- Joined
- 5/17/06
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- 133
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- 28
US companies typically prefer to have just one American or two to head foreign operations -- so as to provide oversight. The rest of the staff they prefer to hire locally and they pay them local wages (much cheaper). When I was living in Pakistan in the mid-'80s, I remember that the Pakistani #2 of a US bank (Citibank?) was earning about $800 a month -- which wasn't much in Pakistan even then. For the Americans posted there, the banks or companies don't encounter that much difficulty in securing a work visa.
That is not always the case. You will be surprised how many so called LOCAL ppl are actually US Citizens. In my firm, we always send colleagues to the offices outside of US where they originally come from.
It is not just financial companies, most of the big multi-national companies don't like to use local people as managers, they prefer to send ppl originally from there. But make no mistake, they look like local, talk like local, indeed they are Americans or Europeans.
That's why nowadays a lot of business leaders are worrying about the issue. They make huge profit outside of the G7 countries, and they can't afford to play with this kind of games.
Remember last year GS had issue to send a manager from Singapore to head an important dept in China? At the end, they have to send someone from NY office who was born in China to replace that role in Beijing? We had an article about this posted on Quantnet.