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Chee: Stop the exploitation of workers Print E-mail
Friday, 13 November 2009

Chee Soon Juan

I chanced upon a man dressed in office attire yesterday morning lying on a park bench. Covering his face was The New Paper's Wednesday edition with the headline in big, black letters: I WANT TO JUMP OFF WITH MY KIDS.

It was a report on how Ng Chee Kiang set ablaze his flat, burnt his two children alive and then jumped to his death. He was a bankrupt and was being hounded by loan sharks, and was in the process of a divorce.

When he lifted the newspaper from his face and saw me, Lim (as he later introduced himself) smiled one of those half-smiles. We chatted. He had just lost his job because his company found a cheaper replacement, someone from mainland China.

Lim was contemplating his next move, not knowing where he could find another job as he was in his forties. "I don't think anyone will hire me if I tell them how old I am," he said blandly.

Sadly, Lim's experience is not all that uncommon. As retrenchment and competition for jobs hot up, more and more people have no where to go - literally and economically. Singaporeans continue to face a difficult existence with wages plummeting but with the cost of living escalating.

This is the message that I have tried to get across in the 10 interviews that I have done, and about to do, with US radio stations these past few days.

All these years workers in this country have been getting the short end of the stick. They have no labour unions to speak up for them. The only existing one that has all the power has as its leader a cabinet minister who, incredibly, exhorts workers to work even "cheaper, better and faster".

Included among them are elderly Singaporeans who have little option but to continue to work menial jobs like cleaning tables just to survive. There is no financial support for them in a system designed by a bunch of ministers who pay themselves $10,000/day.

In the meantime, the Government floods Singapore with guest workers in the millions. More than one in three people you see on the streets in Singapore are not Singaporeans.

While my colleagues and I have never objected to foreign talent – and let me be on record that we are in need of such talent – the truth is that the Foreign Talent Policy has much to do with foreign but little with talent.

The reality is that the Government exploits cheap foreign labour to suppress local wages. Foreign workers are allowed into Singapore to keep wages low. Wages are kept low so that we can remain attractive to MNCs.

The result is that Singaporeans bear the brunt of depressed wages.

Do the employers, many of them multinationals from America, care? With generous tax breaks and almost 100 percent repatriation of their profits, these MNCs adore Singapore as a business venue. And you have a Government that outlaws industrial action and crushes workers' rights to boot. It's corporate heaven on earth.

The PAP even consults these foreign companies on how much Sinaporeans' should be paid. The National Wages Council has on its 2007/2008 board representatives from the US (Douglas Miller), Japanese (Shigeru Kobayashi), and German (Alexander Melchers) chambers of commerce.

The PAP's Foreign Talent Policy benefits not the workers, both local and foreign, but the rich and powerful, both local and foreign.

When I get on the air in the US, it is the guy whom I met at the park and the old lady at the hawker centre who cleans tables whom I have have in mind.

This exploitation of Singaporeans must stop and Americans must know that their corporations cannot continue to operate in Singapore and ignore their corporate social responsibilities.

I call on the US not to remain silent when the Singapore Government, on behalf of American MNCs, exploits Singaporean workers.

The ultimate tragedy, Martin Luther King Jr once reminded us, is not the oppression and cruelty by the bad people but the silence over that by the good people.

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Comments (7)
  • Newton Heath
    Bravo Dr Chee!
  • vipersonic
    The problem of exploitation of workers is real and all around us. It is sad that many better-off people, still caught up in their own happy world, fail to realise the sad truth in Singapore. Just because we're better-off financially doesn't mean we can turn a blind eye to those suffering. They are, after all, our fellow citizens. Perhaps Lee Kuan Yew has got one thing right, that is we have not yet become a nation.
  • tencents - Maybe communism works?
    Please tell me where in the world where there are no such pitiful sight? It pains my heart so everytime I see this in Singapore, New York, Beijing, London and yes, even Tokyo where people pick cans from the rubbish bin, collect cardboards and eat leftover food from lavish restaurants. If there is indeed such a place, let me know, so I'll want to retire there. But I guess not in any capitalists society in the world.

    Actually, I've come across such a place before --- a village in China where residents harvest bamboos and bamboo shoots for a living. They live on a meagre income, but everyone got food on their table. So there ... communism works eh?
  • tewniaseng
    My Burma friend told me, there is no hunger in Burma, every one got food to eat but in S'pore if you are jobless and no money,you eat grass.I wonder the advertisement calling us Singaporeans to donate $2 for the lego...for those jobless and retrenched,but is the pap govt helping these people, why call us to donate, instead the millions dollars ministers should donate 50% of their pay for 6 months to help this so called lego campaign.
  • vipersonic
    @tencents - The problem with Singapore is that the widening income gap; the rich are getting richer and the poor are getting poorer. This wide income disparity is unacceptable in a first-world nation. Also, the percentage of poor people is higher than other 1st world countries.

    Some people struggle to compete for jobs with foreigners, while others experience their problems only when they start to retire, because the CPF holds their hard-earned savings by letting them withdraw only a few measly hundred dollars a month.
  • Clear eyed
    Dear Dr Chee, thank you for speaking up for the ordinary Singaporean who is voiceless and has no rights in his own country. You are the conscience of our land which is ruled by leaders who have lost their moral compass and conscience.
  • greyheyn - Communism - Tried
    Communism has never lived long. It requires a selfless man and that's a creature that still has never evolved. What people must do and what is done is simply to harness self-interest in order to serve the greater good by creating wealth. And that is what Capitalism has done to the urban parts of China etc.

    However, communist government owns everything including human and civil rights. This is why the government can kill or jail those who don't fit the definition they have chosen. Similarly, fascism is equally applicable to the latter sentence.

    Now Capitalism has to be watched closely because greed and self-interest are dangerous things but they are the only things that have the necessary force to continue to generate the wealth to allow us to survive.

    The pendulum of history maybe swinging its position. We live it regardless of what ideology one has. But there is not much point going back on something many have tried before.
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