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Tweak worker policy

Labour leader suggests changes in 3 areas to tackle fall in productivity
Kor Kian Beng
07 Aug 09
Laborstart

LABOUR leader Josephine Teo wants the Government to 'retune' its foreign worker policy to arrest the declining productivity of Singapore workers. Mrs Teo, who is also a Member of Parliament, has three suggestions on how to tweak the policy to reduce the over-reliance on foreign labour in sectors where the problem is rife.

Doing so will force the companies to review their work processes and improve their standards and this will lead to a boost in productivity, she said on Thursday.

Mrs Teo, an assistant secretary-general of the National Trades Union Congress (NTUC), was speaking to about 150 workers of Tien Wah Press at the printing company's ceremony to mark National Day.

Her call echoes a growing chorus in the labour movement for measures to halt the slide in labour productivity, or output per worker. It dipped 15.4 per cent in this second quarter, compared with the same period last year, continuing a steady decline since end-2007.

But the fault does not lie with Singaporean workers because they 'have been working as hard as they have been in the past', she said. She pointed a finger at local companies, saying they failed to work smarter during an economic boom, choosing instead to hire foreign workers as an easier, cheaper option to meet higher orders.

Singapore has around one million foreigners in its workforce. About 870,000 are unskilled work permit holders labouring in construction and as domestic helpers. But falling productivity is an 'unintended consequence' of the foreign worker policy, she said, which she described as fundamentally sound. She proposed changes in three areas:

One, reduce the foreign worker quota in sectors with stagnating or falling productivity. She declined to identify the sectors, saying the Manpower Ministry is examining the productivity on a sectorial level.

The Government has set up a high-level Economic Strategies Committee to explore new ways for Singapore to grow its economy. One of its aims is to cut the reliance on foreign labour. For every local worker employed, the construction sector can hire seven foreign workers; the marine sector, five; manufacturing, roughly two; and services and landscaping, one.

Two, raise the quality of foreign workers allowed in, by setting higher skills standards and tightening regulations to ensure their superior qualifications are what Singapore requires.

Third, reward industries or firms that are productive with a higher foreign worker quota. Mrs Teo cited Tien Wah Press as one company that is doing things right. The Japanese-owned firm prints commercial titles like coffee-table books and children's books. Despite the downturn, it invested in new machinery that could raise output by 40 per cent, as well as focused on reducing wastage by 30 per cent.