By Joanna Chia

Read this morning about outgoing labour chief Lim Swee Say urging and warning that if workers do not upgrade their skills, Singapore will lose out to other countries and become just a normal country.

Truth be told, Swee Say himself is just ordinary at best. He cannot compete on the world stage. The standard is just not there.

If he can be normal, the audacity is unbelievable to ask workers to be special. Does not the outgoing NTUC chief realize that during his watch and others before him at NTUC is actually a failure in real terms. Before asking more out of workers like how it has always been from them, do something about the ridiculously ever widening income gap.

Is this not a good measure of how workers progress rather than just say it is better to have a job? The actual truth is, it will be best to have a job and still not be at the extreme lower end of this income disparity which should not be too wide.

Every call seems to ask workers to do their best and to sacrifice for the greater good for the country’s economy. The reality is that workers have put in so much over the years that when the pie is divided, the sharing is so disproportionate that it becomes just scraps for the workers. Let us really do something about this injustice to workers.

Let us see how the new NTUC chief corrects this grave social injustice. Workers have sacrificed too much for too long. It is time NTUC truly represents workers and workers interest first.

Subscribe
Notify of
10 Comments
Newest
Oldest Most Voted
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments
You May Also Like

If 377A is repealed, people will realise that other families are just part of the normal variation in society

by Martin Piper I’m very concerned about the comments from National Council…

Work discrimination in teaching service

Letter by a teacher who wish to be anonymous I am finally writing…

Where is the transparency for our students?

By Crystal I am writing from the viewpoint of an average 15-year-old…

Stop using the poor for your political agenda – Part Two

The following is Part Two of a two-part response to Senior Minister…