Permits Foundation Petitions Indian Government To Grant Expatriate Spouses Easier Access To Work

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30th November 2009, 05:48pm - Views: 626






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MEDIA RELEASE PR37321


Permits Foundation Petitions Indian Government to Grant Expatriate Spouses Easier Access to Work


NEW DELHI, Nov. 30 /PRNewswire-AsiaNet/ --


    - India is Losing Out on Talent and Hobbling Global Companies


    - Poor Visa Norms Don't Support Dual Careers


    - 17 Countries Including UK, US, France, Australia Allow Spouses of

Corporate, Global Organizations and Government Expatriates An Easy Work

Regime


      Permits Foundation, an international non-profit corporate initiative, has

initiated a campaign directed at changing the existing laws on employment

rights for expatriate spouses through an improved visa regime for those on

intra-corporate transfers. The Foundation promotes access of spouses of

expatriate employees to employment through an improvement of work permit

regulations. The Foundation has made representations to the concerned

ministries and has received the support of the Indian apex industry

associations and the United Nations office in India.




    In India, the rules being applied by the Bureau of Immigration prevents

spouses from taking up employment except through a fresh, home country based

application for an employment visa. Such applications do not receive any

benefit of having a family presence in the country and is treated at par with

any employment visa application. The Bureau of Immigration states that "if

the spouse wishes to take up any employment in India, then he or she will be

required to return to the country of origin and obtain a requisite employment

visa." This results in cost, complexity and stress for spouses who usually

sacrifice their careers to support their partners abroad.


    As a first step, the Permits Foundation has proposed to the Ministry of

Home Affairs that spouses of employees on inter-company transfers be

permitted to change their visa status by applying to the FRRO in India.

Subsequently, the Permits Foundation has proposed the creation of a specific

category for applicants who are transferred to India as a part of any

intra-corporate transfer and an equivalent category for applicants who are

spouses or dependents of this category of visa holders as is the case in many

other countries.


    According to Kathleen van der Wilk-Carlton, Board Member-Permits

Foundation, "In view of the increasing number of dual careers in families,

international employers find work permit difficulties for spouses to be a

hurdle to mobility. A number of countries today offer access to work for

spouses accompanying trans-national workers. Permits Foundation argues for

change benefiting a small but significant population: those expatriates who

are employed typically with global corporations or global organizations and

People Feature Permits Foundation 3 image

governmental foreign services. The issue is of as much concern to Indian

global companies as the Indian Foreign Services, and Permits Foundation is

engaged globally in campaigning for a change to work regimes for spouses.

Today, over two thirds of expatriates surveyed find India an unattractive

destination due to the inability of their spouses to easily access work. With

this initiative Permits Foundation seeks to make India a preferred

destination for the global talent pool. Strengthening both Indian companies

with global operations, and trans-national corporations with large

commitments in India."


    Currently Argentina, Australia, Canada, Denmark, Finland, France, Hong

Kong, The Netherlands, New Zealand, Sweden, United Kingdom and the United

States (e.g. L/E visa) allow spouses of expatriate employees of all

countries, including India, access to an open work permit by which they can

work for any employer or be self-employed. Further, countries like Belgium,

Germany, Japan, Malaysia and Singapore allow spouses who have a job offer to

work for a specified employer via a simple local process, which does not

require a labour market test.


    About Permits Foundation:


    Permits Foundation is an international non-profit corporate initiative to

promote access of accompanying spouses and partners of international staff to

employment through an improvement of work permit regulations. More than 40

major international companies like British Airways, Bosch, Ericsson,

GlaxoSmithKline, Schlumberger, Shell, Unilever, AstraZeneca, BMW, TNT amongst

other organisations worldwide support Permits Foundation. These organisations

represent a growing and broad base of support from diverse businesses.

Permits Foundation has been successful in contributing to change in the USA,

France, The Netherlands, Hong Kong and Malaysia. It is currently promoting

improvements throughout the European Union and several countries in Asia and

is working to raise awareness worldwide.


SOURCE: Permits Foundation   


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