SINGAPORE: Companies in the construction industry are calling for more resources to be set aside to ensure the welfare of foreign workers.
They said labour must also be fully utilised for the industry to grow in a sustainable way.
The call comes after
the National Development Ministry said some 30,000 foreign workers will
be needed for public housing alone this year - almost double the number
of last year.
The Housing and Development Board (HDB) is expected to release some 25,000 Build-to-Order (BTO) units this year.
This, in a bid to ramp up affordable housing, especially for first-time home owners.
For the construction industry, this news comes as a mixed blessing, amid an uncertain economic outlook.
Dr
Ho Nyok Yong, president of the Singapore Contractors Association, said:
"This is a good opportunity for our contractors, our members to get
more HDB projects. Simple as that. Business opportunity.
"For
construction, especially this year, there are less private projects.
This is one of the ways it can help to compensate back some of these
shortages."
To build public housing, the number of foreign workers needed is expected to increase to 45,000 in the next few years.
Aside
from the shortage of dormitories to house foreign workers, Dr Ho said
there's the question of ensuring that the growth can be sustained.
Dr
Ho said: "When gearing up construction for HDB flats, contractors and
builders buy a lot of machinery, equipment and tools, and also human
resources such as workers, middle management and management. They train
them up.
"Then all of sudden, in the next two years, (if)
there's nothing much in terms of volume, all that investment - the high
purchase - there's no returns."
Dr Ho acknowledges some of these resources can be diverted, for example into civil engineering and private housing.
"But
some contractors are only doing HDB, they are the builders, they are
very different from those constructing bridges, roads. They're (from)
different trades. They might be able to divert some, but not all, and
quite a few might suffer from that."
Labour costs are another concern.
The foreign worker levy has been going up since 2010 and companies said their costs could rise by about 10 per cent this year.
Some social activists said this could have an impact on the welfare of workers.
Jolovan
Wham, executive director, Humanitarian Organisation for Migration
Economics (HOME), said: "When business costs go up, what we've seen is
that migrant workers bear the brunt of it.
"All this is happening
because employers are worried about their expenses, and they're afraid
of having to pay so much and the increase in the levies isn't doing very
much to improve the situation.
"We've seen workers who are paid S$1.50 - S$1.60 an hour.
"These
are wages that no Singaporean will ever accept for the work that they
do. It's disproportionate to their contributions to this country.
"The
National Integration Council for example, most of the programmes that
they have, and a lot of their resources that are invested are in new
Singapore citizens and PRs.
"But what about migrant workers
because there are a million of them here. I think there has to be more
public education, to promote communal ties between Singaporeans and
migrant workers.
"We're not going to see many Singaporeans doing
these kinds of jobs. We'll have to accept the reality that for certain
kinds of industries, like construction for example, a larger number of
migrant workers is necessary."
HDB said there are measures under
the Construction Productivity Roadmap launched last year, to moderate
the increase in the number of foreign workers needed as higher
productivity allows for more to be done with fewer workers.
- CNA/ck
Finally a good news, a business opportunity for both sides.
Originally posted by QX179R:
"We've seen workers who are paid S$1.50 - S$1.60 an hour.
Which company pays this rate?
Work 2 hours to earn a plate of vege cai png.