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Serious Council of Towkays Recommend Serfs Take Pay Cut! Moslem Serf Wants Minimum Salary Of At Least $2k! KNN!

JohnTan

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SINGAPORE - For Mr Nur Fazli, 33, who was laid off in June, taking a six-month pay cut would have been better than losing his job.

The former store supervisor said he was taken by surprise when his employer delivered the news, as he had believed his logistics job was secure.

"I would rather have people cut my pay for a few months... rather than just (have) zero income," he told The Straits Times on Saturday (Oct 17).

"Everyone has to eat. We cannot just let go people like that."

His sentiments were echoed by other job seekers at a career fair held at Our Tampines Hub on Saturday, with some saying they were prepared to take up to a 50 per cent pay cut to secure a job.

But most added that they would actively look for other jobs, if wages stayed low for too long.

On Friday, the National Wages Council gave employers the green light to cut wages in order to save jobs, provided that Government support and other cost-saving measures have been exhausted.

It recommended that management take earlier and deeper cuts, and also inform their staff how their wages would eventually be restored.

"The employer must honour the fact that the paycut is temporary,"
said Ms Denise Tan, who attended Saturday's career fair. The former customer service executive, who is in her 50s, said she was willing to take a 30 per cent pay cut from her previous job. But she was doubtful that employers would reinstate salaries once business improves.

Around 1,400 jobs were on offer at the two-day fair which ended on Saturday. It was organised by the North East Community Development Council (CDC), in collaboration with NTUC's Employment and Employability Institute. The jobs include positions in the retail, logistics, transport and food and beverage industries.

North East CDC said the number of residents seeking employment assistance has more than doubled over the past three months, compared to the previous quarter.

The Straits Times also spoke to several Singaporeans who did not attend the job fair for their views on the NWC recommendations this year.

Some suggested that employers could stop paying their portion of Central Provident Fund (CPF) contributions as a cost-saving measure rather than cutting workers' pay, while others raised concerns over having their pay cut even though their company was still profitable.

One of them was Ms P. T. Lee, 49, who works in the private education industry. Her company has already implemented a wage freeze, which will likely be in place until August 2022, she said.

Now that the NWC has okayed pay cuts, she is worried that her employer will follow suit. "I don't think it is fair if the company is making a profit and still cuts staff pay," said Ms Lee.

Another Singaporean, who wanted only to be known as Muhammad, said he would be able to stomach a 10 per cent pay cut.

The 36-year-old, who works in the logistics industry and earns between $2,000 and $2,500 a month, said anything else would be a "burden".


Mr Muhammad said his pay remains unchanged for now, although he has friends who have been affected. "For lower wage employees, getting a salary freeze is terrible," he added. "Saving for rainy days is not possible for them, considering the low wage and high living standard in Singapore."

https://www.straitstimes.com/singap...es-but-employers-must-honour-the-deal-say-job
 
In the late 1970s, ALL employees had a significant cut from the EMPLOYERS' CPF contribution to their total
pay package. The cuts went straight back to employers' bottom line. And the CPF cuts were NEVER restored.
 
KNN celery $2k to 2.5k already not enough in sg still pay cut KNN my uncle say better jia sai then follow suit KNN
 
Bosses has been letting go staffs, cur pay, no pay etc since many months ago or even last year.
Why National Wages council now then talk rock???
 
import so mamy people lah
now locals also no jobs

Did u notice nowadays MIW kip telling Employers to ustand sinkies grievances. Jobs must go to sinkies first. Tat means all along MIW knew FTs steal sinkie jobs but buat bodoh. Now lost Sengkang MIW wake up leow
 
Did u notice nowadays MIW kip telling Employers to ustand sinkies grievances. Jobs must go to sinkies first. Tat means all along MIW knew FTs steal sinkie jobs but buat bodoh. Now lost Sengkang MIW wake up leow
That's why la.
Singkie has been faithfully voting the MIW, so that MIW can draw high pay. Create lies and mirage of 1st World in red dot Singapore.
But when ask for minimum pay of $1300,MIW kpkb said that minimum pay does not have skill standard to back up.
 
View attachment 93518

SINGAPORE - For Mr Nur Fazli, 33, who was laid off in June, taking a six-month pay cut would have been better than losing his job.

The former store supervisor said he was taken by surprise when his employer delivered the news, as he had believed his logistics job was secure.

"I would rather have people cut my pay for a few months... rather than just (have) zero income," he told The Straits Times on Saturday (Oct 17).

"Everyone has to eat. We cannot just let go people like that."

His sentiments were echoed by other job seekers at a career fair held at Our Tampines Hub on Saturday, with some saying they were prepared to take up to a 50 per cent pay cut to secure a job.

But most added that they would actively look for other jobs, if wages stayed low for too long.

