Scarce skills expatriates in South African universities: Rhetoric and realities of the "Messianic" academics
Abstract
This article investigates the reason for the continued scarce skills shortage, despite the
recruitment of expatriates in academic institutions as an intervention measure. It argues
that while the Human Resources Departments in South African universities motivate for
the appointment of expatriates in the development of scarce skills, little monitoring is
done to determine the effectiveness of this objective and, often, no performance
instrument exists for such personnel. As such, the scarce skills to be developed continue
to be wanting in the country. This article is conceptual and uses literature to argue about
the hypothetical relation between the lack of a monitoring tool for expatriates and the
continued scarce skills problems that universities cannot address. It concludes that the
continued lack of a performance-monitoring instrument in South African universities for
contracted expatriates will not solve the skills shortage problem experienced in South
Africa.