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The PAP government's open door policy for foreign workers

LITTLEREDDOT

Alfrescian (Inf)
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Forum: Get S'porean doctors based overseas to return instead​


OCT 1, 2022

MOH Holdings is looking for a recruitment agency to help recruit 60 medical officers annually from India over the next few years. Can the authorities explain the rationale for this?
There are many Singaporean doctors who are trained in countries like Britain and the United States and are based in those places. Are there preventable hurdles in them coming back to Singapore?

Lim Chew
 
When asked whether MOHH intends to expand the recruitment of Singaporean doctors trained overseas, the spokesman declined to comment.

She also would not comment on whether junior doctors from India make up the majority of those who are not local, and whether it issues similar tenders for recruitment services in other countries.

Over 90% of junior doctors hired are local: MOH Holdings​

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MOH Holdings recruits about 700 junior doctors to support the needs of Singapore's public healthcare institutions every year. PHOTO: ST FILE


OCT 1, 2022

SINGAPORE - Over 90 per cent of junior doctors recruited by the holding company of Singapore's public healthcare clusters annually are local.
These doctors are either graduates from one of the three local medical schools, or returning Singaporeans who pursued overseas medical studies at recognised universities, said a spokesman for MOH Holdings (MOHH) in a statement on Saturday.
The three local schools are the Lee Kong Chian School of Medicine at Nanyang Technological University, the Yong Loo Lin School of Medicine at the National University of Singapore, and the Duke-NUS Medical School.
The statement comes amid an online furore surrounding an ongoing tender, issued on Sept 6, by the company for a recruitment agency to provide services for recruiting doctors in India.
The tender, which closes on Oct 10, was picked up by social media users and alternative news site The Online Citizen, which raised concerns about efforts taken to hire local doctors as well as alleged incidents of widespread fraud among Indian medical students and doctors.
A letter to The Straits Times Forum also asked whether it would be possible to recruit Singaporean doctors trained in countries such as Britain and the United States and are based there.
When asked whether MOHH intends to expand the recruitment of Singaporean doctors trained overseas, the spokesman declined to comment.

She also would not comment on whether junior doctors from India make up the majority of those who are not local, and whether it issues similar tenders for recruitment services in other countries.
She said MOHH recruits about 700 junior doctors to support the needs of Singapore's public healthcare institutions every year. "We have increased our local pipeline over the years."
Between 2012 and 2019, Singapore's medical schools increased their combined intakes by 45 per cent from 350 in 2012 to about 510 in 2019, the spokesman added.

The schools admitted another 40 medical students each year in 2020 and 2021 to cater to students whose overseas medical studies were disrupted by the Covid-19 pandemic.
"We size the intake of our local universities, based on the need of the healthcare sector and also the admission standards of the universities," she said.
"Naturally, this means that places in medical schools are highly sought after, admission is very competitive but, on the other hand, graduates from our medical school are very highly regarded."
The spokesman said MOHH has been recruiting from other countries with qualified doctors, not just India, to supplement Singapore's capacity needs and help reduce the heavy workload of existing doctors.
They must have graduated from medical schools that are on the Second Schedule of the Medical Registration Act, she added.
"These doctors will only be granted conditional registration for clinical practice and under strict supervision.
"They may eventually convert to full registration if they remain in good standing and have favourable supervisory reports attesting to their professionalism and competency."
She added: "Regardless of nationality, we value the contributions of each and every single doctor to Singapore and our healthcare system."
 

Forum: Get S'porean doctors based overseas to return instead​


OCT 1, 2022

MOH Holdings is looking for a recruitment agency to help recruit 60 medical officers annually from India over the next few years. Can the authorities explain the rationale for this?
There are many Singaporean doctors who are trained in countries like Britain and the United States and are based in those places. Are there preventable hurdles in them coming back to Singapore?

Lim Chew
If they return, must start from the bottom.
 

Forum: Get S'porean doctors based overseas to return instead​


OCT 1, 2022

MOH Holdings is looking for a recruitment agency to help recruit 60 medical officers annually from India over the next few years. Can the authorities explain the rationale for this?
There are many Singaporean doctors who are trained in countries like Britain and the United States and are based in those places. Are there preventable hurdles in them coming back to Singapore?

Lim Chew
Why would they come back and help this shithole?

