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Huge pay bumps and flexible work policies: How Singapore companies are fighting the war for talent

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In a normal year, lawyers at one of Singapore’s top four local law firms could expect to receive an annual increment of between 10% and 15%.
The company said employees would get a larger increment this year, one former employee told CNBC. His salary jumped by 40% and the increase was not tied to a promotion, the person said.

That law firm isn’t the only company in Singapore adjusting compensation packages in a hot labor market.
Southeast Asia’s largest lender DBS told CNBC it increased salaries across the bank in mid-2021. Accounting company KPMG announced in May that the firm will spend 25 million Singapore dollars ($18.23 million) on salary increments.
SPH Media Trust, a news and media publisher, also said it recently conducted a salary review to bring remuneration in line with market levels.
On the global front, tech giants Microsoft and Amazon have said they will increase salaries of their employees.
Average increments have been significantly higher this year, and companies are paying a premium to attract and retain workers especially if talent is scarce in an industry, said Cynthia Ang, an executive director at recruitment firm Kerry Consulting.

New benefits​

Companies in Singapore are also making other adjustments to employee benefits in the form of mental health support, bonuses, flexible working policies and others.
“The Singapore labor market is definitely moving towards, or has been looking at tangible aspects of the deal — pay and benefits — as a major competitive battleground,” said Lewis Garrad, Mercer’s Singapore career business leader.
Around 60% of 270 companies surveyed by Mercer reviewed their benefits in 2021, up from between 10% and 15% in earlier years. That’s at least in part because of the tight job market, Garrad said.
Prudential Singapore gave each of its employees $1,000 worth of shares in October 2021, said Neetha Nair, who heads a team that prepares the workforce for the future. The company also gave some workers credits to use for booking co-working spaces as part of a hybrid work initiative, she said.
In February, Randstad Singapore began allowing employees to work remotely from anywhere in the world for up to four weeks per year, Daljit Sall, general manager of technology at the recruitment company, told CNBC.

An employee at a local media company, who declined to be named because he was not authorized to speak to the media, said more people received promotions this year than in previous years.
“Usually there is a cap in terms of the numbers, so it’s quite limited, but this time they did seem to try to promote most people who are deserving,” he said.
Employees who successfully refer a new hire at Finn Partners can now receive SG$5,000 in two payouts if the referred person stays with the company for at least one year, said Safina Samian, a partner at the communications agency. That bonus used to be SG$1,000.
Finn Partners also gives its employees four days of mental health leave, a $100 annual allowance for a wellness app subscription, and half day off one Friday per month, Samian said.
“We’re seeing a much broader range of wellness and well-being benefits,” said Ang from Kerry Consulting, citing self-care days and no-meeting days.

‘Talent war’​

Some companies said the improved benefits are part of broad talent retention efforts to deal with the Great Resignation, a global trend.
A senior staffer at DBS, who requested anonymity as he was not authorized to speak to the media, said the bank adjusted salaries to keep morale up and “so that we don’t lose out in the current talent war that you see in Singapore.”
Lee Yan Hong, head of group human resources at the bank, confirmed that the pay increments were made “to ensure that our employees continue to be paid competitively compared to the market.”
An SPH Media Trust spokesperson similarly said it raised salaries “to remain competitive in recruiting and retaining talent.”

Sall of Randstad Singapore said the company’s remote work program was well-received and helps to minimize push factors that make employees look for new jobs.
But not all companies explained the rationale for the changes.
The legal professional who received a 40% increment told CNBC that the law firm simply said it was conducting a pay review.
“The sense is that they may be trying to offer more attractive salaries to keep up with what in-house roles are offering, maybe bridge the gap with what the international firms are paying,” he speculated, though he did not have evidence to support it.
The legal industry saw a record 538 lawyers leave the profession in 2021 — a 30% increase from the previous year, Singapore’s Law Society President Adrian Tan said in January.

‘Extraordinarily’ tight job market​

The recent reviews of salaries and benefits take place against the backdrop of a competitive job market in Singapore, whether or not companies explain the reasons for conducting them.
“We are in an extraordinarily tight labor market,” said Mercer’s Garrad. He pointed out that Singapore is historically reliant on foreign talent, and Covid-19 made it difficult to attract such workers over the past two years.
While official data suggests Singapore has not been hit hard by the Great Resignation, it’s likely that different industries are experiencing varying turnover rates and the average “hides a lot of change,” he told CNBC.
Talent is in high demand in some segments of the workforce, such as life sciences and tech, he added.
“That creates an environment where HR functions continue to predict increased competition for talent and therefore, take action,” he added.

