Basel Faces Labor Deficits

Basel Faces Labor Deficits

Published: June 1, 2011 (Issue # 1658)

MOSCOW — A labor shortage is forcing companies to find creative ways to attract and keep blue-collar workers. Basic Element is ready to double salaries over the next two years, provide assistance for better housing and even dole out equity packages.

There have been dramatic changes to the Russian labor market, said Viktoria Petrova, deputy general director of Basic Element, or Basel. The crisis is over, markets are growing, and demand for workers is colossal. Basel is primarily facing a deficit of engineers, project managers and highly qualified workers.

“There are few such specialists in the country, and the number is not growing. Every year for every significant business category we review the exact same lists of 100 to 150 names,” Petrova said.

Basel has decided to fight this problem by radically altering its human resources policy. “We are abandoning our mentality of cutting costs on personnel,” Petrova said. “Staff is becoming a key resource.”

The new policy is still in the works. But the general principles are already understood: double the average salary for rank-and-file employees by 2013, improve housing and working conditions, and offer workers at all levels shares in the company — this could involve up to 10 percent of total company equity, including shares not publicly traded.

The new policy will benefit 230,000 people, Petrova promised. The company employs a total of 260,000, of which about 30,000 are executives — who already have their own salary and retention programs deployed or in the works, Petrova said.

Basic Element’s RusAl and GAZ Group already have parts of the new program in place, she said.

Yekaterina Nikitina, personnel director at RusAl, said the average salary at her company is 35,000 to 40,000 rubles ($1,200 to $1,400) per month. The goal is to increase that to 60,000 rubles by 2013. Additional spending on staff will amount to $100 million this year, $200 million next year and $300 million in 2013.

The unfavorable demographic situation is also contributing to the labor shortage, said Stanislav Tsyrlin, vice present of human resources at Novolipetsk Steel, known by its Russian acronym NLMK. From 2002 to 2010 the number of school graduates in Lipetsk plummeted from 6,000 to 2,000 graduates per year. Their motivation to work in the industrial sector has also significantly dropped, Tsyrlin said.

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