SINGAPORE: Singapore's workforce is expected to grow at a pace of about two per
cent or below per year in future.
Minister in the Prime Minister's
Office and NTUC's Secretary-General, Lim Swee Say, said the current growth rate
of about four per cent per year will not be sustainable for the longer term.
This, with the tightening of the
foreign worker policy and efforts by the government to encourage companies to
improve productivity through innovation and skills upgrading programmes.
Mr Lim said these a day after the
Manpower Ministry released the third quarter employment situation for Singapore
which showed job growth slowing.
The NTUC chief once again echoed
a point which ministers have been stressing recently, that there will be no
u-turn on the government's policy to tighten the entry of foreign workers into
the workforce.
Mr Lim said: "If you look at
Singapore on the whole, we have no choice but to slowdown on our workforce
growth, because if we were to continue growing at four per cent a year, like
what we did in the last five to ten years, from an economic angle, eventually,
the Singapore economy will run out of steam.
"If we do not upgrade the
skills and productivity, eventually, we will lose our competitiveness. More
importantly from the social angle, Singapore will become overly crowded.
"So to the SMEs out there my
message to them is instead of being succumb by this pressure with the policy
change why don't we work together. There are many ways to upgrade the skills or
workers, to upgrade productivity and hasten the pace of innovation. At the end
of the day, those who are able to respond faster, they will be able to grow
even better in the new scenario"
He explained that the slowdown in
job growth in Singapore can be attributed to two factors.
The first is cyclical, given the
present uncertainty in the global economy.
He said exports have softened all
over the world and as a result, employment and hiring have slowed down.
The second reason and more
importantly is that workers are seeing a structural shift in Singapore's
manpower policy with a slowdown in the increase in the number of foreign
workers.
Mr Lim said: "What this
means is that in the future we could see a slower pace of job growth through
this policy design. Our challenge is that to make sure that the slower growth
in the workforce does not turn turn into higher structural unemployment, slower
wage increase and slower economic growth.
"On the opposite what we are
trying to do as tripartite partners, we are trying to upgrade skills to
minimise structural unemployment, we are trying to upgrade productivity to
sustain our economic growth and more importantly to ensure that workers of
Singapore become more skillful and become more productive, hopefully we will be
able to sustain our real wage increase.
"Therefore our focus today
and in the years to come will be in terms of how can we value every worker,
make better use of every worker and making better use of every worker does not
mean asking every worker to work harder or longer hours.
"But making use of eery
worker more in terms of how we can help every worker make their job easier
through the better use of technology, through process designs as well as taking
better care of them."
- CNA/ck
Business & Investment Opportunities
YourVietnamExpert is a division of Saigon Business Corporation Pte Ltd, Incorporated in Singapore since 1994. As Your Business Companion, we propose a range of services in Strategy, Investment and Management, focusing Healthcare and Life Science with expertise in ASEAN. Since we are currently changing the platform of www.yourvietnamexpert.com, you may contact us at: sbc.pte@gmail.com, provisionally. Many thanks.
No comments:
Post a Comment