海角大神

Beijing is booming, but talent is leaving due to bad air

The horrifyingly bad air in Beijing is driving something of an expat exodus - as well as one by young Chinese executive types. The past three months have seen the worst air quality on record. 

In February. car travel on a hazy day in Beijing. The past three months have seen the worst air pollution on record in Beijing.

Kim Kyung-Hoon/Reuters

April 4, 2013

Some days it is so thick that you can scarcely see across the street. Other days its acrid smell catches at the back of your throat. More than one day in two in recent months, it has been officially unsafe to go outside without a face mask.

Three months of shockingly bad air pollution, known to foreigners here as the 鈥渁irpocalypse,鈥 is now prompting growing numbers of expatriates and their families to leave China, and some companies to offer hazard pay to keep them here, according to executive recruiters, doctors, and business leaders.

And for the first time, they add, ambitious young Chinese executives, too, are seeking to build their careers in more hospitable cities, driven to fresher pastures by the capital鈥檚 foul air.

鈥業t鈥檚 everyone鈥檚 business.鈥 In Finland, national security is a shared responsibility.

Though foreigners leave Beijing for many motives, says Jim Leininger, principal consultant at the Beijing office of Towers Watson, a global human resources firm, 鈥渢he litany of reasons usually starts with air quality. It鈥檚 a very important factor.鈥

鈥淛ust yesterday I got two e-mails from people who said they had been in Beijing for several years, the air quality was nuts, and they wanted to go back to the States,鈥 adds Kitty Vorisek, executive vice president of DHR, a head hunting company with five offices in China. Such requests, she says, have snowballed in recent months.

The past three months have seen the worst air pollution on record in Beijing. For a couple of days in January, the levels of PM 2.5 particulate matter (2.5 micrometers or less in diameter, which reaches deepest into the lungs) were 40 times higher than those categorized as safe by the World Health Organization.

On 35 days during February and March, more than every other day, the US embassy鈥檚 air pollution monitor detected levels deemed 鈥渧ery unhealthy,鈥 鈥渉azardous,鈥 or 鈥渂eyond index.鈥

鈥淎ir quality is one of the most negative things about living in Beijing, especially for families with children,鈥 says Mr. Leininger. 鈥淚t鈥檚 all you hear about every day.鈥

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鈥淚鈥檝e talked to a lot of parents who won鈥檛 be renewing their employment contracts when they are up,鈥 says Richard Saint Cyr, a doctor at Beijing United Family Hospital who specializes in air quality issues. 鈥淔or many of them it is a very reasonable decision.鈥

Foreign business community taking a hit

The trend is anecdotal for the time being; nobody appears to have compiled any statistics yet, but human resources experts say the movement is clear and a handful of departures have attracted attention in the foreign business community.

A senior lawyer for BMW and a top Volkswagen executive both insisted on being repatriated in January, and when anyone leaves 鈥渨e inevitably hear, nearly every time, that one of the contributing reasons is the air pollution,鈥 says Adam Dunnett, head of the European Union Chamber of Commerce in China.

The traditional outflow of expatriates in the summer, at the end of the school year, is 鈥渁lmost guaranteed鈥 to be up on last year, predicts Max Price, China partner at Antal, an executive consultancy. But pollution is not the only reason, he points out; many international firms are increasingly replacing foreign executives with locally hired Chinese recruits.

That might become more difficult in the future, observers suggest. Some young Chinese executives, who have long seen Beijing as a high-paying mecca where the rewards are worth the hardships, are beginning to think differently.

Reason to go south

Appealing to them are companies such as Meizu, a manufacturer of mobile phone handsets based in the southern seaside town of Zhuhai.

Two months ago, the firm launched a 鈥淏lue Sky Recruitment鈥 campaign in Beijing, placing ads in business tower block elevators around the city to tempt young IT engineers into moving south.

鈥淒o you dare to pursue a life with blue sky and white clouds?鈥 read a Meizu poster at a Beijing jobs fair last week. 鈥淲elcome to air you can breathe with a PM 2.5 reading of 27.鈥

鈥淵oung Chinese professionals are looking not just at pay but at quality of life issues too,鈥 says Mr. Price, whose own girlfriend has just moved from Beijing to the coastal city of Qingdao to escape the pollution here. 鈥淭hey are very curious about this stuff, more eyes are open, and I can see this increasing.鈥

Meanwhile, human resources departments are scrambling to deal with the air quality issue for their companies鈥 employees, buying air purifiers, restoring hardship allowances, and asking for expert advice.

鈥淥ur hospital has been flooded with requests from companies and embassies for health talks,鈥 says Dr.聽Saint Cyr. 鈥淎 lot of businessmen are very, very worried about this.鈥

That has made it harder to attract new talent from abroad, says Ms. Vorisek. In the past six months, she says, health questions have become 鈥渕uch more prevalent鈥 among candidates for jobs in Beijing. Some companies, according to Price, are even paying American recruits "danger money" to attract them.

Long term damage to Beijing?

This could do long term damage to Beijing鈥檚 future, worries Huang Xiaoping, head of Risfond, a head-hunting company that specializes in recruiting foreigners to Chinese companies. 鈥淚t will be a big challenge for Beijing to attract foreign talent if the air quality does not improve,鈥 he warns. 鈥淓nvironmental problems could become a big obstacle to future economic growth.鈥

The Chinese government says it is aware of the threat. Most of the PM 2.5 pollution comes from power generating plants and cars. The head of Beijing鈥檚 Environmental Bureau, Chen Tian, promised in an interview this week with the Beijing News that new automobile emissions standards to be introduced in July will help reduce pollution, and that the construction of new power stations outside Beijing will be sped up so that coal-burning generators can be shut down.

In February, the State Council, China鈥檚 cabinet, pledged new fuel standards to make gasoline and diesel less polluting.

Similar promises in the past, however, have not always been kept.

Beijing is losing its pre-eminence in China鈥檚 economy, and thus its attractiveness to high-flying foreign executives, as second-tier cities develop specialized industries, says Price. 鈥淗ow fast that happens depends on how quickly they get hold of the pollution issue,鈥 he predicts.

鈥淏eijing will always be the capital of the fastest growing big economy in the world,鈥 he says. 鈥淏ut it is losing its attraction."