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Serious Sinkies Balls Shrinked - Thousands of Jobs to be Axed in Coming Months!

Pinkieslut

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Thousands of jobs in Singapore may go in next 6 months, say experts
There is a limit to what the Government can do to cushion the weakening job market, said observers, who expect tens of thousands of jobs here to be cut within the next half a year, when the full impact of the Covid-19 pandemic will be felt.

Measures that have staved off retrenchments, such as the recently extended Jobs Support Scheme (JSS) that helps offset part of the wages of local workers, draw heavily on the country's reserves, added experts, who fear the intensity of layoffs will build up for a while.

Aviation, tourism, retail, hospitality, entertainment, food and beverage, marine and offshore, and construction will be hit hard.

Their views echoed those of Deputy Prime Minister Heng Swee Keat, who in a ministerial statement on Aug 17 said that retrenchments will be inevitable despite the Government's best efforts. He added that the JSS cannot be sustained at current levels.

Labour experts said workers have so far been sheltered from the worst economic effects due to substantial government support.

National University of Singapore senior economics lecturer Kelvin Seah said: "Nobody knows how long (the pandemic) will last. There is too much uncertainty. It will depend on whether countries are able to contain the virus effectively."

The outlook remains uncertain and not just within Singapore, said the Ministry of Manpower (MOM). It added that the impact of the pandemic and the mitigation measures were not fully felt in the first quarter of the year.

"We are now starting to see the deeper impact of Covid-19 on the labour market," MOM said.

National Trades Union Congress (NTUC) deputy secretary-general Cham Hui Fong said: "Within the unionised sector, we are witnessing an increase in the number of retrenched workers, especially during these few months, as compared to last year."

The pandemic will be long drawn and business volumes for many sectors will be unable to recover for a while, she said. Some firms would have no choice but to resort to layoffs after exhausting other cost-cutting measures.

Retrenchments more than doubled in the second quarter of this year, with 6,700 workers laid off, up from 3,220 in the first quarter. This was higher than the peak of 5,510 during the 2003 Sars outbreak, but below the 2009 global financial crisis high of 12,760.

And this is only the tip of a large iceberg, warned observers.

Last month, labour chief Ng Chee Meng said he expects job losses to rise in the next six to 12 months as the economic impact of the pandemic becomes widely felt.

Dr Seah noted that layoffs typically do not happen right after businesses see a fall in their profits.

"Although businesses might be losing money, they may still try to retain workers," he added. "If profits continue to fall for a sustained period, then companies have little choice but to lay off workers. Some of these businesses may not even survive themselves."

When firms in key sectors like aviation and tourism fare poorly, "there will be a domino effect since these people suffer a fall in income", Dr Seah pointed out.

The aviation and aerospace sectors have been badly hit by Covid-19, with air travel crippled by border closures and airlines grounding planes. Aerospace giant Pratt & Whitney, aircraft manufacturer Airbus and engine maker Rolls-Royce are among major firms that have cut staff here due to declining business.

The impact has trickled down to other businesses, including Resorts World Sentosa and Millennium Hotels and Resorts, which have also retrenched workers here.

Mr David Leong, managing director of human resources firm PeopleWorldwide Consulting, said most affected sectors are running at sub-optimal capacities and conditions.

"The industries that depend on footfall, face-to-face human traffic are the ones that are critically crippled," he added. "This may take half a year to go by before we can see any modest signs of recovery."

Mr Paul Heng, managing director of NeXT Career Consulting Group, pointed out that there will always be job cuts - including from business units moving out of the country and mergers and acquisitions. The pandemic has just necessitated more.

But retrenchments will always be a last resort, said Ms Cham, adding that embattled businesses would first implement cost-cutting alternatives such as a shorter work week, no-pay leave and wage cuts.

Unions and associations said they have been busy working with firms in recent months in an effort to save as many jobs as possible.

For instance, the fintech industry is not spared from the economic fallout of Covid-19, said Singapore FinTech Association president Chia Hock Lai. A recent survey by the association found that over a quarter of its members had reduced manpower, although many indicated that the downsizing was temporary.

Mr Gilbert Tan, chief executive of NTUC's Employment and Employability Institute, which offers training and job matching for Singaporeans who have lost their jobs, said it will continue to hold job fairs to offer opportunities to those affected.

Singapore Human Resources Institute president Low Peck Kem advised workers to quickly bounce back if they can, including taking on gig work or reaching out to different industries.

"The longer you stay unemployed, the more difficult it is to go back to the workforce," she added.
 

Scrooball (clone)

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Singapore Human Resources Institute president Low Peck Kem advised workers to quickly bounce back if they can, including taking on gig work or reaching out to different industries.

"The longer you stay unemployed, the more difficult it is to go back to the workforce," she added.

