High dependence on cheap maids and cheap foreigners in Singapore:
one reason why government will not implement the minimum wage rule? and
othr matters [
pict source: Singapore's defence burden - Something no maid can carry]
[
pict source]
Because there are already too many foreign workers in Singapore? Because too many 'rich' families will be inconvenienced?
According to -
'Measures to improve welfare of Foreign Domestic Workers'[
93.8live, 12Mar2010]:
"Presently, there are about 196,000 foreign domestic workers (FDW) in Singapore." According to
'Salaries of new Indonesian maids to rise to S$450' [
CNA, 18Jan2011]- S$450/ month is the salary of an Indonesian maid in Singapore.
What's sauce for the goose is sauce for the gander. Perhaps the govt knows that SG economy will certainly collapse
overnight when many of foreign workers and maids see overnight salary
increments in line with the implementation of such a minimum salary
policy.
Perhaps if the Singapore government is so intent on lavishing its rich
with the luxury of 'subsidised' maid services and its business
corporations through the exploitation of cheap foreign labour; then
wouldn't it be quite reasonable to request that the Singapore government
treat all it's own citizens a more equally rather than with evasive
excuses such as
"When I talk to my grassroots leaders, I just did a
walkabout in my constituency, we also have to send another message,
which is that, only about 50 per cent of Singaporeans pay taxes." K Shanmugam
'Looking out for the young and old' [
CNA:12Mar2012] Aren't GST and property tax are indeed taxes too?
Shouldn't the GST credit scheme be renamed the salary top up scheme in lieu of the absent minimum salary scheme?
Also, shouldn't the foreign domestic worker levy (currently: btw S$170 -
265) also be increased given that in both services and construction
sector worker's employment levies will go up to $600/month?
Since foreign domestic workers also add to the total population of
foreign workers residing in Singapore, why should those who employ maids
be allowed to pay lesser levies as compared to other employment
sectors- and conversely, aren't Singaporean manual (domestic) workers
getting short changed given to the fact that anybody can employ a
foreign domestic worker at a relatively low levy as compared to other
sectors under the work permit scheme? Is the SG government trying to
send the signal that it is more desirable to have a maid in tow than to
employ a foreign worker other than as a maid in tow? That it is
desirable for someone else to have do your domestic chores for you? Are
Singaporean women really so calculative that they need to be bribed with
cash handouts and discounts on work permit levies just to entice them
back to work- how much more handouts then should the disabled/ the
handicapped receive?
Also, I cannot fathom why the S-pass is cheaper than a work permit to
attain since making work permits harder to attain would encourage
employers to employ more Singaporeans in lower skilled jobs, wouldn't a
relatively more expensive S/ employment pass encourage employers to
train-up and employ more Singaporeans in these higher paying positions?
Is Singapore's desire for a status and a high GDP too intense for its
own long term good?
In commenting about the short fall in government revenues after 2016 in
'New ways to raise revenue needed, says DPM Tharman' [
TDY; 02Mar2012][
pict];
it might perhaps be good for Mr Tharman to also ask himself how long
more the rich should be allowed their foreign maids at subsidised levies
whilst Singaporeans working as maids and nannies are being deliberately
paid less due to the relatively cheap FDW maid levies.
Once again, Singapore's overpaid ministers have shown themselves to be
good only in adding steroids to the Singapore economy. No wonder they
were the first to tag their own with the pinnacle of all Singaporean
salaries.
Reference(s):
-
'Foreign worker levies to increase, says MOM' [
CNA; 21Feb2011]:
"There are nearly 1.1 million foreigners employed in Singapore as at end-2010. Out of the 871,000 work permit holders employed in Singapore, 248,000 are in the construction industry....The
next big consumer of foreign workers is the services sector. Its present
levy structure of S$170 to S$450 will go up to between S$300 and S$600. ...Employers of S Pass holders can expect an average increase of S$240 in the monthly levy
between now and 2013. The current levy of between S$110 to S$150 will go
up to S$300 to S$450 in two years time." PS: For those really in need of the assistance of a FDW: Aged (w
handicap), disabled or with young children: perhaps a levy subsidy can
be given according to need/ affordability however the FDW levy shouldn't
be in first instance so excessively cheap to the extent that it becomes
an embarrassment as compared to other levy- ditto the S-pass and
employment passes: a foreign banker/ lawyer is no more valuable then a
foreign construction worker if he were to quibble over the same
$300-600monthly levy every month given his ostensibly high salary to
start with. If the banker/ lawyer cannot afford the $300-600/mth levy,
then neither can the construction worker... and the MOM ought appreciate
that well too.