Firstly, PAP rejected them from doing medicine in SG and instead gave money for foreigners to do medicine. They had to use their own funds to study overseas.

SG working culture is the bullying type.

Might as well stay away and enjoy the lifestyle there.
 
why should a turd world ceca doctor get same benefits as someone trained in stinkypura ?

it makes no sense for stinkies to study in stinkypura and compete with turd world trained ceca doctors.

pap piglets policy always has been haphazard, no logical sense in it.
 
slanties are genetically inferior in any case


destined to be inferior

thie highest achieving slanties also outperformed by lower tier caucasoids.

that's the true ability of slanties, truth be told.
 

Forum: Don't get addicted to over-dependence on non-citizens to drive economic growth​

Oct 4, 2022

None of the findings in the Government's Population In Brief report is surprising (Singapore's population up 3.4% to 5.64m; more tying the knot, Sept 28).
The report highlighted the rapidly ageing population, with the proportion of citizens aged 65 and above increasing to 18.4 per cent in 2022 from 11.1 per cent in 2012.
Meanwhile, despite numerous government actions to incentivise marriage and childbirth, the proportion of singles has risen and the fertility rate has fallen in the past few decades. Perhaps the Government should redouble its efforts with some fresh ideas.
The obvious quick fix is to raise economic growth by simply importing more people who are always available.
But as we formulate population and immigration policies, I believe we should determine the best way to balance a sensible level of foreigners against a reasonable rate of economic growth, so as to maintain social cohesion and harmony.
A continuous unlimited inflow of foreigners beyond the current 37 per cent of the population has the potential to make citizens feel unconnected to their own country. In the long term, this could undermine social cohesion and hurt the delicate racial, cultural and religious harmony that is uniquely Singaporean.

We must also acknowledge that long-term over-dependence on non-citizens to drive economic growth could unwittingly become an addiction.

Such an economic model is not without dangers since most foreigners have the option to leave Singapore quickly when conditions are unfavourable.
Any exodus of foreigners could catch us unprepared and disrupt Singapore's economic well-being if the Singaporean core of critical workers at all levels is short in number or competence.

Ang Ah Lay
 
Ang ah lay wrote to St forum for fuck ?
As my niece mentioned hundreds of times on behalf of me, that this kind of things is only effective to be done infront of a large crowd of people better when on live TV or streaming.
 
Ang ah lay wrote to St forum for fuck ?
As my niece mentioned hundreds of times on behalf of me, that this kind of things is only effective to be done infront of a large crowd of people better when on live TV or streaming.
Ang ah lay this kind of people are gong cheebye like gansiokbin. They wrote to St forum is to
1. Display their A1 writing skills or
2. Thinking someone would reply to it or reconsider her suggestions ?
3. Inform other people
Whichever option is the answer and definitely is either 1 of it or all means Ang ah lay is a gong cheebye.
 
Welcome ! Welcome !All are Welcome ! 61% voted for it !
 
I can tell you that the pappies really desire for Sinkieland's FT expat population ratio to be similar to that in Dubai. :wink:

Of course they can't admit this publicly or do this instantly. Hence the 'slow boiling frog' over the years while concurrently spouting claptrap about 'Sinkies come first' or a 'strong Singapore core' etc. :biggrin:

popwhitepaper1.jpg
 
I can tell you that the pappies really desire for Sinkieland's FT expat population ratio to be similar to that in Dubai. :wink:

Of course they can't admit this publicly or do this instantly. Hence the 'slow boiling frog' over the years while concurrently spouting claptrap about 'Sinkies come first' or a 'strong Singapore core' etc. :biggrin:

popwhitepaper1.jpg
If sinkies be cum too smart, they might supplant the PAP. Compete with PAP. But if u keep the sinkies down, they will be dependent on the PAP. And grateful for their benevolence. Very clever indeed. :sneaky:
 

Forum: Knowledge and skills transfer from global talent easier said than done​

Oct 5, 2022

Minister for Manpower Tan See Leng assured Singaporeans that employers must practise fair consideration in their selection of candidates, and that the Ministry of Manpower will act against employers found to be discriminatory (S'poreans will not miss out on senior roles amid schemes to draw global talent: Minister, Oct 1).
He said that having the right complementary talent here will add to the number of opportunities available to Singaporeans now and in the future.
Singaporeans agree that we need complementary talents here to help our economy to develop faster and grow stronger.
However, it is difficult to translate the expectations of knowledge and skills transfer into reality. People protect their own interests, and it is difficult to expect expatriates to train Singaporean subordinates who would eventually become a threat to their jobs.
Dr Tan said the Government supports businesses in growing the local talent pool through leadership development schemes such as the International Postings Programme.
I believe such schemes make more meaningful progress in the development of local talent.
Therefore, more resources should be channelled to them to achieve this mission, so that Singaporeans can climb the corporate ladder instead of "being trapped in middle management", a concern expressed by Workers' Party MP Jamus Lim.

