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Lim Swee Say and PAP are avoiding the hard truths
An honorable member of the Coffee Shop Has Just Posted the Following:
http://www.tremeritus.com/2015/08/29...e-hard-truths/ Lim Swee Say and PAP are avoiding the hard truths August 29th, 2015 | Author: Contributions Minister Lim Swee Say with his famous toothpick (Photo: ST) “Foreign workers” is a hot election issue and the PAP knows it. Hence Minister Lim Swee Say has this to say to justify the PAP’s macro-economic policies: The Government came to the conclusion that one good way to protect the Singaporean workers from (global economic volatility) was to expand the size of the work force, to go for higher growth. The foreign manpower provided some buffer to the local workforce from the fluctuation of the economy. But because of our higher growth policy and more liberal intake of foreign manpower, we were able to stay away from unemployment and wage stagnation. The gain for the Singapore workforce: There were fewer retrenchments. Also, wages went up, not just in nominal but real terms. If only this is the truth, the whole truth, nothing but the truth. There is no need to repeat the writer’s position on the government’s addiction to labour but this is an opportunity to hear from academia in refuting Mr. Lim. Growth with Equity In 2014 Professor Hui Weng Tat and Associate Ruby Toh of the Lee Kuan Yew School of Public Policy wrote “Growth with Equity: Challenges and Prospect” for the International Labour Organisation (www.ilo.org/wcmsp5/groups/public/—ed_protect/—protrav/—travail/documents/publication/wcms_244819.pdf). This is what they have to say about the higher growth strategy pursued by the PAP to “protect Singaporean workers”: With the prospect of increasing volatility in the economic environment, the fear of acute financial hardship faced by the unemployed with no social protection coverage was perhaps a key factor contributing to the aggressive growth maximisation policy pursued by the government in the mid-2000s. Although the growth policies adopted were successful in bringing down the unemployment rate, it also led to other unplanned outcomes with negative social costs and adverse effects on the welfare of workers. These included the surge in number of low-skilled foreign worker population which resulted in depressed wages at the lower end of the wage distribution, lower productivity growth, higher income inequality and overcrowding of the public transport system. Escalating property prices stemming the sharp rise in demand and increased shortages also reduced the affordability of housing for many. Hui and Toh note that Growth Maximisation failed to return unemployment to the pre-Asian Crisis level of 2% and that significant structural changes occurred in unemployment in particular among older workers. Refuting the PAP ideology of minimal state funded social safety net, the paper states: This absence of protection of temporary income loss could potentially be inefficient (Mitra and Ranjan 2011) and is at odds with the need to sustain quality growth through supporting increased risk-taking and entrepreneurship in dynamic value-creating industries that generally experience higher turnover of the workforce. However, the call for more robust social safety nets incorporating unemployment credit scheme and wage insurance scheme without the disincentive work effects has not gained traction. The presence of these social protection schemes which provide income support for the jobless and those in transition to new jobs would go a long way towards improving job matches and mobility and ensure efficient allocation of labour to facilitate the necessary restructuring efforts to sustain quality growth (Bertola 2009, Boeri and Macis 2010). In other words, if the government wants to generate high quality growth, social safety net that provide temporary relief to workers are absolutely necessary in a dynamic economy. Burdening the workers Up next Professor Pang Eng Fong, former envoy to the European Union and the United Kingdom and former Dean of the Singapore Management University, and Professor Linda Lim, University of Michigan. In their recently published paper, “Labour, Productivity and Singapore’s Development Model”: Social policy — and the need for it — have been distorted by this development model. On the one hand, macroeconomic stabilization policies have been constrained. ‘The instruments most often deployed in recessions were direct cuts in employers’ CPF contributions and reductions in government-controlled fees, charges and rentals. However, econometric research suggests that such measures entail painful adjustments for workers and are inefficacious since export demand is not too responsive to them.’ (Choy, 2010, p. 134) on the other hand, ‘low-skilled foreign workers… depress earnings at the lower end of the nominal wage scale because of their low productivity, thus impacting on income distribution adversely. If by now, one thinks this is looking like a mess, Pang and Lim put it succinctly: The long-established integration of industrial and social policy, while effective in ‘creating competitiveness’ and maintaining the profitability of business (especially for MNCs and GLCs), has created policy inter-connections which are difficult to disentangle one from another. Thus, CPF employer contributions provided for wage flexibility, and CPF savings enabled a very high degree of home-ownership, including of publicly-provided HDB flats. But today nearly half of Singaporeans lack sufficient savings at retirement, the high share of income spent on housing reduces consumption in other sectors and limits the stabilizing effect of domestic demand (Abeysinghe and Choy, 2004; Abeysinghe and Gu, 2011), and the bottom quartile of wage-earners finds it increasingly hard to make ends meet,38 even as some GLCs make record profits (including from property) and Singapore’s world-leading sovereign wealth funds Temasek and the Government of Singapore Investment Corporation (GIC) accumulate valuable assets around the world. Conclusion If the government is truly “protecting Singapore workers”, its response to increased global economic volatility ought to be a strengthening of the social safety nets, not the wholesale use of cheap foreign labor to ramp up growth rates. Strong social safety nets are a test of a government’s ability to handle its social responsibilities effectively. Instead, the government has gone for the soft option of foreign labour than face a true test of governance. It may have avoided its own hard truths but the socio-economic hard truths of its addiction to soft options have instead fallen on Singapore workers. And Mr Lim says “this is a good way to protect workers”? Chris Kuan * Chris was regional head of capital markets for Asia Pacific until his retirement. He writes opinions and commentaries mostly on economic and financial matters. Click here to view the whole thread at www.sammyboy.com. |
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