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General Discussion >> General Board >> Singapore is an Orwellian oligarchy
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Message started by Svengali on Mar 24th, 2015 at 6:46pm

Title: Singapore is an Orwellian oligarchy
Post by Svengali on Mar 24th, 2015 at 6:46pm
Some are more equal than others. In particular the Lee Kuan Yew family and their stooges are the major beneficiaries and the ordinary workers are slaves to the beat of the drum.

Singapore allows temporary immigrant labor under the pretense of free trade. However the immigrant workers from nearby third world countries are paid considerably less than Singaporeans and their presence is contrived to suppress wages of ordinary workers in Singapore.

If Singapore was truly a free trade democratic society they would not allow migrant workers to be exploited at a fraction of the wage a Singaporean would get for the same work. That is exploitation and slavery.

The GDP of Singapore is high but doesn't trickle down. There are too many hands in high places catching the trickles.  Then they throw a few pennies to the workers.

The GDP of Singapore is due to the high price of apartments. It costs $7000 per month to rent a 2 bedroom apartment.

Singapore is a house of cards with the house taking a higher cut than casinos do.

Title: Re: Singapore is an Orwellian democracy
Post by gizmo_2655 on Mar 24th, 2015 at 7:04pm
Got a link to the OP??

Title: Re: Singapore is an Orwellian democracy
Post by Svengali on Mar 24th, 2015 at 9:46pm

gizmo_2655 wrote on Mar 24th, 2015 at 7:04pm:
Got a link to the OP??


At your service:

The Singapore government is at the forefront of worker abuse and have legally implemented no minimum wage so workers can be abused. The Lee family's sticky fingers are in this unsavory business. Read on:

https://andyxianwong.wordpress.com/2014/04/07/answered-are-foreign-workers-exploited-in-singapore/


Quote:
The Singapore government leads the way

Just think about it. If government controlled SMRT can treat their workers with such disdain, if government controlled SMRT can openly and unlawfully confiscate workers passports, if government controlled SMRT can hire workers through dishonest overseas agents without providing native language employment contracts, if government controlled SMRT can hire a repatriation company (“they acted like gangsters”) to detain and deport employees that complain about unsanitary living conditions, then who is to say the problem is not widespread? Who is to say the problem is not systemic? Government controlled corporations and other related entities are almost certainly the largest employers in Singapore. If GLCs do not set a good example, what hope is there for hiring practices elsewhere? Clearly, in the case of their Chinese bus drivers, SMRT set the worst possible example.

I wrote some time ago about why Singapore has no minimum wage – with the government owning or controlling more than one hundred billion dollars of investments in Singapore’s largest listed companies, the ruling party have a huge incentive to keep the cost of doing business as cheap as possible. Unfortunately, exploiting workers by not paying bonuses, providing cheap but unsanitary dormitaries and unilaterally re-writing contracts to reduce overtime pay would all be ways to achieve that goal. While it is impossible to say for sure that a desire to keep costs down is an actual driving force behind GLCs such as SMRT treating workers badly, the government sets itself up for huge conflicts of interest by being such a large and active player in the same labour market which MOM appears to regulate so ineffectively.

Some of the solutions to the problems faced by foreign workers are obvious. Singapore is lucky to have some very committed and thoughtful NGOs working in this field and it is time for MOM to listen to them. Requiring companies to issue payslips would apparently help to resolve many low level disputes. Beyond that it is time for the government to reduce its level of political involement in the local economy. Temasek and GIC should move away from holding politically sensitive controlling stakes in key local industries. A balanced, passive investment model which attempts to track local and global benchmark indicies would almost certainly be cheaper, give better returns and also remove many of the conflicts of interest inherent in Singapore’s current economic and investment model. But with PM Lee as Chairman of GIC and his wife CEO of Temasek, it is clear that the government is anything but concerned about such questions.

Title: Re: Singapore is an Orwellian oligarchy
Post by Svengali on Mar 25th, 2015 at 3:54pm
I perceive Gizmo has hightailed it to Singapore. Good luck little buddy.

Singapore willfully excludes migrant workers from its labor laws and Singapore government controlled entities are amongst the leading exploiters of migrant labor.

http://thediplomat.com/2015/03/indonesias-migrant-workers-dreams-and-tears/


Quote:
Crossing the Straits

The flow of migrants from Indonesia to Singapore is one of the busiest migratory pathways in Southeast Asia. There are currently 220,000 domestic workers in the country, the majority of whom are Indonesian.

With its wealth and international standing, social workers say Singapore should be leading light in Asia, a model of labor relations for other countries to follow. But the reality is far from ideal.

There is no minimum wage in the country, and domestic workers receive no union representation. Domestic workers are also excluded from the country’s Employment Act – a cornerstone of labor legislation that grants workers a mandatory day off, regulated working hours, and the right to change employers.

For Jolovan Wham, director of HOME, a migrants advocacy group, weak legislation is the root of many problems. He says that if the government is serious about improving the livelihood of its domestic workers, a fundamental revision of labor rights are needed.

“Employers have the unilateral right to cancel the work permits of their domestic workers – to dismiss them and repatriate them. There are no avenues of redress, even if the dismissal was a wrongful dismissal.”

He also said there were many cases of mistreatment. HOME registered 47 cases of physical abuse in 2014, as well as nine cases of sexual harassment. The NGO has also registered complaints about poor living conditions, unjustified salary deductions, and horrific cases of food deprivation.

Title: Re: Singapore is an Orwellian oligarchy
Post by miketrees on Mar 25th, 2015 at 7:21pm
Singapore seemed like a great place when I was there.

Title: Re: Singapore is an Orwellian oligarchy
Post by Svengali on Mar 25th, 2015 at 8:02pm

miketrees wrote on Mar 25th, 2015 at 7:21pm:
Singapore seemed like a great place when I was there.


If human trafficking, slavery and blatant exploitation of immigrant workers is your objective you found your Shangri-la.

Lah?

Title: Re: Singapore is an Orwellian oligarchy
Post by Svengali on Mar 25th, 2015 at 8:09pm
The Singapore economic model is not sustainable according to Nobel Prize winning economist Paul Krugman.

The oligarchs' cup is 99% full and the proletariat's cup is 99% empty.

http://blogs.ft.com/the-world/2015/03/singapores-miracle-uncovered/


Quote:
The pessimist take on Singapore’s economic model was championed by Paul Krugman, the Nobel-prize winning economist, who in 1994 compared the city-state to the Soviet Union under Stalin.

“Singapore grew through a mobilisation of resources that would have done Stalin proud,” Prof. Krugman wrote in the Foreign Affairs journal. “There is no sign at all of increased efficiency. In this sense, the growth of Lee Kuan Yew’s Singapore is an economic twin of the growth of Stalin’s Soviet Union”.

Prof Krugman’s remarks were largely based on controversial research by Alwyn Young, a professor of economics at the London School of Economics, who sought to understand what exactly drove economic growth in Singapore between the 1960s and the 1990s.

He found that, much like in Communist Russia, economic growth was the result of more workers joining the labour force, a larger proportion of the population entering formal education, as well as higher levels of investment. There was no evidence that Singapore became any better at turning these inputs into productive output.

“Rising participation rates, inter-sectoral transfers of labour, improving levels of education, and expanding investment rates, serve to chip away at the productivity performance of East Asian [countries], drawing them from the top of Mount Olympus down to the plains of Thessaly,” Prof Young wrote.

These results implied that the Singaporean model was not sustainable. Unlike technological growth, which in theory can drive economic growth for ever, governments cannot rely on doubling the number of workers entering the labour force. No surprise Lee was outraged at Prof Krugman’s findings.

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