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Mudland graduates face sinking starting salaries and drop in demand for good jobs!

TerrexLee

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PETALING JAYA: Degree holders are facing a double whammy as they stare at shrinking starting salaries coupled with a declining demand for high-skilled jobs.

Bank Negara, in its Annual Report 2018, revealed that real monthly salaries for fresh graduates holding a diploma or degree have dipped since 2010.

With the amounts adjusted for inflation, the starting pay for graduates with a basic degree was RM1,993 in 2010 whereas the amount dropped by RM10 to RM1,983 in 2018.

Those with a Master’s degree saw an even greater decline in their starting pay.

Their real minimum salary recorded was RM2,923 in 2010 while this figure dropped to RM2,707 in 2018.

The report, however, noted that the minimum wage has supported increases in the salaries of lower-skilled workers in recent years.

More at https://www.domainofexperts.com/2019/04/better-believe-itbecause-they-actually.html
 

borom

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Mudland graduates nowadays can't even speak proper English and yet many get jobs easily in Singapore thanks to the generosity of the PAP
 

syed putra

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Mudland graduates nowadays can't even speak proper English and yet many get jobs easily in Singapore thanks to the generosity of the PAP
I think many multinationals are on the lookout for jiu hu graduates who can speak 3 languages. Provide them with scholarships. Moment they graduate, housing and car loan in KL. But work in sinkie. Rental homes, no need car.parents given PR no questions ask. If they want citizenship also probably given.
 

whoami

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I think many multinationals are on the lookout for jiu hu graduates who can speak 3 languages. Provide them with scholarships. Moment they graduate, housing and car loan in KL. But work in sinkie. Rental homes, no need car.parents given PR no questions ask. If they want citizenship also probably given.

They (jiuhukia) sing praises for PAP. Of course garment treated them 1st class. Unlike those ungrateful sinkies badmouth own garment
 

JohnTan

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Generous Asset
Why would any talented jiuhukia want to work in jiuhu for 1/3 the pay they can get in Singapore? And that's before we talk about living as a second class citizen for not being a m&d nor a moslem.
 

congo9

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Once a mudland university graduate came and ask $2400 starting as a starting pay.
I reject her straight.
 

Scrooball (clone)

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Once a mudland university graduate came and ask $2400 starting as a starting pay.
I reject her straight.

Lol u make it sound like u damn atas. If u really that atas, u won’t even grant a Mudland Uni grad an interview.

The people in here talk like real sia.
 

winnipegjets

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Why would any talented jiuhukia want to work in jiuhu for 1/3 the pay they can get in Singapore? And that's before we talk about living as a second class citizen for not being a m&d nor a moslem.

Because many jiuhukia don't intend to be an employee forever. Business opportunities are better there.
 

congo9

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Because many jiuhukia don't intend to be an employee forever. Business opportunities are better there.
They don't make good employees. That's why Singkie make good employees because of their craving for safety. Just pay them and they are safe.

As for the Jiuhu Kia, you got to guard against their jealousy. They will find loop hole in your business and make a meal out of it.
 

ChristJohnny

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Hello, how to compare with Mudland graduate against international standard. There are hundreds if not thousands of 10As in Mudland in their annual SPM. They should be standing head and shoulders with the best of the best. But in reality, it is not as rosy as it seemed.

This is a classic example of in denial. You can adjust and give preferential treatment to your race and shout "ketuanan melayu". Who is the donkey?

IQ and Race …
 

syed putra

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When it comes to " ketuanan " superiority complex, nothing beats the chinese.
China's superiority complex must be carefully managed
Reuben Mondejar says China is increasingly showing signs of the imperiousness it flaunted in its dealings with outsiders in the past


REUBEN MONDEJAR
Published: 12:09pm, 26 Feb, 2015


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philippines_south_china_sea_impasse_tok101_44850151.jpg
philippines_south_china_sea_impasse_tok101_44850151.jpg

Several countries in East and Southeast Asia are experiencing escalating pressure from China to concede strategically positioned maritime territories. Photo: AP
In modern China's security dealings, one notion is gradually coming to the fore: that the imperiousness that once dictated ancient China's policies seems to be manifesting itself once more in the present day.
For all but the most recent 200 of the last 2,000 years - its "sick man of Asia" period - China has lived up its self-proclaimed "Middle Kingdom" title: a country that saw itself as the centre of the world by virtue of its superiority in economic production and a perceived divine entitlement to universal rule.
Now on the rise after two centuries of languishing in the wake of subjugation by the West and internal division, a united China is again showing signs of eagerness to assert its strength, both on its own people and on other countries in the Asia-Pacific region. Beijing recently stood firm against Hong Kong's Occupy Central protests for democracy. In doing so, China underlined its right to "comprehensive jurisdiction".


China has also had a long history of human rights issues and censorship - it ranks among the top nations in terms of the number of journalists arrested, for example.
Several countries in East and Southeast Asia are also now experiencing escalating pressure from China to concede strategically positioned maritime territories, such as the Senkaku/Diaoyu Islands near Japan in the East China Sea, and the Spratly Islands in the South China Sea near the Philippines. The claims China places on these territories, thought to contain an abundance of natural gas and oil resources, are laid on the basis of the so-called "nine-dash line" that leaves much room for misinterpretation.
Skirmishes have occurred, and tensions between China and the Philippines in particular have reached such a high that the latter has taken the Spratly Islands case to the tribunal under the UN Convention on the Law of the Sea.
It is safe to assume that, in the near future, China will continue to stake its claim to these disputed territories on the basis of its stated commitment to "defending territorial integrity". These feelings of entitlement ultimately do not come across as wholly unjustified when taken into context - China is now once again a powerful nation under the banner of the Chinese Communist Party, and there seems to exist some intuitive sense that all is right in the world if China takes its place among the great powers. It will not allow itself to lose face to smaller countries, which will have to make concessions.
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It has also become apparent that the "kingdom" paradigm may be part and parcel of a unified China - a centralised method of governance suitable for its vast and diverse geographic and social make-up - and this method of leadership, by definition, incites at least some sense of imperiousness.

The challenge, then, is how to properly manage China's imperious attitude in terms of not appeasing it excessively, yet conceding that China deserves to have clout in the future of the Asia-Pacific region. Hopefully, steps towards an amenable arrangement will occur through careful negotiation rather than armed conflict.
Reuben Mondejar is an associate professor and a board member of the Southeast Asia Research Centre at the City University of Hong Kong. Rafael Nite contributed research assistance for this article

This article appeared in the South China Morning Post print e
 
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