This US farker complaint about not getting cheap labours. Plenty of cheap labours in South America, Africa, Philippines and India and why don't he go there.
Fucking bullshit American creating unemployment in his own US country.
MyPaper published a story yesterday (20 Jun) with regard to former CEO of Singapore International Chamber of Commerce (SICC), Phillip Overmyer, packing up and going back to America.
Mr Overmyer stepped down from his position as CEO of SICC two months ago. He had been heading the SICC since 2003. Before SICC, he was working for AT&T in Singapore. He came to Singapore in 1989.
In an interview with MyPaper, he said many companies in Singapore continue to struggle with manpower. Expressing his views in a personal capacity, he said he had some reservations about whether the Government’s foreign-labour policies could affect the development of growth industries in Singapore.
Citing the example of the aerospace sector, he noted that their operations can be sustained only with the support of a base of lower-level staff.
“Many operations, like test driving the engines, are done 24/7 and require skilled technicians, which may be hard to find among Singaporeans,” he said. Such jobs are also shunned by Singaporeans, he added.
He suggested that the Government could look at calibrating its manpower policies to suit the varying needs of different industries.
http://www.tremeritus.com/2014/06/21/pmet-jobs-bank-may-affect-sgs-competitiveness/
Fucking bullshit American creating unemployment in his own US country.
MyPaper published a story yesterday (20 Jun) with regard to former CEO of Singapore International Chamber of Commerce (SICC), Phillip Overmyer, packing up and going back to America.
Mr Overmyer stepped down from his position as CEO of SICC two months ago. He had been heading the SICC since 2003. Before SICC, he was working for AT&T in Singapore. He came to Singapore in 1989.
In an interview with MyPaper, he said many companies in Singapore continue to struggle with manpower. Expressing his views in a personal capacity, he said he had some reservations about whether the Government’s foreign-labour policies could affect the development of growth industries in Singapore.
Citing the example of the aerospace sector, he noted that their operations can be sustained only with the support of a base of lower-level staff.
“Many operations, like test driving the engines, are done 24/7 and require skilled technicians, which may be hard to find among Singaporeans,” he said. Such jobs are also shunned by Singaporeans, he added.
He suggested that the Government could look at calibrating its manpower policies to suit the varying needs of different industries.
http://www.tremeritus.com/2014/06/21/pmet-jobs-bank-may-affect-sgs-competitiveness/