Singapore : When Singapore Airlines resumed hiring in February after a two-year hiatus, the national carrier had aimed to recruit 2,000 cabin crew trainees by March 2023.
It has hired 1,200 people to date, and now wants to bring in the remaining 800 trainees by December, as air travel continues to rebound from the depths of Covid-19.
With borders open, the airline is also considering restarting hiring from places outside Singapore and Malaysia, which it did pre-Covid-19 in China, Indonesia, South Korea and Taiwan.
Like SIA, other companies in the local aviation sector are pulling out the stops to replenish their ranks.
From ground handlers, to security staff, cleaners, cabin crew and air traffic controllers, almost all types of airport workers are now in strong demand, amid a tight labour market.
Manpower shortages have been a key hurdle for airlines in the Asia-Pacific.
In Australia, for instance, a lack of workers has left airlines and airports unable to keep up with demand since unrestricted travel resumed early this year.
In Singapore, Changi Airport's handling capacity has largely stayed abreast of growing passenger traffic.
Singapore Institute of Technology Associate Professor Volodymyr Bilotkach, who heads its air transport management degree programme, noted that major Asian markets such as China, Hong Kong, Taiwan and Japan remain restricted, which limits the speed and extent of the recovery in Asia.