Tag: foreigners

  • Selling Tissue Paper At Food Centres – The Next Industry To Face Foreign Competition

    Selling Tissue Paper At Food Centres – The Next Industry To Face Foreign Competition

    Last week, we read in the Sunday Times that the latest industry facing stiff competition from “foreign talents” for jobs is the tissue-packet-selling industry at food centres and coffeeshops.

    We thought the report was interesting and taught us a few things. It reminds us that any “profitable business” is always susceptible to new entrants in the market. And believe it or not, indicators reported by the Sunday Times suggested that selling tissue paper is far more lucrative than most of us realize.

    A job that that pays a decent salary. 

    According to the article, people selling packets of tissue paper can earn anywhere from $20 to $100 day for a few hours of work. If we take the average value ($60) and assume 3 hours of work each day, the salary per hour works out to be a very decent $20.

    A seller could expect to make about $1,440 for 24 working days of 3 hours per day each month. Not too bad, especially when you consider that there isn’t really much economic value created compared to other jobs such as a cleaner or a security guard.

    Singapore, an open economy

    Our government never fails to remind us that Singapore is an open economy. And part and parcel of being an open economy includes a very open labour market. To ensure we retain our competitiveness, we are always taught to be cheaper, faster and better, and that applies to everything, including selling packets tissue paper.

    A more able-bodied foreigner who can cover ground more quickly would be able to reach out to more patrons at food centres and coffeeshops, thus, increasing their revenue. And because people are unlikely to make multiple purchases of tissue packets, this appears to be one of those finite, first-come-first-serve market.

    Taking care of our elderly

    We respect and empathise with the elderly in our society who are working hard to provide for themselves and their dependents in some cases, especially in our increasingly expensive country. Having to walk around for a few hours each day while lugging around huge plastic bag full of packets of tissue paper is not easy for some of the elderly people selling them. Doing so at an old age and possibly, with disabilities, makes it so much harder.

    Being “self-employed”, these elderly citizens have no access to the type of Human Resources perks that the rest of us take for granted. No paid medical leaves when they are ill, no annual leave entitlements and no medical coverage.

    And now, foreign competitors vying with them in the industry.

    What can be done?

    Even if they want to, it is difficult for any government legislation to help these elderly folks who are in the business. This is because sellers are required to have a license to sell tissue paper.

    According to NEA, only 11 such licenses have been granted to sell packets of tissue paper. As such, we think it is safe to assume that foreigner or not, most of the sellers plying their trade are doing so illegally anyway.

    Because most are plying their trade illegally, there isn’t much the government can do to help them. We believe that the government’s requirement for licenses to be applied for is to protect the local citizens, and maybe even, to render them further assistance via referring them to social welfare groups.

    However, most do not do so, and are thus, left to fend on their own.

    Singaporeans can do our parts by helping locals. By simply not purchasing packets of tissue paper from non-locals or able bodied people, we can ensure that only the most needy are able to sell their packets. We can also inform local sellers about the need to apply and get a license from the NEA so that they can continue plying their trade legally, and at the same time, get access to further social help if they are in hardship.

     

    Source: http://dollarsandsense.sg

  • Indranee Rajah: Building Economy While Maintaning Singaporean Core A Tricky Balancing Act

    Indranee Rajah: Building Economy While Maintaning Singaporean Core A Tricky Balancing Act

    Building a strong economy with the help of foreign labour while keeping a Singaporean core is ‘a tricky balancing act’, said Senior Minister of State for Law and Education Indranee Rajah.

    With low total fertility rates and an ageing population looming in the near future, the city-state may have fewer working individuals to drive the economy and support more seniors, Ms Indranee told some 300 students who attended the annual Polytechnic Forum held at Ngee Ann Polytechnic on Friday afternoon.

    “If you don’t have enough of your own people, then you have to ask people from outside to come in,” she said. “And that is a very tricky balancing act to do, because you must not have so many people coming in from the outside that your own local, Singaporean core is eroded.”

    She also acknowledged there are sectors that Singaporeans are not keen on working, such as construction. “So that is one area where we will still need to have people from abroad to help out with,” she said.

    Ms Indranee said the Government had been tightening up on foreign labour in the last five years, but it had to be a gradual process. She cited the F&B sector, which faces a lack of waiters and waitresses.

    “So for us in the Government, we’ve got to make sure we finely calibrate it,” she said. “But as far as possible, wherever Singaporeans can take up those positions, that’s what we want.”