On Friday, the National Wages Council gave employers the green light to cut wages in order to save jobs, provided that Government support and other cost-saving measures have been exhausted.

It recommended that management take earlier and deeper cuts, and also inform their staff how their wages would eventually be restored.

"The employer must honour the fact that the paycut is temporary,"
said Ms Denise Tan, who attended Saturday's career fair. The former customer service executive, who is in her 50s, said she was willing to take a 30 per cent pay cut from her previous job. But she was doubtful that employers would reinstate salaries once business improves.

Around 1,400 jobs were on offer at the two-day fair which ended on Saturday. It was organised by the North East Community Development Council (CDC), in collaboration with NTUC's Employment and Employability Institute. The jobs include positions in the retail, logistics, transport and food and beverage industries.

North East CDC said the number of residents seeking employment assistance has more than doubled over the past three months, compared to the previous quarter.

The Straits Times also spoke to several Singaporeans who did not attend the job fair for their views on the NWC recommendations this year.

Some suggested that employers could stop paying their portion of Central Provident Fund (CPF) contributions as a cost-saving measure rather than cutting workers' pay, while others raised concerns over having their pay cut even though their company was still profitable.

One of them was Ms P. T. Lee, 49, who works in the private education industry. Her company has already implemented a wage freeze, which will likely be in place until August 2022, she said.

Now that the NWC has okayed pay cuts, she is worried that her employer will follow suit. "I don't think it is fair if the company is making a profit and still cuts staff pay," said Ms Lee.

Another Singaporean, who wanted only to be known as Muhammad, said he would be able to stomach a 10 per cent pay cut.

The 36-year-old, who works in the logistics industry and earns between $2,000 and $2,500 a month, said anything else would be a "burden".


Mr Muhammad said his pay remains unchanged for now, although he has friends who have been affected. "For lower wage employees, getting a salary freeze is terrible," he added. "Saving for rainy days is not possible for them, considering the low wage and high living standard in Singapore."

https://www.straitstimes.com/singap...es-but-employers-must-honour-the-deal-say-job

A person earning 2500 sgd and you expect him to take a 50% paycut to hold on to a job ?Either the company is going to bankrupt soon or he has a cheaper FT willing to take over his role at the much cheaper rate.
 
The PAP is now announcing staff shortages in mainly Blue collar jobs,,,my big question is, with such a high proportion of educated singkies etc,,where are the shortages in white collar jobs?

https://www.channelnewsasia.com/new...ers-1000-jobs-restaurant-association-13441340

No takers for 1,000 F&B jobs, says restaurant association
A worker cleans the exterior of Funan’s Hawker Chan restaurant while a passerby looks on
A worker cleans the exterior of Funan’s Hawker Chan restaurant while a passer-by looks on. (Photo: Jeremy Long)
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SINGAPORE: Some restaurants have been on the lookout for workers to fill about 1,000 positions as business picked up with the return of dine-in services, but for more than a month, there have been no takers.

These positions were made available as early as Sep 14, when Trade and Industry Minister Chan Chun Sing said that the Restaurant Association of Singapore (RAS) is working with its members to provide more than 1,000 job opportunities to retrenched staff from Singapore Airlines (SIA).

According to the RAS on Friday (Oct 30), none of the positions offered has been taken up.

The jobs cut across front-end and back-of-house roles which include service crew, kitchen helpers, chefs and managers, it added. Salaries range from S$1,300 to S$7,000 a month.

The RAS has been working directly with SIA on promoting the vacancies, its spokesperson told CNA.

Besides the aviation sector, the association is also working with Workforce Singapore (WSG), as well as the National Trades Union Congress (NTUC) and its Employment and Employability Institute, to attract those who lost jobs in the hospitality and tourism sectors to make the switch to food and beverage (F&B).

While higher-skilled managerial roles such as outlet managers will require some relevant experience, F&B operators are “willing and open to training newcomers” for service-related roles, said RAS.

“So far, unfortunately, we have not received positive responses from companies within these sectors,” the spokesperson added.

BREWING MANPOWER CRUNCH

The F&B industry was among the worst hit by the COVID-19 pandemic, particularly when dine-in services were banned during the “circuit breaker”, pushing businesses to let go of employees to survive.

Minor Food Singapore, for instance, had to let go of 10 per cent of its foreign manpower as it tried “to protect as many (local) jobs as possible”, its chief executive Dellen Soh said.

“During the circuit breaker, there was a lot of restructuring and many in the F&B industry were operating on very lean manpower just to survive and pull through that period,” Mr Soh added.

READ: For F&B outlets, COVID-19 is a wake-up call. Here are seven changes they can make
But as the economy reopened with the resumption of dine-ins, many F&B operators found themselves struggling with a labour crunch.