Harry Ong Heng Poh
 

Forum: Measurable objectives should be set and monitored for One Pass​

Oct 5, 2022

I am not fully convinced by Manpower Minister Tan See Leng's assurances that the new Overseas Networks and Expertise (One) Pass is good for Singaporeans (S'poreans will not miss out on senior roles amid schemes to draw global talent: Minister, Oct 1).
The One Pass is valid for five years and is not tied to any measurable objectives such as creation of jobs for Singaporeans or annual turnover.
The One Pass should be issued for a shorter period and be renewable yearly subject to meeting tangible criteria related to its stated objective of bringing in global talent who can create more opportunities for Singaporeans.
Please set proper criteria, then monitor and ensure compliance. Otherwise, the One Pass will just be a five-year Employment Pass at a higher qualifying salary.

Lynne Tan
 

Forum: Recruitment of foreign doctors can be a double-edged sword​


October 6, 2022

I refer to the report on an ongoing tender by MOH Holdings (MOHH) for a recruitment agency to provide services for recruiting doctors in India (Over 90% of junior doctors hired are local: MOH Holdings, Oct 1).
I applaud MOHH for responding to the complaints of junior doctors. In recent years, there have been reports about the excessive workload of junior doctors, sometimes leading to burnout.
With our ageing population, and the construction of new medical facilities like the Woodlands Health Campus and the new integrated hospital that will open in Bedok North, more medical staff will be needed.
Our current number of junior doctors may not be sufficient to cope with the added workload.
MOHH's recruitment of foreign doctors will help increase the pool of junior doctors in the public sector. With more junior doctors, each doctor would have a lighter clinical workload, do fewer night duties and have fewer problems taking personal leave.
However, junior doctors are also concerned about a shortage of specialist training positions.
A bigger pool of junior doctors would mean tougher competition for specialist training positions and jobs.

Will the selection of traineeship or fellowship posts be perfectly meritocratic, or will local graduates and returning Singaporeans who pursued overseas medical studies have priority in being selected for these posts over foreign junior doctors?
Will these foreign doctors be limited to working only in hospitals, or will they be allowed to be family physicians or general practitioners after full registration?
Like any other sector, bringing in foreign skilled workers can be a double-edged sword. It helps relieve workload, but it may also intensify competition for promotion and jobs.

Desmond Wai (Dr)
 
This is the PAP government's justification to import more foreign workers

24k more nurses, healthcare staff needed by 2030 as S'pore ages​

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While locals will continue to form the bulk of the nursing workforce, the number and role of foreign nurses will grow. ST PHOTO: KUA CHEE SIONG
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Joyce Teo
Senior Health Correspondent


OCT 5, 2022, 9:59 PM SGT


SINGAPORE - With the number of elderly Singaporeans on the rise, a system to care for the aged is set to become a critical part of the nation's healthcare landscape.
The new initiative to prevent illnesses and keep the citizens healthy is a move in that direction, Health Minister Ong Ye Kung told Parliament on Wednesday.
"Healthier SG is a key effort to activate and reform the public health system, empower individuals to choose health, and lay the foundation for the aged care system," he said.
One key challenge is to find enough foreign nurses to supplement local ones to care for the elderly.
Mr Ong said nurses, allied health professionals and support care staff are needed to operate hospitals, clinics and also eldercare centres.
"They number 58,000 now and MOH (Ministry of Health) estimates that this will need to grow to 82,000 by 2030," he added.
He also pointed out that by 2030, one in four Singaporeans will be aged 65 and above, up from one in six today.
In his closing speech on the debate on the Healthier SG White Paper in Parliament, Mr Ong underlined the need to prepare for a rapidly ageing population from a healthcare perspective and also the urgency to attract foreign nurses, who are in high demand globally but are also critical in making the aged care system work.
He said Singapore's healthcare system is not one system but three interconnected systems working together to deliver good health.
The first is the acute care system, comprising hospitals and emergency departments, where people were treated when they get very sick.