Ang of Kerry Consulting said that around one in five offers the company handles is now met with a “significant counter offer” from the candidate’s current company.
The number of job vacancies in 2021 was at its highest in at least a decade, and 35% of those openings remained unfilled for six months or longer — up from 27% in 2020 and bucking a broad downtrend, data from the Ministry of Manpower showed.
Attrition has increased in Singapore’s public service, with the resignation rate among management executives reaching a 10-year peak of 9.9% last year, according to government data.
On Sunday, Singapore’s Public Service Division announced that 23,000 workers would receive salary increments of between 5% and 14%, according to media reports.

Talent retention success?​

How effective are employee retention efforts? It depends, workers told CNBC.
The senior DBS employee said pay adjustments “stemmed the tide of the Great Resignation” for the bank.
“Our voluntary attrition rates in 2021 were comparable to pre-pandemic levels, and were in fact either on par or lower than the market average in our core markets,” Lee, head of group human resources at DBS, said.
An employee at SPH Media Trust, who got a 20% pay rise, said she isn’t in a hurry to look for a new job now that her salary is higher. “In that sense, it did change a bit of the perspective,” she said.


But other factors still matter.
The former lawyer who received a 40% increment said he left practice “in search of better hours.”
The employee at a local media company who observed more promotions in his firm, whose salary has increased by around 40%, said he would still look for a new role if he wants to advance his career. But he acknowledged that it would be more difficult to find a more attractive alternative, given his pay bump.
For Finn Partners, employee referrals have increased by 100% since the referral bonuses were increased, said Samian, noting that it’s important to have more candidates in a competitive job market.

Looking ahead​

However, competing aggressively on pay may not be sustainable in the longer run, said Garrad of Mercer.
Some companies are already starting to wind back financial incentives for all but “mission critical” roles, he said.
Things could also take a turn as economic fears rise.
“Some are now starting to look at hiring freezes in their organization to preempt recession risk,” he said.
Kerry Consulting’s Ang said it looks like the economic cycle is in the middle of an upswing where companies are still expanding and hiring.
“I believe in another six to maybe potentially 12 months’ time, this might potentially taper a little,” she said.

Still, benefits that were introduced during the Covid pandemic will remain important and may become the norm, Ang said.

She also said companies that don’t provide flexible or hybrid work arrangements could lose workers or potential hires.

Benefits such as mental health coverage can send a signal about the company’s culture, and that’s partly why there has been a growth in non-traditional benefits, Mercer’s Garrad said.

“Competing on company culture is becoming more common,” he said.
 
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There are reports a lot of people are not able to find a job, while MSM frequently parrot Singapore job market is tight and salary is rocketing.

Insiders told me that PAP government finally aware on the trend that majority of young people hate them. They are desperately rolling employment scheme for the fresh graduate with little prospect changing their odious reputation.


 
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This is an implicit admission that most are not doing well in the economics domain, especially for a lot of young Singaporeans. The MSM has tried their best to divert the discussion from foreigners import.

PAP are not addressing real concern unfortunately. They are only cooking fake news. I see them losing power pretty soon. Everyone is sick of them. They would have loss power now if they have not given massive free basic healthcare to the old.

PAP are stupid people who make enemies everywhere in Singapore to enrich the elites themselves.

1654650657902.png


 
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Singapore MSM is now anchor in fake news. In the 90s, people got multiple job offers before graduating.

Few months ago I see many fresh grad becoming COVID 19 gate keeper, officially keep happy with tax payer monies. PAP is afraid, very afraid. And now there are so many job scheme. You do not have that when job market it good.


***************

When it became apparent that COVID-19’s economic impact would be prolonged, fresh graduate, Jasmine* braced herself for a long period of unemployment.

Many companies she wrote to were not even overtly hiring. Out of 50 companies, three responded and one finally took her on as an intern for their in-house public relations team with a possibility of converting her three-month internship into a permanent position.


