SINGAPORE - Professionals, managers, executives and technicians
(PMETs) remain vulnerable to layoffs, according to a report released by
the Ministry of Manpower (MOM) yesterday.
Among occupational groups, PMETs were the second-most vulnerable,
after those holding production jobs.
The third-most vulnerable group
were those in clerical and sales positions.
Last year, about 4,170 PMETs were made redundant - retrenched or released early from contract - up from 3,450 in 2010.
Overall, some 9,990 workers were laid off last year. Due to a rise in
layoffs in the fourth quarter last year, the number of employees made
redundant was higher than the 9,800 in 2010.
Still, against a larger employment base last year, the rate of
redundancies - at 5.5 workers for every 1,000 employees - continued to
decline from 5.7 in 2010. Last year's rate is the lowest since 1998,
when MOM first released the annual Redundancy And Re-entry Into
Employment report.
Mr David Ang, executive director of the Singapore Human Resources
Institute, said that the rise in the number of PMETs displaced last year
could be attributed to restructuring among companies in sectors such as
manufacturing and services.
"Sometimes, companies merge or streamline their operations and, in
the process, employees working in jobs like sales and marketing may end
up losing their jobs," he told my paper.
"There may not be space for these employees, who used to hold
positions that have now been combined with those in other departments or
removed totally."
This was reflected in the report, which cited restructuring for
greater efficiency and increased labour costs as the two main reasons
for redundancies.
Workers in the manufacturing sector continued to be the most
susceptible to redundancies. About 11 employees were laid off for every
1,000 of such workers last year.
This was drastically higher as compared to the 3.8 per 1,000 workers
laid off in the services sector, and the 4.2 workers laid off for every
1,000 in the construction sector over the same period.
Meanwhile, the rate of re-entry into employment for workers who were laid off last year improved for the second straight year.
The report showed that 70 per cent of workers - or seven in 10 - who
were made redundant in the first three quarters of last year had managed
to secure employment again by December.
This was an improvement over the 66 per cent figure for the previous cohort in 2010, and 65 per cent for the 2009 cohort.
On average, it took just over two months for these workers to land new jobs last year.
Younger employees, and those laid off from clerical, sales and service jobs, took the shortest time to clinch new jobs.
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