The implementation of safe management measures, for one, required dedicated manpower, said RAS.

These could range from temperature taking to reminding customers of rules such as putting their masks back on when they are no longer eating. For others, it could involve a bigger change in operations.

Ms Bonnie Wong, chief operations officer of Creative Eateries, cited one of the group’s brands – Japanese buffet restaurant Suki-Ya – as an example.

“The restaurant used to be self-service but today, we serve customers everything at their tables. So we suddenly require a lot more manpower but that is not something we can find overnight,” she said.

READ: About 6,700 opportunities offered in food sector since April amid COVID-19 pandemic: MOM
F&B businesses told CNA that even in a grim labour market with rising unemployment, they have had little luck hiring Singaporeans.

Creative Eateries has been exploring “all avenues to get resumes” such as joining job fairs and getting recommendations from business partners, but some of its new hires threw in the towel after the first day or simply did not show up. The company still has about 40 vacancies at the moment.

“We hire people on a weekly basis but it’s really hard to find people who stay,” said Ms Wong.

Mr Soh said F&B jobs were never popular among Singaporeans to begin with, due to the long working hours and shift work requirements. The pandemic and its impact on jobs hardly shifted the needle.

“It’s funny that some sectors are retrenching but we are struggling to find workers … With the current situation, you can see that F&B jobs are really not on top of the minds of Singaporeans even when there’s high unemployment.”

Getting foreign workers, which the industry has been reliant on, is now an uphill task.

RAS said businesses have faced difficulties renewing work pass applications for their foreign workers, with border controls adding to the hiring challenge.

There is also the tighter dependency ratio ceiling (DRC), which refers to the proportion of foreigners a company is allowed to hire, and a higher salary threshold for S Passes to contend with.

READ: Business owners in F&B, retail and construction raise concerns about rise in S Pass qualifying salary
Currently, the F&B services sector faces a 38 per cent DRC and 13 per cent S Pass sub-DRC, which will drop to 35 per cent and 10 per cent respectively in January next year.

Meanwhile, the minimum qualifying salary for S Passes, which are for mid-skilled staff, went up by S$100 to S$2,500 last month. It marked the second increase this year.

“All these are unfortunately happening at a time when things are picking up and most of us are trying our best to make up for what has been lost in the past six months," said Mr Soh, whose company is looking to hire at least 50 people.

READ: Becoming less reliant on foreign manpower: Why is it so hard for Singapore’s F&B industry?
New openings in the industry will also compound the manpower situation.

“Forward-looking F&B companies take this opportunity during COVID-19 to pivot and expand their business to better position themselves for the economic upturn when it comes,” said the RAS spokesperson.

All these mean that the labour shortage could only get worse, especially when Phase 3 of the economic reopening comes around.

“Usually around the year-end, there will be many company dinners, award or gala dinners but without these, all the service crew for that are now part-timing in restaurants. If Phase 3 comes and such events are allowed to resume, hotels will start hiring and these part-timers that we have will be gone as well,” said Ms Wong.

“Even those in F&B and hospitality that are still sleeping temporarily, like the bars and caterers, could come back alive in Phase 3. The demand (for manpower) will only keep going up.”

READ: Bucking the trend, some F&B businesses open new outlets despite COVID-19 downturn
WHAT CAN BE DONE

F&B operators are already looking at how to reduce manpower needs through digitalisation and revamping work processes.

For example, the menu at Minor Food Singapore’s newly opened western grill restaurant was crafted with “simpler” kitchen processes in mind.

“We have to reengineer the menu to make the kitchen preparation processes much simpler so that even less-experienced workers can fulfil the tasks," said Mr Soh.

"The important process – cooking – will still be fulfilled by the chefs but instead of hiring five experienced cooks, I can now hire three chefs and have kitchen helpers do the rest."

Still, simplifying processes and automation can only go so far as the F&B industry remains a service-oriented industry.

Said Ms Wong: “We are already rolling out self-ordering at our restaurants but this is a fine balance as customers still want to feel like they are taken care of.”

A mindset shift among workers will still be needed.

“The F&B sector offers exciting careers with a diverse range of roles, from service-related roles to managerial roles, giving our workforce the opportunity to build a meaningful career,” said the RAS spokesperson.

“While F&B companies continue to redesign and improve their operations workflow and job roles, it is important to note that a societal culture shift in a service mindset has to happen,” he added.

“Contrary to other societies where service roles are treated with dignity and respect, perhaps we need to start such mindshare early, perhaps even when they are still in their teens.”

On how it will fill the vacant positions, RAS said it continues to work with various partners, including WSG and NTUC, to “extend the job opportunities in the F&B sector to the wider public”.

It is also in the midst of working with WSG to organise an F&B-focused virtual career fair to reach out to those who are keen on a career in the industry.
 
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