As part of our anti-discrimination role, we, at the Equal Opportunities Commission (EOC), hear of individual experiences and challenges that may not be very apparent to the public.
On the language issue, the EOC continues to work on lowering employment barriers with key stakeholders. Some recommendations we make to employers are to review their job requirements to ensure that Chinese language proficiency is included only if genuinely needed. The other is to try and provide on-the-job language learning opportunities and incentives.
In particular, government departments are being encouraged to “design their own language tests” that are tailored to the job requirements, so applicants have another way to meet the language proficiency requirements. The Civil Service Bureau will also provide basic workplace Chinese training for its ethnic minority interns.
Learning job-related Chinese at work will fill the skills gap that many ethnic minority youth face. We are certain interns will find such application-oriented and practical training beneficial.
The language barriers in employment that ethnic minority Hongkongers face is an issue that requires a longer term approach and more flexible accommodation. But the job barriers related to the ways in which ethnic minority jobseekers may dress and appear is one that requires more public education and awareness.
At a recently concluded charter event attended by the representatives of nearly 100 businesses and other organisations, best practices among Hong Kong employers were discussed.
Some of the more noteworthy efforts to promote diversity and fair hiring are showing diverse faces on job advertisements, having a diverse hiring panel, adopting a diversity and inclusion statement that goes beyond “equal opportunities employer”, reaching out to ethnic minorities through NGOs, and drawing feedback from minority staff through employee group discussions and surveys.
For employees from racial or other minorities to feel comfortable, be productive and willing to stay in the job, organisations must develop a culture of diversity and inclusion that runs the length and breadth of the system and in every interaction.
Take the hijab case for example. A little bit of flexibility around staff uniforms or attire to accommodate the hijab – or other religious dress – is surely a win-win solution. Then, the policy should be made known to all sections of the company. This is essential in preventing operational-level staff and hiring practitioners from sticking to a mainstream-biased mindset with no awareness of the flexibilities available.
With the government encouraging its departments to pay attention to one of the biggest challenges to the employment of ethnic minorities in civil service jobs – the Chinese language – there will hopefully be more tangible diversity.
There are many benefits to having greater diversity in the civil service. For a start, it “mainstreams” ethnic minorities and makes these communities, which have deep roots in Hong Kong, more visible to the general populace. This visibility can dispel many unconscious biases and prejudices that may have arisen from a lack of interaction.
With so many potential benefits and with the government leading the way, we are certain that many businesses will feel empowered to follow.
Ricky Chu Man-kin is chairperson of the Hong Kong Equal Opportunities Commission