Then there is the public health system, which includes the control of infectious diseases such as Covid-19, as well as population health, which is being beefed up through Healthier SG.
The third one is the aged care system, which is not just about nursing homes, which continue to be built, but also enabling seniors to age in the community.
"In our Asian culture, we value caring for our seniors at home. Our seniors also prefer to age in a familiar environment. We should not lose this," said Mr Ong.
"As a society, we must guard against the assumption that seniors will always become sick and frail, and unable to take care of themselves."
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An estimated 97 per cent of seniors above 65 can either live independently or with some help in the community today.
Mr Ong also alluded to research showing that the health impact of loneliness for a senior is the equivalent of smoking 15 cigarettes a day.
"We must maintain or improve that share, and not inadvertently give them that equivalent of 15 cigarettes a day, and weaken their health and ability to live independently," he said.
But he also pointed out that an expanding aged population needs more healthcare. And since there simply are not enough local nurses available for this, Singapore will have to rely on more foreign nurses.
Replying to several MPs, including Ms Mariam Jaafar (Sembawang) and Mr Dennis Tan (Hougang), who had raised issues on manpower, Mr Ong said there has been no exodus of local nurses, and that efforts are afoot to raise the intake of nursing students locally to 2,300, from 2,100 currently.
While locals will continue to form the bulk of the nursing workforce, the number and role of foreign nurses will grow.
"If we want to take care of our seniors and the sick, if we want to reduce the workload of healthcare workers, we must expect foreign healthcare workers to play a bigger role in the coming years," said Mr Ong.
"This is especially so in areas that are facing a bigger manpower crunch, like aged care or palliative care."
In response to Nominated MP and breast surgeon Tan Yia Swam's suggestion of granting permanent residency to the good performers, given the heightened international competition for nurses, Mr Ong said MOH is supportive of this.
The Immigration and Checkpoints Authority assesses permanent residency applications holistically and will certainly consider the important contributions of healthcare workers, and MOH's support for foreign healthcare workers, when evaluating their applications, he said.
Singaporeans and permanent residents make up about 72 per cent of Singapore's pool of registered nurses and 63 per cent of enrolled nurses. The rest are from the Philippines, Malaysia. China, India, Myanmar and other countries.
Mr Ong said MOH will broaden training for existing nurses, allied health professionals and pharmacists so that they can take on crucial roles alongside doctors.
For example, community nurses will be trained in lifestyle coaching to help residents make good choices according to their care needs, he said.
There are also plans to train community pharmacists, who can already provide smoking cessation and weight management services, in influenza vaccination.
"But first, there must be enough people to train," he said,
Meanwhile, Dr Janil Puthucheary, Senior Minister of State for Health, in his reply to Mr Xie Yao Quan (Jurong) and Ms He Ting Ru (Sengkang), said Singapore is trying to grow its pool of family physicians to meet its target of 3,500 by 2030.
Overall, about 200 overseas-trained Singaporean doctors come back every year, he added.
 

Singapore still has plenty of tech jobs amid layoffs worldwide: Ng Chee Meng​

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Labour chief Ng Chee Meng urged those in the tech industry to adopt an adaptive mindset and to keep their skills updated. PHOTO: NTUC
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Osmond Chia


NOV 11, 2022

SINGAPORE - The demand for tech talent here is still high amid the spate of tech firms laying off staff worldwide, said labour chief Ng Chee Meng on Friday.
He urged those who have lost their jobs to consider applying for some 400 jobs on offer at the Infocomm Jobs and Skills Fair at the National Trades Union Congress (NTUC) Centre in Marina Bay on Friday. The fair is open online till Nov 25.
The fair comes after major tech firm Meta laid off at least 50 employees in Singapore as it slashed 11,000 jobs worldwide to cut costs. An unknown number of Twitter employees here were also affected as the social media giant cut 3,700 jobs worldwide.
Mr Ng, who is NTUC’s secretary-general, told The Straits Times: “In the local space, there is a lot of aggregate demand for tech talent… With this job fair, we are trying to help match those already equipped with the skills to jobs that are available.”
The lack of tech talent here means that opportunities are open even to those who have not worked in a while and others who are keen on a mid-career switch to tech, he added.
Mr Ng also urged those in the industry to adopt an adaptive mindset and keep their skills updated as the tech sector evolves rapidly.
About 135 job seekers attended the fair in the hope of landing one of the 400 roles on offer by some 30 firms such as Accenture and Amazon Web Services (AWS). The hybrid event was jointly organised by NTUC’s Employment and Employability Institute (e2i), Tech Talent Assembly (TTAB) and AWS.

