Chinese
A shocking influx
Since door opened last year, the numbers and speed of China's
immigrants shock Singaporeans. Forbes.
May 16, 2008
Singapore's unloved Chinese labour
boom
By Shu-Ching Jean Chen
Low-skilled workers from China are ubiquitous in Singapore
these days: in the shiny new terminal of Changi Airport,
in coffee shops, in shopping malls, in supermarkets, at
gas stations, at construction sites and populating the much-loved
open-air food courts called hawker centers.
They also make their presence felt in five-star
hotels, where one recent encounter found a Mandarin-speaking
maid who could not comprehend a word of English.
Most recently, Singapore's two bus companies
began hiring drivers from China.
Chinese workers are just one constituency
in Singapore's fast-growing foreign population, but they
are the largest component of an expatriate contingent that
crossed the 1m mark in October, helping boost the overall
population to 4.68m in an otherwise chronically aging society.
Foreigners make up about one-third of the
national workforce.
The country set a goal to raise its population
total to 6.5 million within two decades, rejuvenating itself
mainly through immigration from India and China.
But the sudden influx of workers from China
appears to have taken ordinary Singaporeans by surprise,
as the low-skilled and the elderly start to find themselves
losing jobs to the newcomers.
The tidal wave of mainland Chinese workers
began last year, when Singapore relaxed its rules to allow
more immigration to staff its service industries, part of
its measures to address an acute labor shortage resulting
from a boom in the construction, marine, manufacturing and
services sectors.
Beginning this year, Singaporean companies
were allowed to draw on foreigners for up to 50% of their
labour force; 10% can be Chinese nationals. Previously,
the respective figures were 45% and 5%.
The government last year reckoned 450,000
jobs would be created in the next five years; the country's
annual birth rate is only 30,000.
As Chinese workers with distinct and varied
provincial accents proliferate, so do natives' complaints
about their loudness and lack of mastery of English.
Their popularity with the city-state's employers,
who like their work ethic and low wage expectations, further
fuels resentment.
They threaten the job security of Singapore's
most unskilled, the low-wage workers who earn less than
S$1,200 (US$872.73) a month, numbering about 350,000.
"There are so many of them everywhere,
the mainland Chinese," a taxi driver lamented. "They
take away our jobs and force poor people to go unemployed."
This month, Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong
tried to place the issue in context, arguing that the majority
of Singaporeans have benefited from rising household incomes,
a boon stemming from the country's historically low unemployment
rate.
This follows four consecutive years of strong
economic growth.
But
labor activists view things differently. The Workers' Party
pointed out that Singaporeans are being left behind by the
recent boom: more than 60% of the record 236,600 new jobs
created last year went to foreigners.
http://www.forbes.com/markets/2008/05/08/singapore-chinese-immigration-markets-econ-cx_jc_0508markets04.html