A WAGE increase of 20 per cent is possible in the next 10 years, even
in unfortunate circumstances, said Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong in a
dialogue recently.
"That is a very ambitious target for us to do because we are already at a very high level of development," he added.
His comments were made last Thursday in a pre-Budget dialogue with
labour and union leaders, and will be published in tomorrow's edition of
NTUC This Week, a publication by the National Trades Union Congress.
In 2010, the Government began efforts to raise real median wages by
30 per cent by 2020, to improve the living standard of the average
Singaporean.
To achieve this, productivity growth has to rise from 1 per cent a
year to between 2 and 3 per cent. Mr Lee noted last Thursday that, over
the last 10 years, Singapore's productivity improved by 20 per cent and
wages rose by 11 per cent.
But he said Singapore actually did better than that, as much of the
improvements were made in the last five years, following a difficult
period during the Sars crisis.
He said Singapore has to improve its productivity in the next 10 years by over 20 per cent.
If Singapore was "lucky" enough to achieve a 30 per cent productivity
increase, real wages for the median worker may be pushed up by about 30
per cent as well, he said.
"But if we are not lucky, we can get the wages up 20 per cent over the next 10 years, and that is something which is possible."
The dialogue session was organised by the Ong Teng Cheong Labour
Leadership Institute and held at the NTUC Auditorium. It was attended by
about 450 people, including union leaders and Manpower Ministry
representatives.
Mr Lee added that Singapore has to rely less on foreign workers. In
the last five years, about 150,000 foreign workers came into Singapore
annually, he said.
If this continues every 10 years, there would be one million more
people here, he said. With a population of about five million now, the
population could grow to six million 10 years later and seven million 20
years from today, he said.
"I think we can squeeze a bit closer together but there is a limit to how much you can squeeze," said Mr Lee.
This means Singapore has to manage its inflow of foreign workers and
be less dependent on them, and the country has to work harder to upgrade
its productivity, skills and capabilities.
"That's what we must do if we are to grow over the next 10 years and
beyond," said Mr Lee. "It's the only way we can grow in Singapore and
improve the lives of our people."
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