Thursday, October 13, 2011

EDITORIAL


Foreign Maids Snubbing Singapore


The new generation of Indonesian and Filipina maids, who are better educated and have a higher expectation of life, prefer to work in Hong Kong and Taiwan as their take-home pay is much higher due to minimal tax.


The era of cheap maids streaming into Singapore to find work, particularly from Indonesia and the Philippines, may be coming to an end.


With South-East Asia enjoying better living, Singaporeans - who are among the world’s biggest employers - may soon find this supply becoming scarcer and more expensive.


The new generation of Indonesians and Filipinas, including the rural women, is better educated and has a higher expectation in life.


Indonesia, in particular, has been growing at a steady pace during the past 20 years; and to a lesser extent, the Philippines, as well.


With the rise of global jobs and budget travel, their people have more job opportunities at home and abroad.


Many maids have become salesgirls, hairdressers, office assistants, thrown up by an expanding middle class.


More are seeking trainings to move into higher-paying jobs in healthcare, computers and tourism.


In a recent Buddhist funeral rite the monks performed had the help of a woman who hailed from Java served as assistant.


She had been with the troupe for nearly 10 years, speaking and chanting prayers in Chinese.


On the last night, she was helped by a second lady, a Filipino woman.


Their salaries were several times higher than what a maid would get. Globalisation never ceases to amaze!


In Singapore, many employers do not realize the extent of some of these changes in the region.


The older ones still see the maid as an unchanging person left behind by progress, an agency representative said.


"They don’t realise there is a big difference between the young maids who come abroad today and those who arrived a generation earlier," she added.


It is not unlike the gap between two generations of Singaporeans, she said.


Today’s maid from the Philippines or Indonesia is no longer the same as older ones who came in the 1970s or 1980s.


She is generally better schooled, has higher ambition and is probably less deferential to orders rudely given.


The agency representative once said: "You can’t work her like you could her mother!"


Dwindling supply is, however, not the only worry. For years, they have been losing the competitive edge against Hong Kong and Taiwan employers because of a special S$345 (US$265) monthly levy they need to pay for hiring a maid.


This means that, although the monthly costs add up about the same for the three countries, the maid in Singapore takes home only half of what she gets elsewhere.


Effectively, a maid who works in Hong Kong and Taiwan has a much higher take-home pay because the tax is minimal.


For example, a fresh Indonesian maid currently earns Singapore (S)$380-$400 a month, depending on age and experience. It is higher than the official recommended salaries of S$280-$320 a month.


The first blow to the employers here was harder-and-costlier-to-get English-speaking Filipinos, who are widely sought after in not only Asia but also in the Middle East.


When the Manila embassy demanded a minimum pay of about S$520 a month, many employers turned to Indonesia. Today, the circle has turned.


Many Indonesians who have completed a two-year contract are quick to move to Hong Kong and Taiwan, where their earnings just about doubled.
A Javanese girl who has learned enough English to leave, told a friend:

"Sorry ma’am, in Hong Kong I can earn in 12 months what it takes two years to make in Singapore."


She uses a smart-phone and aspires to buy a tablet. "I can’t afford that in Singapore," she added. Her sister had worked in Bahrain and is now going home to open a small restaurant there.


This trend is inevitable and a long time coming. In the early 80s, former prime minister Lee Kuan Yew had warned that the easy supply of maids would dry up once the neighbours became more prosperous.


The pace of arrivals has matched, as well as fuelled, Singapore’s economic growth.


By 1988, there were 40,000 of them, the figure rose four-folds to 160,000 by 2005 and 201,000 last year. The number of Indonesian maids alone today totals 90,000.


Seven in 10 new arrivals are from its hinterland. In recent years the pressure has forced Singaporeans to seek maids from Myanmar, India and Bangladesh.


"I doubt if these countries can train enough maids to meet our demand," an agent told a reporter.


The noose of high cost is steadily tightening. The Philippine government has stipulated a minimum salary of about S$500 a month, which turned the demand to Indonesia. And now the wheel turns again.


Jakarta wants to see a minimum of S$450 as a starting monthly pay - and employers and the government are reluctant to comply.


Recently, the govern-ment fined 16 employment agencies more than S$150,000 for collectively fixing the pay of new Indonesian maids, raising it from S$380 to S$450.


They were charged under the city’s price-fixing laws, turning down arguments that the hike was a necessary market response to free up supply of maids.


A Jakarta official reportedly indicated his government may be considering cutting off supply to Singapore - until it agrees on the minimum pay of S$450 a month.


That could bring the cost of a maid to about S$900-S$1,000 all-in-a monthly sum that could push out many Singa-poreans from the market.


With the global trends moving at such fast pace, the history of the maid in South-East Asia may end in the longer term. /MP

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