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Stuart Gentle Publisher at Onrec

Will the Government's injection help hiring?

The Australian Government has injected AU$2.8bn into the banking system and guaranteed bank deposits. But will these initiatives have any effect on recruitment?

The Australian Government has injected AU$2.8bn into the banking system and guaranteed bank deposits. But will these initiatives have any effect on recruitment?

Simon Tobin, national manager, financial services at recruiter Michael Page, comments: ìThereís still a lot of caution out there. People are wondering what it will mean: theyíre waiting to see what new regulations and government involvement will mean.î

Toby Aikins, at search firm Jon Michel, tells eFinancialCareers that the injection is not enough to boost confidence or make employees feel more secure in their jobs. ìThe banks, especially the big ones, are basically in a hiring freeze, and although it will probably have a stimulatory effect down the track, thereís no change yet. Itís not seen as big enough to stop any slide, though, but it will help control it.î

One banker at a European bank, who wished to remain anonymous, says sentiment in the financial sector has been low not because of the financial crisis itself, but because no one knew its dimension and character. But now ìit is clear we are entering a global recession and so we now have a distinct, quantifiable, identifiable problem to solve.î

Tobin agrees: ìBanking attracts intelligent, entrepreneurial people, and whatever happens in the sector, those bright brains will be working on it and probably coming up with solutions and practices that are entirely new and innovative.î

The Governmentís intervention is not thought relevant to taming the ìbonus cultureî because it concerns local retail banks, rather than big-bonus-paying international investment banks.

If bonuses at the globals do fall, says Oliver Darkes, principal consultant at recruiter Carmichael Fisher, it will be because their bankers are part of a worldwide bonus pool which will undoubtedly be constrained by the global credit crisis.