Singapore job losses highest in more than a decade
The overall unemployment rate, which includes foreign workers in Singapore, rose from 2.5 percent in December to 3.2 percent in March.
More than 12,000 jobs were lost in the first quarter which ended in March – the highest in more than a decade, according to Ministry of Manpower figures going back to the Asian financial crisis in 1998.
But that's not the biggest news at the moment as far as one local radio station is concerned, which is giving more coverage to the swine flu which has not yet broken out in Singapore.
Singapore's Channel NewsAsia website goes one better. It doesn't even have any reports on uenemployment or joblessness in Singapore at 1.30 pm today! A site search only turned up what labour chief Lim Swee Say had to say two days ago! And nothing about the Manpower Ministry report today!
But here's the hard news.
Employers retrenched 10,800 workers, and another 1,800 were released from their contracts early, bringing total job cuts to 12,600 in the first quarter ended in March – up from 9,410 in the last quarter which ended in December.
That's 3,000 more than the 8,890 jobs lost in the fourth quarter of 2001, the year of 9/11 and the dot-com bust, the previous worst quarterly figure for job losses.
The economy shrank a record 19.7 percent between January and March.
Some 9,000 electronics workers lost their jobs, another 2,900 workers were laid off from services and 700 from construction.
The ministry says these are only preliminary estimates.
Worryingly, it says not enough new jobs are being created to make up for the job losses.
The ministry says:
Falling external demand has severely affected the manufacturing sector where employment declined by 19,900, deeper than the 7,000 loss in the earlier quarter. Supported by a strong pipeline of building projects, construction employment grew by 8,500 in the first quarter of 2009, but lower than the gains in the earlier quarters. Services added 10,300 workers, substantially lower than before.
But it's hardly headline news as far as the Singapore radio station 93.8 is concerned. Top of the news this morning was what Deputy Prime Minister and Home Minister Wong Kan Seng had to say about what businesses should do if the swine flu breaks out in Singapore and, no, the government is not planning to close the borders as yet. The job losses were reported only at the end of the news bulletin.
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