    The Polytechnic Forum, which started in 1996, is organised annually by the five polytechnics. It provides a platform for students to gain a deeper understanding of national issues through activities, discussions and dialogue with industry and government leaders.

    During the two hour-long dialogue on Friday, students from all five polytechnics raised issues such as university education and National Service. A common concern was on permanent residency and citizenship.

    Ms Indranee noted that foreigners do not automatically qualify to become Singapore permanent residents or citizens. “If we add to the Singaporean pool, (they) must be people who identify with us, share our values and can contribute to Singapore,” she said.

    Urging Singaporeans not to be xenophobic, Ms Indranee added: “We should be willing to allow people to join the Singapore family.”

     

    Source: www.straitstimes.com

  • Singapore Sees Influx Of Foreign Beggars

    Singapore Sees Influx Of Foreign Beggars

    Able-bodied foreigners are flying in to Singapore on a tourist visa selling tissue paper on the streets. At 3 packets for S$1, these foreign beggers compete with Singaporean poor for street donations, who unlike them, are licensed by the National Environment Agency (NEA).

    Under the NEA, Singaporean poor, who are often handicapped and elderly unable to find employment, are only allowed to peddle tissue paper in specific areas and have to pay S$120 annual license upfront. Foreign tissue peddlers are however not entitled to these “privileges” and they will make a quick buck in and out avoiding the authorities whose resources are already overstrained by the increase in crime rate.

    Photo from Gintai

    For the first six months of 2015, NEA caught 72 foreign illegal peddlers selling tissue paper, mobile phone accessories, clothes and other goods. Those who were caught at fined S$300 for the first offense and this applies to Singaporeans as well.

    Foreign tissue peddlers who are usually from China, Vietnam, Thailand and Myanmar would trawl local coffee shops and fastfood restaurants, or simply loiter at one spot half-begging. They would earn between S$20 to S$100 for a few hours of “work”. According to The Straits TImes, a 65 year old  Thai woman said that she earned S$50 in a few hours.

    According to the NEA, there are only 11 licensed street tissue peddlers in Singapore which means the hundreds, if not thousands, in Singapore streets are mostly illegal. In an interview with the media, 65 year old tissue paper seller Goh Say Lian who is blind in one eye and having kidney failure lambaste the foreign tissue peddlers:

    “They are able-bodied and can walk, yet they come here to sell tissue paper and snatch business from us”

    The Singapore PAP government has just been returned to power with a strong mandate of 69.86%. It is unlikely the government will enforce stricter immigration laws now that the election is just over. Singaporean poor will likely see greater foreign competition which the government often attributed to “globalization”.

     

    Source: http://statestimesreview.com

  • GE2015: Let Your Rallying Cry Be One Of Hope, Not Hate

    GE2015: Let Your Rallying Cry Be One Of Hope, Not Hate

    It’s Thursday, 8.30pm, and the crowd at the Singaporeans First Party (SingFirst) rally is getting heated up.

    In front of me, a party candidate stands on the stage, behind a rostrum, his fist in the air. He shouts into a mic. “Foreigners have come into our country, stolen our jobs, broken our families! They have destroyed our self-esteem!”

    A wave of cheers erupted from the audience, with only a smattering of boos.

    “Throw them out!” yelled a man with grey, thinning hair, his elbows propped against a yellow metal barricade.

    Another man, with a gold chain around his neck and his hands cupped around his mouth, screamed, “Ask them to f*** off! They are not Singaporeans!”, as a woman, with her hair stuck to her forehead, knocked two empty plastic bottles furiously against each other, showing her support for his strong words. A folded-up pram leaned against her thin frame.

    Nearby, two children stood silent, peering through the yellow bars. Their parents were nowhere to be found.

    The same scene was played out at a Reform Party rally the next night and another SingFirst rally on Saturday.

    Targeting foreigners is a tactic as old as politics itself.

    Ever since tribes were formed, and nations created, the notion of “us”and “them” is the foundation of any group.

    History is replete with examples of how a group of people, in trying to define themselves, use the “others” as examples, with disastrous and often violent results.

    Look at the dozens of civil wars in Africa, where genocide has been undertaken, or, more recently, the ostracising of the Rohingyas in Myanmar.

    In this general election, there has been no violence, or suggestion that Singaporeans take up violence, thankfully.

    But political parties are not averse to, and rather gleeful about, pushing the agenda against foreigners to score political points.

    At a Reform Party rally last Friday, a candidate shouted: “The foreigners have come into our country, stolen our jobs with their fake degrees!”