The openings cover a wide range of roles in tech firms, from cloud engineers and data analysts to positions in sales, design and human resource management.
Mr Ng encouraged job seekers to tap the courses and traineeships available at the fair to find a way into tech. These include AWS’ re/Start programme, which was launched in June to provide training for tech roles, and career coaching services to help job hunters in their search.
TTAB president Ng Tiong Gee said reskilled workers are important to the talent-strapped industry as experienced workers in tech are hard to find.

Said Mr Ng: “They are not easy to find and they are very expensive. The number of people needed in the industry is going to grow... Where are they going to come from?”
He cited research commissioned by AWS that predicted cyber-security and cloud-related roles would be the top two most in-demand roles by employers by 2025.
Cloud-related roles are sure to be in demand in the coming years, said AWS public sector country manager Elsie Tan, adding that 65 per cent of workers indicated in the firm’s research they need cloud-related training by 2025 to progress in their careers.
Regarding the recent layoffs, Mr Ng said: “A lot of jobs have been changed by tech, so if workers don’t reskill, it will be hard to keep a job.”
Some job seekers at the fair, when interviewed, said it would be tough to switch to the tech sector but that the courses and traineeships on offer would help prepare them for new roles.

Mr Mohamad Ajmal, 41, who works at a money exchange in Bugis, said he was considering the training programmes to help him make his dream move into the tech industry.
“I have learnt some basics in coding but am still not very familiar. The traineeship programmes and advice can help make me more comfortable in a new role. I’d also like to find out if the role is a good fit for me,” he added.
A business analyst who gave his name only as Mr Lin, 36, said he was keen to find a cloud-related job, but was not confident he has the expertise as he has had several unsuccessful job applications despite attending multiple courses.
Mr Lin added: “I’ve taken up online courses in data analysis and sciences, but I am not sure if it is enough. The assessments for these roles are difficult to complete.”
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About 135 job seekers attended the job fair in hopes of landing one of the 400 roles on offer by some 30 firms. PHOTO: NTUC
Former associate program manager Fadil Ismail, 38, said he turned to an e2i career coach to help him prepare a resume that suited the demands of tech firms.
The father of four, who was laid off in March by a leading tech firm, said he also signed up for a nine-month data training course to keep up with changing tech trends while he searches for a full-time position.
“After seven years at that firm, maybe I grew complacent, thinking that nothing would happen to me. Now that I am back looking for a job, I think some of my skills might need to be updated. So I must keep learning,” he added.
For more on the job fair, visit https://uspur.e2i.com.sg/1122
 

Singapore to hire about 4,000 new nurses by end-2023​

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The increase, which will begin from the middle of 2023, represents about 10 per cent of the current number of nurses here. PHOTO: ST FILE
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Zhaki Abdullah

Nov 21, 2022

SINGAPORE - As part of efforts to enhance Singapore’s nursing workforce, the Republic expects to employ almost 4,000 new nurses by end-2023, Minister for Health Ong Ye Kung said on Monday.
This increase, which will begin from the middle of 2023, represents about 10 per cent of the current number of nurses here, said Mr Ong, adding that it is about 700 more than the number of new nurses in 2021.
Foreign nurses will make up about 60 per cent of the new nurses, to make up for the slowdown in foreign nurse recruitment during the Covid-19 pandemic, he said.
“Even whilst we ramp up foreign recruitment to bolster our nursing workforce, the large majority of our nursing workforce will continue to be local and contributed through our nursing school intakes and mid-career training programmes,” he added.
Tackling the manpower shortage will help lighten the workload of nurses, said Mr Ong, noting the country had lost many experienced foreign nurses as a result of the competition for nurses from other countries during the pandemic.
In August, Senior Parliamentary Secretary for Health Rahayu Mahzam said the proportion of nurses in public hospitals who resigned reached a five-year high in 2021, with 7.4 per cent of local nurses and 14.8 per cent of foreign nurses leaving their jobs.
In July, Mr Ong announced that more than 25,000 nurses in the public sector would receive a special payment of between 1.7 and 2.1 months of their base salary in 2022, as part of efforts to attract and retain nursing talent.

