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Lim Swee Say: Minimum wage is an easy solution
October 1st, 2010 | Author: Your Correspondent
PAP minister without portfolio Mr Lim Swee Say has lashed out at advocates of the minimum wage as opting for an “easy solution.”
The minimum wage came under public discourse for the first time after figures aligned to the establishment spoke out in support of it publicly such as a professor from the Lee Kuan Yew School of Public Policy Dr Hui Weng Tat and senior diplomat Tommy Koh.
More than 90 percent of the countries in the world have a minimum wage system in one form or another to safeguard the livelihood of its low-income workers with Hong Kong the latest economy to introduce a minimum wage.
Rehashing the same old PAP rhetoric, Mr Lim claimd that introducing a minimum wage will lead to higher unemployment rates as commpanies start moving to more cost-competitive locations.
“Yes, we can try to reduce the number of low-wage workers by having a minimum wage, but the number of workers with no wage will go up and unemployment will go up,” without substantiating his statements as usual.
His claims were already debunked by sociologist Dr Vincent Wjeysingha at the Singapore Democratic Party’s pre-election rally last Saturday. He quoted a study from UK showing that the minimum wage has negligible impact on cost of living and employment rate.
Mr Lim had earlier exhorted Singapore workers to be “better, faster and cheaper” and compete directly with the hordes of foreign workers the PAP is mass importing into Singapore.
As Reform Party Secretary-General Kenneth Jeyaretnam had written in an article lately, the main problem faced by Singapore is that it has became an Asian hub for low-cost laborers whose relentless influx has depressed the wages of ordinary Singapore workers.
It is pretty obvious that the PAP regime has run out of fresh ideas to manage the economy. Singaporeans should vote wisely in the coming general election to reclaim their rights as citizens of their country.
October 1st, 2010 | Author: Your Correspondent
PAP minister without portfolio Mr Lim Swee Say has lashed out at advocates of the minimum wage as opting for an “easy solution.”
The minimum wage came under public discourse for the first time after figures aligned to the establishment spoke out in support of it publicly such as a professor from the Lee Kuan Yew School of Public Policy Dr Hui Weng Tat and senior diplomat Tommy Koh.
More than 90 percent of the countries in the world have a minimum wage system in one form or another to safeguard the livelihood of its low-income workers with Hong Kong the latest economy to introduce a minimum wage.
Rehashing the same old PAP rhetoric, Mr Lim claimd that introducing a minimum wage will lead to higher unemployment rates as commpanies start moving to more cost-competitive locations.
“Yes, we can try to reduce the number of low-wage workers by having a minimum wage, but the number of workers with no wage will go up and unemployment will go up,” without substantiating his statements as usual.
His claims were already debunked by sociologist Dr Vincent Wjeysingha at the Singapore Democratic Party’s pre-election rally last Saturday. He quoted a study from UK showing that the minimum wage has negligible impact on cost of living and employment rate.
Mr Lim had earlier exhorted Singapore workers to be “better, faster and cheaper” and compete directly with the hordes of foreign workers the PAP is mass importing into Singapore.
As Reform Party Secretary-General Kenneth Jeyaretnam had written in an article lately, the main problem faced by Singapore is that it has became an Asian hub for low-cost laborers whose relentless influx has depressed the wages of ordinary Singapore workers.
It is pretty obvious that the PAP regime has run out of fresh ideas to manage the economy. Singaporeans should vote wisely in the coming general election to reclaim their rights as citizens of their country.