Search
Contact
Login
Share this article
IMPACT – MEDIUM
The Ministry of Manpower has reported the first decline in total employment since 2003, attributing the reduction to lower numbers of foreign work permit holders in the marine and construction industries. Locals make up a growing proportion of the Singaporean workforce (not counting domestic workers) at 67.2 percent, a 0.8-percent increase from 2016. The proportions reflect the two-to-one local-to-foreigner ratio that Singapore stressed as a key workforce benchmark in the 2016 budget speech.
Key points:
Background: The Singaporean government has increased its focus on protecting local workers following predictions of weaker job growth in the next three to five years. The country has long stressed the importance of not only developing a strong local workforce, but developing employee-lean operations, with officials saying that Singapore’s limited workforce could be a “bottleneck” to growth.
Authorities expanded the Fair Consideration Framework rules in March to include employers with 10 or more employees. Originally introduced in 2014, the Framework requires that employers provide fair consideration to Singaporean job candidates and fulfill local advertising criteria before hiring a foreign national for a job opening. According to Minister for Manpower Lim Swee Say, the total number of companies that have been on the watch list over the past two years has reached 500 – including about 150 that have changed their practices and have since been removed. The information provides yet another indication of how aggressive Singapore has become in protecting and promoting its local workforce.
BAL Analysis: All indications point to a continued government focus on promoting the local workforce, which may lead to greater scrutiny of foreign workers and employment pass applications to ensure that companies do not discriminate against local job applicants. Foreign workers are still in demand in Singapore due to a potential bottleneck in local employment growth. For additional information from the Labour Market Report 2017, view BAL’s previous alert here.
This alert has been provided by the BAL Global Practice group in Singapore. For additional information, please contact singapore@bal.com.
Copyright © 2018 Berry Appleman & Leiden LLP. All rights reserved. Reprinting or digital redistribution to the public is permitted only with the express written permission of Berry Appleman & Leiden LLP. For inquiries please contact copyright@bal.com.
The State Department has launched the Immigrant Visa (IV) Scheduling Status Tool to give visa applicants an idea of when…
The government of Canada has introduced temporary Employment Insurance (EI) measures to improve access to EI benefits, including waiving the…
The Department of Homeland Security announced the implementation of its REAL ID enforcement measures at Transportation Security…
Ireland’s Department of Enterprise, Trade and Employment (DETE) has launched its new Employment Permits Online system (EPOS). Key Points:…