    What’s more worrying than the political parties’ message is that it seems to have gotten some traction among those in the audience.

    Dr Mohan J. Dutta, who studies communication for policy changes at the National University of Singapore, said that xenophobic language hinders “meaningful deliberations” because it provides “simplistic views towards deep social issues”.

    “Xenophobic language appeals to deep-seated emotions (in the audience), and people get fired up, which affects the quality of discourse.”

    On Saturday, a Malay candidate said: “Let me speak in Malay, because foreigners cannot understand Malay.” Well, as a born-and-bred Singaporean Chinese, I cannot understand a whole speech delivered in Malay either.

    For me, these anti-foreigner speeches were intensely uncomfortable experiences.

    As a manpower reporter, I’ve spent many evenings visiting migrant workers staying in walk-up apartments, purpose-built dorms, even bin centres. Recently, I’ve also started talking to more foreign white-collared workers in IT, healthcare and the finance sectors.

    This group has been the target at rallies for allegedly stealing jobs meant for Singaporeans.

    Over the Chinese New Year period this year, I travelled with a group of mostly Bangladeshi and Indian nationals to Malaysia for a holiday organised by a local dorm operator. Most of them live on the fringes of our society, in industrial areas in Toh Guan, Senoko and Tuas.

    “Othering” foreign workers is easy because they do not share the same social spaces as most Singaporeans. They live among themselves; consistently eat food that is not usual hawker fare or typical Singaporean food such as chicken rice, laksa and char kway teow; and band together during weekends at places such as Lucky Plaza, Little India and Chinatown.

    And to opposition parties, foreigners can often easily become the same thing they accuse the ruling party of using them as: nameless digits.

    Well, they are not.

    Some of them are mothers, like domestic worker Trina Ocampo, 23, from the Philippines, who cried every night for a month when she first came to Singapore, because she missed her one-year-old son.

    Others are husbands, like construction worker Abul, 33, who wanted to work overseas so he could pay off medical debts for his sick wife. He hurt his right thumb when he was trying to close a latch at his workplace last month, and refuses to see a doctor because he is afraid of being out of work here.

    They are also sons and daughters, like IT consultant Arjuna, 33, and nurse Maria Bautista, 27, who send money home so their parents can have a better life. Mr Arjuna’s parents, for example, sold part of their land in India for him to study here.

    As the world becomes more connected, the issue of migration must be treated with kid’s gloves.

    Singaporeans are feeling cramped as more migrants flock here to seek their fortunes. It is not unfair for citizens to hope that the Government can protect their interests better. At the same time, it is also the Government’s responsibility to ensure we are not left behind as the world surges forward.

    So we need representatives who have a plan and can represent us to have a healthy, hearty discussion on what to do next regarding migration.

    But stop xenophobia. Singapore’s politics deserves better.

     

    Source: www.straitstimes.com

  • SPF Refuse To Do Anything About PRC Couple Sleeping In Public Park

    SPF Refuse To Do Anything About PRC Couple Sleeping In Public Park

    A frustrated reader has sent us photos of a PRC couple who have made Somme Road park their unofficial home, despite her pleas to the Singapore Police Force (SPF) to do something about the foreign couple for the safety of the children living nearby. She has written 2 emails to the SPF but has the couple have yet to be “evicted” out of the park, and now the couple have even taken to sleeping and living in the children’s playground in the same park.
    Read her 2 emails sent to the SPF and Ministry of Home Affairs here:
    Dear Sirs,
    this same PRC couple sleeping in Somme road park and storing their garung gunitrolley and their cardboard, cans etc in the bushes. 3rd time already.
    21 june 2015 was the first time the police were called.
    1) 2 previous times, police were called, police just looked at their ID and let them goscott free
    2) nothing was taken down, nothing ca be traced, nothing on record
    3) with the LAX attitude from our police force towards these PRs/new citizens, why would they even care to respect Singapore law?
    Nparks officers were more proactive, but the Police seemed to be UTTER BO CHAP.
    a very dissappoint born an dbred Singaporean
    Wendy Chan <[email protected]>
    —-
    Dear Sirs,
    The police must have come since the sleeping couple have since moved from their original position and now they are sleeping inside the children’s slide in the playground.
    Did the police even take down their details?
    Because they do not seem to think they are doing anything wrong and this will be the4th time the police have been called re this sleeping couple.
    What is happening to law and order in this country? especially towards nonSingaporeans? and or new citizens?
    Wendy Chan

     

    Source: www.allsingaporestuff.com