"Just as England came to look for nurses in Portugal a few years ago, they are coming to look for our students.” According to the president of the Estoril Higher School of Hotel and Tourism (ESHTE), Carlos Brandão, guarantees that international demand by Portuguese tourism students is increasing.
Greece, Spain, England, Italy, Croatia, Mozambique, Malta, Germany, Belgium, Brazil, the Netherlands, the Czech Republic, Costa Rica, São Tomé and Príncipe, Tunisia and Dubai are some of the countries looking for interns from Portugal. This is making convincing future professionals in the sector to stay in Portugal increasingly difficult according to a report by Dinheiro Vivo.
Following the pandemic, Greece began to look at the Estoril School for human resources and, last year, around 80% of international internships for final-year undergraduate students were carried out there. “These are luxury hotel chains that provide excellent conditions, paying between 800 euros and 1200 euros for an intern, with accommodation included”, admits the president of the educational institution.
This year, Dubai's luxury hotel group, Jumeirah Hotels and Resorts, took on Greece with an offer of 100 internship positions at its units. It offers travel, accommodation, insurance, food, gym, and a monthly salary of 500 euros to Portuguese students. Internships take place during the summer months after classes end. Carlos Brandão admits that the offers are starting to exceed the available students, around 140.
“I hope we can have enough students to fill all the vacancies in Dubai. I think we will get closer, so far we have 80 registered. It’s a lot of people for our size, even if we placed almost all of the hotel management interns, practically everyone would go and we still have the other protocols,” he says. For the president, the quality of teaching and the technical capabilities of ESHTE students are the great added value that various international companies recognise in these students.
Final internships are the first door that opens to the professional world and many of those who go abroad end up working abroad. “A classroom assistant, for example, can earn four thousand euros in England or Germany. In Portugal, in a position as a hotel assistant director, you will receive just over a thousand euros. There are always many students who want to go abroad because the salaries are much higher. We are talking about two or three times more”, he points out.
Last month, Emirates also carried out a recruitment campaign for cabin crew on the school premises. The person responsible for ESTHE admits that the United Arab Emirates airline is keeping an eye on these students due to their solid training and language skills. The objective, he says, will be to later transfer them to other operational functions within the company, for which broader skills in tourism are needed. Currently, a protocol is also being concluded with the United States to send students to the Walt Disney World Resort, in the city of Orlando.
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strongly recommend NO ONE work in Dubai especially in Hotels. You will have no rights there and have your passport confiscated. The pay is always advertised higher and the paid accomodation is equivalent to a prison cell far outside the city. Dubai is a terrible place with no rule of law, you can and will be treated as a modern day slave.
By Chris from Porto on 06 May 2024, 19:08
You will always battle to retain talent if you aren't paying people what they feel they are worth. Until Portugal drops the Socialist mentality, we will never be able to retain the talent we have. This is further compounded by the negative growth rate we have thanks to young people immigrating to other countries looking for better opportunities, where they inevitably find someone, get married there, have their children there and never return. And so the cycle of loss of people, potential skills as well as addition to the tax base continues.
By Michael from Lisbon on 07 May 2024, 06:22
I completely agree with Chris having once spent time as a long stay guest in an International brand 5 star hotel whilst on work related assignment in Dubai. The hotel provided a particularly luxurious bath robe, I asked the Filipino room attendant if the hotel would sell me one, he said he was very pleased that I was prepared to buy it as most guests took them without paying and the amount was deducted out of his salary and with 15 rooms to care for he was often left with very little money. I asked him why he didn't leave and he said the hotel made him sign a two year contract that automatically renewed and retained his passport. He pleaded with me not to complain on his behalf because, "things will be made bad for me". I had often stayed in that particular hotel group's hotels whilst on assignments in other countries, but never again.
By Greg from Other on 07 May 2024, 12:46
I was born in Mozambique and educated in South Africa and now working in the Netherlands as an Editor. I have tried many times to find work in my field in Portugal, but to no avail. The best I can do is to move there on retirement, not ideal as I would love to move my two boys as soon as possible. The longer I take to be able to live and work in Portugal, the longer it will take for my kids to eventually live in the country of their nationality. Due to the continued Portuguese diaspora many citizens will find themselves economically shut out of their own country.
By Victor from Other on 08 May 2024, 09:22
Dubai is world's leading tourism destination with so many man made wonders. Visas are issued instantly and 13 million people enter Dubai every month.
By Riya from Other on 19 Dec 2024, 19:19