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INTERNATIONAL JOB ASSIGNMENT: BOON OR BUST FOR AN EMPLOYEE'S CAREER?

11th Annual Global Relocation Trends Survey Finds That 21 Percent of Transferees Leave Their Jobs During Assignments; Meanwhile, Workforce Grows More Female - and Younger

Oak Brook, Ill. (March 13, 2006) - Is an international job assignment a steppingstone for better career positions - or a minefield of professional and family risks that keep employees close to home?

It's an interesting question - and these days the answer depends as much on an employee's family situation as their ambition, according to a new survey that explores worldwide employee-relocation trends.

The 11th annual Global Relocation Trends Survey - issued jointly by GMAC Global Relocation Services and the National Foreign Trade Council - revealed that:

Since it began in 1994, the annual Global Relocation Trends Survey has been the definitive study of companies' global employee-relocation practices, policies and projections. And as in years past, the latest survey shed light on some surprising trends among companies large and small that maintain expatriate workforces. Among them:

"This latest survey leaves little doubt that a large and growing number of companies are committed to expanding their expatriate workforces as a critical element of their global reach and success," said Rick Schwartz, president of GMAC Global Relocation Services. "As expatriate workforces continue to expand - and, as revealed in this survey, evolve in their makeup - it will become even more important for companies to bring into sharp focus exactly how their expatriate programs are producing a quantifiable return on investment."

As it does each year, the new survey paints a comprehensive picture of evolving trends and emerging issues facing companies of all sizes that rely on an international workforce.

How to Explain the Expatriate Turnover Rate?

There are several explanations for why expatriate employees leave their companies at a much higher rate than the companies' general employee populations. Among the reasons given for expatriate attrition are:

Family Concerns Ripple Through Survey

Family issues and concerns, and the impact of an assignment on a spouse's or partner's career, rippled through the survey:

Additional Survey Findings:

About the Survey

The 2005 Annual Global Relocation Trends Report was conducted by GMAC Global Relocation Services in association with the National Foreign Trade Council and other leading global human resource organizations. Since the first findings were issued more than a decade ago, the comprehensive reports have come to be regarded as the most reliable and respected sources of global mobility data and trends.

This year's study contained 90 questions and reflected responses and data from 125 multinational organizations, both large and small, with offices located throughout the world. Together, these companies managed a worldwide expatriate population of more than 155,000 and a total employee population of more than 4.7 million. For 46 percent of the respondents, the company headquarters was located outside of the United States, a record-high response. A copy of The Global Relocation Trends Survey Report is available at http://www.gmacglobalrelocation.com/survey.html.

About GMAC Global Relocation Services

GMAC Global Relocation Services (www.gmacglobalrelocation.com) is a leading, full service outsourcing partner of end-to-end employee relocation, assignment management and mobility consulting services for multinational organizations worldwide. The company serves corporations in 110 countries and manages more than $1 billion in relocation related transactions for clients. GMAC Global Relocation Services is a subsidiary of Residential Capital Corporation (ResCap), a leading real estate finance company, focused primarily on the residential real estate market in the United States, Canada, Europe and Latin America. ResCap is an indirect wholly owned subsidiary of General Motors Acceptance Corporation (GMAC). For more information about ResCap, visit https://www.rescapholdings.com.