Ella Sherman, an associate executive sales director at Knight Frank in Singapore who specialises in expat housing searches, says she’s hearing of “two to three people a day” leaving. “A lot want to be closer to home, to parents and family, but also some are being retrenched,” Sherman says, referring to the process of employers terminating staffers as they trim their operations in anticipation of a weakened business climate. “And if you’re used to travelling every other weekend and now you can’t, well, there are many who aren’t handling this very well.”
The pandemic, which has sickened more than 6.4 million people worldwide and brought global travel to a near-standstill, is adding to existing pressures that had already been chipping away at the expat lifestyle. There’s been a shift in Gulf nations such as Oman and Saudi Arabia, as well as in some other Asian countries, toward hiring local personnel, which advances policies to provide more employment opportunities for nationals, who are often paid less. Working and living abroad is becoming less lucrative for citizens of nations such as Australia and the United Kingdom (UK), where some taxation policies aren’t as favourable for those who live overseas.
Meanwhile, the optics of all-white-male leadership teams — a common sight for decades at the offices of some Western companies in Asia-have become less desirable, especially for businesses that have to deal with local governments or agencies. And headhunters say contracts that include hefty allowances for housing, cars, and international schools for an employee’s children — once de rigueur for many international postings — are rarer than ever. With health fears now heightened, even countries where many companies offer extra hardship pay, such as India or China, aren’t appealing.
“You’ll see an increased reluctance for people to go to locations where the medical infrastructure is inadequate,” says Lee Quane, regional director for Asia at consulting firm ECA International. “So that’s probably the more developing locations such as the Philippines, India, where the issue isn’t just the risk of catching Covid 19, but also whether you’ll have access to the same sort of quality treatment as back home.”
Safety is coming through in a lot of conversations that Peter O’Brien, Asia-Pacific managing director at Russell Reynolds Associates, is having. The Sydney-based headhunter says inquiries have been rising over the past month from Australians considering returning from Hong Kong, the UK, and the United States. “There’s more anxiousness and more nervousness in the voices of those reaching out to us than I’ve experienced before,” he says. “The whole issue is around safety. Where people see stability is where they want to be based.”