Generic selectors
Exact matches only
Search in title
Search in content
Post Type Selectors

Survey: Czech firms ready to employ around 5,000 refugees

Share on facebook
Share on twitter
Share on linkedin
Table of Contents


Prague, Sept 10 (CTK) – Czech firms are ready to immediately employ at least 5000 refugees from countries such as Syria, especially in technical professions, according to a survey that the Confederation of Industry conducted among several dozens of large Czech industrial companies.

“However, we assume that the demand for refugees may be many times higher,” the confederation’s spokesman Milan Mostyn told CTK.

Czech firms prefer foreigners with technical education, a good command of English and the readiness to undergo retraining.

The language barrier and the very lengthy process of receiving a job permission may be the main obstacles, according to the employers and personnel agencies that CTK has addressed.

The European Commission will demand that the Czech Republic accept further 3000 migrants. The Visegrad Group (V4) countries resolutely rejected mandatory refugee quotas and the planned EC proposal for the redistribution of further 120,000 refugees across the EU. The Czech police detained approximately 2500 refugees in the past three months.

According to estimates, 100,000 to 200,000 workers are lacking in the Czech Republic.

Karel Havlicek, head of the Association of Small and Medium-Sized Enterprises and Crafts, said there has been a lack of workers in some technical professions for a long time.

Firms are ready to employ any skilful person and most of them have employed foreigners already, Havlicek said.

Immigrants are usually very good workers because they do not want to lose their jobs, he added.

Havlicek said he believes that refugees with professions such as a doctor or a technical engineer would find jobs, too.

Linet firm owner Zbynek Frolik said refugees would be good for Czech companies operating in Arab countries.

“If the migrants were interested in staying in the Czech Republic, if they applied for asylum and received the necessary permits, they could find jobs immediately and Czech firms would profit from it,” said Jiri Halbrstat, from the ManpowerGroup personnel agency.

Halbrstat said job opportunities were in agriculture, construction, maintenance, cleaning and product assembly in production firms. Qualified workers can get a job in IT, customer centres for foreigners, finances and engineering even if they do not speak Czech, he added.

But Ladislav Kucera, head of the Hays Czech Republic recruitment and consulting company, said the employment of refugees would be problematic unless the legislation changed.

To get a work permit in the Czech Republic is a long and administratively demanding process and job candidates outside the European Union cannot be flexibly given jobs according to Czech law, Kucera said.

Erik Svarcbach, from the McROY Czech personnel and recruitment firm, said the problems in employing immigrants seem to be the lack of knowledge of the Czech language and the Latin alphabet, the long asylum process, accommodation, a high risk of fluctuation, and cultural and social barriers, namely the fear of clashes between the Czech and Arab cultures at work.

The Confederation of Industry will meet Labour and Social Affairs Minister Michaela Marksova to discuss the possible establishment of a retraining agency for refugees.

most viewed

Subscribe Now