No shit. Do we need the president of a HR institute to tell us these obvious rubbish ?
 

laksaboy

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What happened to 'Our Lives, Our Jobs, Our Future'? :unsure:

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congo9

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No wonder PAP has been losing votes, even sending down 100 billion down to appease the public.
 

laksaboy

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No wonder PAP has been losing votes, even sending down 100 billion down to appease the public.

De facto one party rule always results in the worst form of government, and this is made worse when a family holds the country hostage.

The Taiwanese got rid of the Chiangs, look where they are now. TSMC is the envy of the world today.
 

millim6868

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61% thought that PAPigs can save them if vote for them.Wishful thinking, damage is done.Too many foreigners n PRs holding to their jobs, this is the greatest mistake og PAPigs
 

winners

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Josephine Teo will rubbish that and tell you why no jobs for Sinkies? The daily 200,000 Malaysians from JB are no longer coming in to Singapore during the last 6 months already. So, it's more of Sinkies being choosy.
 

Hypocrite-The

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Singapore’s economy could shrink 7.6% on-year in the third quarter, central bank survey shows
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Published Mon, Sep 7 2020 12:24 AM EDT
Yen Nee Lee
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KEY POINTS
  • Singapore's economy is expected to shrink by 7.6% in the third quarter compared to a year ago, which would be the third consecutive quarter of contraction, according to a survey by the Monetary Authority of Singapore.
  • A potential worsening in the coronavirus pandemic remains the top threat to the Singapore economy, according to economists and analysts in the MAS survey.
  • For the full year, the survey respondents expect Singapore's gross domestic product to fall by 6%, said the MAS.
GP: Singapore street 200403

A man wearing a face mask walks past a mural in Chinatown in Singapore on April 1, 2020.
Roslan Rahman | AFP | Getty Images
SINGAPORE — Singapore's economy is expected to shrink by 7.6% in the third quarter compared to a year ago, with the coronavirus pandemic remaining the top economic threat, according to a central bank survey of economists and analysts.
That would be the Southeast Asian economy's third consecutive quarter of year-over-year contraction. But it will still be an improvement from the second quarter's 13.2% decline versus a year ago — which is the country's worst quarterly contraction on record, data by the Singapore Department of Statistics showed.
The quarterly survey was sent out last month to 28 economists and analysts who closely monitor the country's economy. The Monetary Authority of Singapore received replies from 26 of them.
Here are survey respondents' forecast for the different sectors in the third quarter:
  • Accommodation and food services would shrink by 30% in the July-to-September quarter compared to a year ago;
  • Construction, one of the sectors most reliant on migrant workers, is projected to contract by 25% year over year;
  • Wholesale and retail trade, as well as manufacturing, are forecast to contract by 6% and 0.6% on-year, respectively;
  • Finance and insurance appears to be a bright spot, with economists expecting the sector to expand by 4.7% in the third quarter from the prior year.
For the full year, the survey respondents expect Singapore's gross domestic product to fall by 6%, said the MAS. That's in line with the government's forecast for a contraction of between 5% and 7%
Recovery on the cards
Singapore was one of the earliest countries outside China to be hit by the virus. As of Sunday, the country confirmed more than 57,000 cumulative infections — over 90% of those involved migrant workers living in cramped dormitories, data by the health ministry showed.
More than 56,000 of the total cases have recovered, while 27 died, said the health ministry.
The Singapore government imposed a partial lockdown — which it called a "circuit breaker" — to contain the spread of the virus in April.
Today, most of those measures have been lifted and nearly all economic activities have resumed. The government has also allocated around 100 billion Singapore dollars ($73.26 billion) worth of stimulus to help businesses and households tide through the pandemic-induced crisis.
Economists in the MAS survey expect Singapore's economy to continue recovering. They predict the economy could grow by 5.5% next year, the results showed.
But around 90% of the respondents cited a potential worsening in the coronavirus pandemic as the biggest risk weighing down prospects for the Singapore economy, the survey found. Economists were also worried about U.S.-China tensions and slower-than-expected global economic recovery, the results showed.
On the flip side, containment of the coronavirus disease — or Covid-19 — due "for instance to the successful global deployment of a vaccine" was the most cited factor that would lead the Singapore economy to perform better than expected, said MAS.
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tanwahtiu

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Super Hero CEO paycheck ministers shd be able to create jobs for soil citizens. Why they telling us no jobs with their million dollars CEO paychecks jobs.
 

Peiweh

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Super Hero CEO paycheck ministers shd be able to create jobs for soil citizens. Why they telling us no jobs with their million dollars CEO paychecks jobs.
Comrade Tan of the CCP I think you mean the CCP must create jobs, not the PAP, no? Or are you just typing what your 50 cent masters tell you?

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