Human Resources in Central & Eastern Europe — a Mixed Bag

Acquainting an organisation with an overall understanding of human resources (HR) issues in Central and Eastern Europe is a seemingly very difficult task. According to the experts, each country is at a different stage of economic development and has developed different labour laws and employment practices. Therefore, companies looking to expand into the region should consider each nation as a stand-alone case.

Yolanta Strikitsa, head of HR consultancy at Morgan Chase’s Eastern European Practice, explains, “Before you go, you need to look at the history of each nation — it’s very different to that of Western Europe, not only socially and culturally, but also in terms of industry and business development” .

Taking Hungary as an example, she comments, “They were first to enter the developed, Western-style world. Now, they are already in the second stage of direct investment in the country with companies merging with Western multinationals” .

“Russia too” , she adds, “is past the first stage and is facing proper investment” . According to Strikitsa, the challenge for HR specialists is now more difficult than it was in the past. Formerly, she explains, “investors would go into the market for a very short period of time. Today, however, "there is more long-term investment. HR’s role now is to find expatriates who are willing to stay at least three to five years".

In contrast, Yugoslavia and Serbia are today where Russia was back in the early 1990s, with very short-term investments being introduced. That means, says Strikitsa, “that you see people coming in for perhaps three or four months to do bits and pieces” .

However, despite these very different stages of development, there is one underlying factor that unites these diverse countries — people throughout the region tend to have a high level of education. In their Doing business and Investing in Hungary — 2000 report, PricewaterhouseCoopers say, “Hungary has a skilled and well-educated workforce. Although certain skills such as knowledge of Western languages and of Western accounting and bookkeeping are still in short supply, this is changing as new graduates enter the market” .

In Estonia, Information Technology (IT) is the preferred career path. Encouraged by a government that plans to open a university specialising in IT and telecommunications, the people of Estonia are following the digital pathway. In 1999, for example, a regional bank called Hansapank teamed up with IT services company MicroLink to give away free computers to the first 2,000 people to sign up for the company’s Internet services. Furthermore, according to KPMG, today, “more than half of the population has used a personal computer and one-third of the nation have logged onto the Net” .

Likewise, Romania has a bright, digital-savvy population, and the Romanian Technology School is regarded by KPMG as “one of the best in the world” . Furthermore, the Romanian labour-force is often over-qualified. “It is a well-known fact that Romanian students finish their studies by graduating from colleges in Western countries” , they say.

The West, it seems, has also played a significant role in influencing employment legislation in Central and Eastern Europe. In Hungary, for example, modern Western principles have been incorporated through the Labour Code of 1992. This regulates the basic elements of employer/employee relationships.

Under it, workers’ councils are compulsory at all locations employing more than 50 people, and unions act as negotiating partners with employees, and have access to places of work. Similarly in Romania, the government has issued legislation on areas such as working hours, minimum wages, statutory and paid vacations, and paid maternity leave.

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