Though the crunch at hospitals has made headlines recently, bed occupancies, emergency department (ED) attendances and bed wait times have improved with the wave of infections caused by the XBB Covid-19 sub-variant having subsided, Mr Ong said.
He added that hospitals have reported that the number of non-urgent emergency department patients waiting for beds has halved from the peak of the XBB wave, while patients who require urgent care have always been admitted immediately.
The median wait times at EDs have fallen from seven hours two weeks ago to about four hours, Mr Ong noted.

He added that the authorities are working to further reduce bed occupancies by removing the ringfencing of beds for Covid-19 patients as well as expanding the number of transitional care facilities.
Such facilities admit medically stable patients from public hospitals while they wait for their transfers to intermediate and long-term care facilities or for their discharge plans to be finalised.
Mr Ong noted the newest such transitional care facility, Crawfurd Hospital, which opened on Nov 4, has 43 beds for transitional patients, of which about 15 are now occupied.
This has helped relieve the inpatient load for Tan Tock Seng Hospital, which it is partnered with, he said.
The Health Ministry is now working with Ang Mo Kio-Thye Hua Kwan Hospital to act as a partner facility for Khoo Teck Puat Hospital, he added.

Mr Ong was speaking during the Tan Chin Tuan Nursing Award for Enrolled Nurses ceremony, held at Lee Kong Chian School of Medicine, Nanyang Technological University.
The shift to preventative healthcare under the Healthier SG initiative means the role of enrolled nurses will evolve further, he said.
Enrolled nurses – who typically support registered nurses and are responsible for providing bedside care and monitoring a patient’s condition – can play a key role in supporting patients, by educating them on their recommended health screenings and lifestyle adjustments prescribed within care protocols., said Mr Ong.
These changes are currently under deliberation, he said, adding he hoped to engage enrolled nurses in these discussions.
“We will engage you in our conversations, and look forward to your continued contribution in transforming our healthcare system,” said Mr Ong, addressing the enrolled nurses at the event.
 

Hunting for a job in tech? Over 700 public sector roles on offer under new initiative​

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The Government will hold information sessions over the next weeks on the new roles being offered. PHOTO: NTUC
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Osmond Chia

Nov 25, 2022

SINGAPORE - More than 700 software engineering, product management, design and other roles are on offer in the public sector to plug immediate manpower needs over the next three months.
The tech vacancies come under Tech for Public Good, a new government initiative to fill roles in the public sector, said Minister for Communications and Information Josephine Teo in a LinkedIn post on Thursday.
In an update on the number of job vacancies, Open Government Products (OGP), a division of the Government Technology Agency, said the 700 roles are across all government institutions and agencies.
At least 50 of these job openings are with OGP, which runs the hiring effort together with the Smart Nation and Digital Government Group.
Mrs Teo said tech workers in the public sector have been behind products such as the Parking.sg system that reduced the need for paper coupons; ScamShield, an app that protects users from scam calls; and the digital registration system for Covid-19 vaccination.
She wrote: “People have always been core to the success of Singapore, and in the area of digitalisation, this is no exception... But there is room to do even more and do even better.”
The announcement comes amid a spate of retrenchments at big tech firms such as Meta, Twitter and Shopee.

Meta’s layoffs are set to affect 11,000 workers internationally, or about 13 per cent of the Facebook parent’s 87,000-strong global workforce. It is believed that at least 50 employees here are affected.
In reply to queries from The Straits Times, a spokesman for OGP said other in-demand roles in the public sector cover a range of technical disciplines, including data engineering, data science and cyber security.
“In OGP alone, we are actively hiring for over 50 positions in software engineering, product management and design,” the spokesman added.
The initiative was launched due to the growing need for tech talent to address needs in the public service, she said, adding that this was not a response to the layoffs in the industry.
The spokesman said: “It is not about absorbing layoffs, but rather getting the best people working on these critical problems.”
She added: “There are still many ways we can improve our citizens’ lives through tech, whether it’s healthcare, anti-scam technology or securing Singapore’s critical digital infrastructure.”
The Government will hold information sessions over the next weeks on the new roles being offered. Those interested can register at go.gov.sg/buildforpublicgood
 
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