeit staff in Thailand from China ?

Filed under: Recruiting — Tags: , , — @ 5:24 am October 17, 2005
china staffing
Sthailee asked:


Of course I know it’s not ‘legal’ but,

1. Is it allowed ? (like shoes and clothes)

2. If yes, then is it allowed to open a small/big shop in Bangkok with that counterfeit staff ?

3. Do many foreigners in Thailand do that already ?

4. What kind of problem could have someone who do that business ?

Thanks in advance to all of you for answering.

Temp Staffing in China

If companies paid better wages, would they need to import workers?

Filed under: Recruiting — Tags: , , — @ 3:16 pm October 12, 2005
china staffing
Tish-a-licious asked:


On the news in Australia at the moment there are a lot of stories of companies saying they can’t get local staff and need to import workers from China/India/etc.

I have the feeling that its not about not being able to find local workers but that the working conditions and wages are so poor that people would rather be getting welfare.

Can you think of any other reasons why this situation would happen in major cities as well as small towns?

China Executive Recruiter

Practical things needed to start an Orphanage?

Filed under: Recruiting — Tags: , , — @ 7:59 am August 18, 2005
china staffing
undefined.beauty88 asked:


I am planning on starting an orphange in China within the next 5-10 years, and I am starting to plan it all out. Does anyone know the practical things that would be needed to start an orphanage in China and how much they cost? What kind of staff should I hire? How big of a building would I need? How much would it cost? What is the best location in China with the biggest need? What permits are needed to open an Orphanage in China by the Chinese government?
Please keep in mind that this will be a non-profit organization I’ll be starting, so everyone I’ll be hiring will be on faith support.
Serious answers only please.

China Logistics Recruitments

Remote access program to solve Internet speed?

Filed under: Recruiting — Tags: , , — @ 4:25 pm August 17, 2005
china staffing
steven w asked:


I am in Japan with extremely fast Internet speeds. I have a database that I want outsourced help from China from. Chinese Internet speed is too slow to be cost effective. Large files need to be downloaded from another Japanese site, manipulated, and uploaded (1 file takes 10 seconds to download from the Internet here in Japan but takes 10 minutes to download in China) If I hire Chinese staff (1 to start, more in the future) can they access and download/upload files at Japanese speeds with remote access? Is this my solution? Or are there other options?

Temp Staffing in China

where can i find wooden fighting staves?

Filed under: Recruiting — Tags: , , — @ 1:30 pm August 14, 2005
china staffing
odd1261 asked:


me and my friends are doing this movie about china and stuff and it involes a lot of martial arts and fighting. we decided on using wooden fighting sticks like we see in the movies, but we cant find any on ebay or any of the normal places u find stuff. so please if u guys could help me out id really appreciate it =)

China Executive Recruiter

Are nuclear weapons why we can’t afford to have a religious person in the White House?

Filed under: Recruiting — Tags: , , — @ 12:00 am August 9, 2005
china staffing
Matt M asked:


When you have the power to blow up the ENTIRE WORLD, it is UNACCEPTABLE that you think a god is just biding his time before blowing it up anyway. It is also UNACCEPTABLE to think that only the superstitions of a culture in ancient Israel are worth paying attention to, thus ignoring all the cultural heritage of China, India, Africa, etc. etc.
Just imagine if Bush let James Dobson be Air Force Chief of Staff. Who would be in more danger, Al-Qaeda or San Francisco?

China Executive Recruiter

who funds the embassy?

Filed under: Recruiting — Tags: , , — @ 8:09 pm August 5, 2005
china staffing
antelias asked:


for example lets say the american embassy in china is it the responsibility of china to fund the embassya dn pay the ambassador and staff or is it the united ststes responsibily and vice versa? what about poor countries like the embassy of ghana in america does the us fund the embassy since the countries budget is low or is it still the responility of ghana

Temp Staffing in China

What do you think of China telling restaraunts to take dog off the menu during the Olympics?

Filed under: Recruiting — Tags: , , — @ 3:05 pm July 28, 2005
china staffing
dudefromnewmexico666 asked:


Restaurants and hotels in the Chinese capital have been asked to take dog meat off the menu during Olympics and Paralympics due to concerns that the canine dishes might be offensive to Westerners and animal rights activists.
“Gourmets with a special predilection for dog meat will be disappointed if they come to the Chinese capital in the coming two months,” a Beijing Tourism Bureau official said.

The Beijing Catering Trade Association (BETA) has issued a circular forbidding all the 112-designated restaurants from providing dog meat dishes during Olympics and strongly advised other establishments to suspend serving the canine delicacy until September.

“If a customer orders dog meat, the restaurant staff should patiently suggest another entree,” Xiong Yumei, the Bureaus Vice-Director, was quoted as saying by official Xinhua news agency. “Conflicts should be avoided.” Canine dishes are popular among the Korean community in Beijing, as also in Yunnan and Guizhou restaurants.

Apart from being a delicacy, dog meat is also believed by many Chinese to be an effective element to lower blood pressure. Some also think it boosts “sexual prowess”.

Animal rights and environmental activists claim dogs are brutally killed with clubs and knives in China’s dog meat industry.

DaCare Staffing Services

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