Prime minister of S’pore to have salary five times more than U.S. President

Associated Press
09 Apr 07
http://english.pravda.ru/news/world/09-04-2007/89337-singapore_salary-0

The salaries of Singapore ministers will raise be more that 60 percent by the end of 2008 and the Prime Minister’s pay packet will be boosted to a level that’s five times that of the U.S. president, the officials said Monday.

The announcement came after Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong said last month that government ministers should be earning much more than their $1.2 million Singapore dollars (US$790,000; EUR590,000) salaries to bring them in line with a standard domestic benchmark. His remarks caused much public debate about ministerial pay, which many see as already being too high.

Defense Minister Teo Chee Hean, who is also the minister in charge of the civil service, told Parliament on Monday that the salary adjustment would come in two steps. The first would raise salaries to S$1.6 million (US$1.06 million; EUR790,000) by the end of this year. In 2008, the salaries will jump again to S$1.92 million (US$1.27 million; EUR0.95 million), an increase of 60 percent over the current salaries.

“For the public service to remain an attractive employer, our terms must keep pace with the private sector,” Teo said. “We do not seek to lead the market, but to keep pace with it.”

The high salaries for ministers have caused grumbling in this wealthy, tightly controlled city-state. The ruling People’s Action Party has said ministers’ and civil servants’ pay must be high enough to attract the best talent and prevent corruption.

The prime minister said last month that the salaries were just 55 percent of the Parliament-approved benchmark for ministers and top civil servants, which is pegged at two-thirds of the median income of the top eight earners in six private sector professions, including bankers, lawyers and engineers.

The increase will bring the salaries to 88 percent of the benchmark by the end of 2008, Teo said.

The prime minister and president’s incomes will increase by a total of 25 percent after the two-step increase, Teo said.

Lee’s salary will be S$3.1 million (US$2.05 million; EUR1.53 million), or about five times more than U.S. President George W. Bush, who currently takes home US$400,000 (EUR197,000).

Teo said high salaries were necessary to recruit civil servants.

“We don’t want pay to be the reason for people to join (the government),” Teo said. “But we also don’t want pay to be the reason for them not to join us, or to leave after joining us.”

Singapore ministers get 60 pct pay hike to $1.3 mln
Reuters
09 Apr 07

Singapore’s government ministers, already among the world’s highest paid, will see their annual salaries jump by about 60 percent to an average of S$1.9 million ($1.26 million), a minister told parliament on Monday.

Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong will see his salary rise to S$3.1 million ($2.05 million) from an estimated S$2 million, which will be five times the $400,000 that U.S. president George Bush earns.

“For the public service to remain an attractive employer, our terms must keep pace with the private sector,” Defense Minister Teo Chee Hean, who is also minister in charge of the civil service, said in parliament.

The salary increase – which will take effect in two steps by the end of next year – is slightly smaller than the government had originally proposed.

Prime Minister Lee said last month the salaries of Singapore ministers and top civil servants might have to rise to as much as S$2.2 million (US$1.45 million) because they had fallen way below benchmark top salaries in the private sector.

The announcement sparked an outcry. Hundreds of Singaporeans signed an online petition and wrote to the state-controlled newspapers to protest against the move.

Some Singaporeans said the salaries do not reflect the country’s economy or the government’s performance, and that the government was tactless to raise ministers’ salaries now given Singapore’s widening income gap.

Since 1994, the salaries of Singapore ministers have been set at two-thirds the median pay of the 48 best-paid bankers, lawyers, accountants, engineers, and executives in multi-nationals and manufacturing firms.

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