Macau householders just can't get the help
Mainland maid scheme remains in bureaucratic limbo despite ample demand, keen candidates
Thousands of Macau households are keen to hire the first batch of domestic helpers from the mainland, but the scheme has been delayed and it is still unclear when it will start.
More than 4,000 families have registered their interest with maid agencies grouped under the Macau Oversea Worker Employment Agency Association, said its president, Ao Ieong Kuong-kao.
"Adding the inquiries from maid agencies that are not our members, the number could be up to 6,000 households, but it will vary according to the final regulations set out for importing domestic helpers," he said.
He said that under the government's proposal, candidates would have to apply through the mainland offices of an association of Macau employment agencies, and would be granted a permit after getting a job in a Macau household.
But he said the details were not finalised and that the association did not know when the scheme would commence.
Macau's Secretary for Economics and Finance Francis Tam Pak-yuen said last year that Macau aimed to bring in the first batch of 300 helpers in the first quarter of this year.