Thứ Hai, 25 tháng 2, 2013

Singapore Increases Foreign Labor Curbs as Voters Bemoan Influx

Singapore tightened curbs on foreign
labor for a fourth straight year and unveiled measures that will
raise wage costs for companies through 2015, as the government
steps up efforts to increase productivity among businesses.

Companies must pay higher levies for lower-skilled foreign
employees over the next two years and cut the proportion of
overseas workers in some industries, Finance Minister Tharman Shanmugaratnam said in his budget speech yesterday.

“This is really killing a lot of businesses, many
companies are dying,” said Max Lee, managing director of Plasma
Precision Technology Pte
., which makes and repairs equipment
used by offshore marine companies. His wage costs have risen 15
percent in the past year. “We are losing competitiveness and
productivity.”

After years of letting firms bring in thousands to work at
hotels, shipyards and restaurants, the push by Prime Minister
Lee Hsien Loong’s government to reduce dependence on imported
labor has forced some companies to delay expansion plans. The
clampdown, in part because of voter unhappiness over the influx
of foreigners, has led the government to warn that such curbs
will hurt growth in Southeast Asia’s only advanced economy.

“This is a Darwinian budget for businesses in Singapore,”
said Adrian Ball, head of tax services at Ernst Young
Solutions LLP. “Survival of the fittest!”

Population Surge

The Singapore dollar was little changed at S$1.2369 against
its U.S. counterpart yesterday. The benchmark Straits Times
Index (FSSTI)
of stocks was also little changed.

The number of people in Singapore has jumped by more than
1.1 million to 5.3 million since mid-2004 as the government used
immigration to make up for a low birth rate. There are 3.3
million citizens and 2 million foreigners on the island smaller
in size than New York City. Foreign workers made up 33.6 percent
of the total workforce, the finance minister said yesterday.

The increase in foreign-worker levies and higher salary
thresholds for some skilled employees will have an immediate
impact on business costs, the Singapore Manufacturing
Federation, which has more than 3,000 companies among its
membership, said in a statement yesterday.

“We cannot cut off the flow of foreign workers abruptly,
but we have to slow its growth,” Shanmugaratnam said. “We are
therefore making these further adjustments, and we have to do so
in full knowledge of the difficulties they will pose for many of
our companies.”

Productivity Target

Yesterday’s announcements were the latest in a series of
measures by the government since 2010 to restructure the way
companies operate and make productivity a cornerstone of the
economic blueprint for this decade. Officials blamed some
industries’ use of cheaper, low-skilled foreign labor as a
reason for low productivity in the last decade.

The Economic Strategies Committee in 2010 said the city
state must double its productivity rate by 2020 to between 2
percent and 3 percent annually.

In the 2010 budget, the government said it will impose
higher levies on foreign workers in industries from
manufacturing to services in phases over three years. In his
2011 budget speech, Shanmugaratnam announced such increases will
also take place in 2013. Last year, he said the maximum
proportion of foreign workers to local ones that companies can
hire will be reduced.

An Association of Small and Medium Enterprises survey last
year showed more than eight in 10 firms faced manpower strains.
In a white paper published last month and endorsed by
Parliament, the government predicted total workforce growth will
ease to 1 percent to 2 percent annually through 2020, compared
with an average rate of 3.3 percent per annum in the last three
decades.

Tight Labor

“Businesses have to respond in new ways to the tight labor
market,” Shanmugaratnam said. “We cannot carry on in the same
way. If we pause now and postpone the restructuring of these
industries, we will face the same problems of low productivity,
low wages and low profitability in the future,” he said,
referring to businesses including those in the construction and
marine industries.

SMRT Corp. (MRT), the island’s biggest subway operator, said in
January that its profitability in the next 12 months will
deteriorate in part as staff costs “significantly increase.”
Dozens of SMRT’s bus drivers from China held Singapore’s first
strike in 26 years in November over a wage dispute.

Unit labor costs rose 4.1 percent last year, and the
central bank said in October they may climb as much as 4 percent
in 2013. The Singapore economy grew 1.3 percent in 2012, the
slowest pace in three years.

The government will implement a S$3.6 billion ($2.9
billion) wage credit program to help companies cope with rising
salaries, and give about S$1.3 billion in corporate tax rebates
over three years, Shanmugaratnam said yesterday.

Transition Cost

“There will be some loss of cost competitiveness and for
companies that cannot adjust to this new cost structure, they
will consolidate and some of them may even relocate overseas,”
said Kit Wei Zheng, a Singapore-based economist at Citigroup
Inc. “To be fair, there has been quite a bit of effort to
minimize the transition cost.”

At Plasma Precision, where 40 percent of workers are
foreigners, Lee said productivity is being compromised as
trained workers are repatriated and local replacements remain
scarce.

“Our job is to develop the business,” Lee said. “But we
are fighting fires every day.”

To contact the reporters on this story:
Shamim Adam in Singapore at
sadam2@bloomberg.net;
Sharon Chen in Singapore at
schen462@bloomberg.net

To contact the editor responsible for this story:
Stephanie Phang at
sphang@bloomberg.net


Enlarge image
9b3d7 isgCqU3HpxMs They laughed at Fernandes, but look at him now

Singapore’s Darwinian Budget Sparks Employer Ire

9b3d7 icVT4SN9j2pI They laughed at Fernandes, but look at him now

Charles Pertwee/Bloomberg

Construction workers put the finishing touches on the pavement outside the shopping mall of the Marina Bay Sands casino and resort in Singapore on June 15, 2010. After years of letting firms bring in thousands to work at hotels, shipyards and restaurants, the push to reduce dependence on imported labor has forced some companies to delay expansion plans.

Construction workers put the finishing touches on the pavement outside the shopping mall of the Marina Bay Sands casino and resort in Singapore on June 15, 2010. After years of letting firms bring in thousands to work at hotels, shipyards and restaurants, the push to reduce dependence on imported labor has forced some companies to delay expansion plans. Photographer: Charles Pertwee/Bloomberg


Singapore Increases Foreign Labor Curbs as Voters Bemoan Influx

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