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Since we have had time to digest these suggestions and have hear all affected parties, are you for or against the tax hike?
News @ AsiaOne
Bosses on cut in foreign labour
Recommendations likely to increase business costs. -myp
Wed, Feb 03, 2010
my paper
By Esther Au Yong
They emerge after most people have gone to bed, cleaning, scrubbing and mopping into the wee hours.
Like vampires, they disappear at the first light of day.
And soon, there may be fewer of them - if foreign-worker levies are raised, as recommended by the government-appointed Economic Strategies Committee (ESC) on Monday.
Seen as a "dirty" job, cleaning work is shunned by many Singaporeans, and carried out largely by foreign workers.
The ESC proposal is part of a wide-ranging series of recommendations to better manage Singapore's overdependence on foreign workers.
Higher levies will force employers to improve the skill level of the workforce, and to rely more on technology and innovation, the ESC said.
The levies will be raised progressively, to give companies time to adjust to the changes, and to invest in developing ways of working smarter, it added.
A few industry players whom my paper spoke to lament the increase in business costs the recommendations may bring.
The head of the human resource department in a cleaning- solutions company, who wanted to be known only as Mr Teo, cautioned against a blanket ruling for all industries.
He said: "We must be very careful before the increased levy is implemented. For example, in my industry, which is very dependent on foreign labour, it might be chaotic.
"Generally, locals perceive cleaning jobs to be low-paying and they are also status-conscious."
However, he sees value in training Singaporeans to take on more leadership and supervisory roles within the company, thus improving overall productivity.
The good news for Mr Teo: skills-upgrading for low-wage workers is also a recommendation, and industries which invest in productivity training for their workers are likely to get government support.
Mr Dennis Foo, chief executive of St James Holdings, who employs foreign workers as waiters and bartenders at his nightspots, said: "For sure, cost will increase marginally and operations will be affected in the early days.
"But looking at the big picture, raising levies will force us to look at ways to be more efficient and to see how we can train local employees to be more productive.
"While businesses may have to bear the increased cost now, our economy will benefit in the long run."
The committee also recommended that the dependency ratio be tightened. This ratio, which varies across sectors, sets out the maximum number of
foreign workers that a company can hire on a work permit, or S-Pass, for each Singaporean employee.
This will encourage more prudent and efficient deployment of foreign workers, the ESC said.
Mr Mohan Mulani, chief executive of Harry's Holdings, which runs Singapore's largest pub chain, agreed: "In the past, some companies did not make the effort to upgrade the skill sets of their workers. Hiring more low-wage workers used to be the easy way out. Improving the skills of both locals and foreign workers is the way to go." Last year, 1.05 million people, or a third, of the three-million- strong workforce here were foreigners.
Despite the recommendations to limit the growth rate of the number of foreign workers, foreigners remain valuable as they take up jobs where Singaporeans are in short supply, the ESC said.
Manpower Minister Gan Kim Yong, who chairs the ESC's sub-committee on fostering inclusive growth, said yesterday: "We have to make sure that we have enough foreign workers, especially in sectors like construction, where there are not enough local workers.
"For some companies which are competitive and growing very fast, they need foreign workers to support their growth. So, balancing both ends, maintaining the current balance at one third is probably a wise decision." The ESC also recommended that the Government work with industry associations and private- sector industry leaders to raise the quality of foreign workers to support a high-productivity economy.
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