 
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In a normal year, lawyers at one of Singapore’s top four local law firms could expect to receive an annual increment of between 10% and 15%.
The company said employees would get a larger increment this year, one former employee told CNBC. His salary jumped by 40% and the increase was not tied to a promotion, the person said.

That law firm isn’t the only company in Singapore adjusting compensation packages in a hot labor market.
Southeast Asia’s largest lender DBS told CNBC it increased salaries across the bank in mid-2021. Accounting company KPMG announced in May that the firm will spend 25 million Singapore dollars ($18.23 million) on salary increments.
SPH Media Trust, a news and media publisher, also said it recently conducted a salary review to bring remuneration in line with market levels.
On the global front, tech giants Microsoft and Amazon have said they will increase salaries of their employees.
Average increments have been significantly higher this year, and companies are paying a premium to attract and retain workers especially if talent is scarce in an industry, said Cynthia Ang, an executive director at recruitment firm Kerry Consulting.

New benefits​

Companies in Singapore are also making other adjustments to employee benefits in the form of mental health support, bonuses, flexible working policies and others.
“The Singapore labor market is definitely moving towards, or has been looking at tangible aspects of the deal — pay and benefits — as a major competitive battleground,” said Lewis Garrad, Mercer’s Singapore career business leader.
Around 60% of 270 companies surveyed by Mercer reviewed their benefits in 2021, up from between 10% and 15% in earlier years. That’s at least in part because of the tight job market, Garrad said.
Prudential Singapore gave each of its employees $1,000 worth of shares in October 2021, said Neetha Nair, who heads a team that prepares the workforce for the future. The company also gave some workers credits to use for booking co-working spaces as part of a hybrid work initiative, she said.
In February, Randstad Singapore began allowing employees to work remotely from anywhere in the world for up to four weeks per year, Daljit Sall, general manager of technology at the recruitment company, told CNBC.

An employee at a local media company, who declined to be named because he was not authorized to speak to the media, said more people received promotions this year than in previous years.
“Usually there is a cap in terms of the numbers, so it’s quite limited, but this time they did seem to try to promote most people who are deserving,” he said.
Employees who successfully refer a new hire at Finn Partners can now receive SG$5,000 in two payouts if the referred person stays with the company for at least one year, said Safina Samian, a partner at the communications agency. That bonus used to be SG$1,000.
Finn Partners also gives its employees four days of mental health leave, a $100 annual allowance for a wellness app subscription, and half day off one Friday per month, Samian said.
“We’re seeing a much broader range of wellness and well-being benefits,” said Ang from Kerry Consulting, citing self-care days and no-meeting days.

‘Talent war’​

Some companies said the improved benefits are part of broad talent retention efforts to deal with the Great Resignation, a global trend.
A senior staffer at DBS, who requested anonymity as he was not authorized to speak to the media, said the bank adjusted salaries to keep morale up and “so that we don’t lose out in the current talent war that you see in Singapore.”
Lee Yan Hong, head of group human resources at the bank, confirmed that the pay increments were made “to ensure that our employees continue to be paid competitively compared to the market.”
An SPH Media Trust spokesperson similarly said it raised salaries “to remain competitive in recruiting and retaining talent.”

Sall of Randstad Singapore said the company’s remote work program was well-received and helps to minimize push factors that make employees look for new jobs.
But not all companies explained the rationale for the changes.
The legal professional who received a 40% increment told CNBC that the law firm simply said it was conducting a pay review.
“The sense is that they may be trying to offer more attractive salaries to keep up with what in-house roles are offering, maybe bridge the gap with what the international firms are paying,” he speculated, though he did not have evidence to support it.
The legal industry saw a record 538 lawyers leave the profession in 2021 — a 30% increase from the previous year, Singapore’s Law Society President Adrian Tan said in January.

‘Extraordinarily’ tight job market​

The recent reviews of salaries and benefits take place against the backdrop of a competitive job market in Singapore, whether or not companies explain the reasons for conducting them.
“We are in an extraordinarily tight labor market,” said Mercer’s Garrad. He pointed out that Singapore is historically reliant on foreign talent, and Covid-19 made it difficult to attract such workers over the past two years.
While official data suggests Singapore has not been hit hard by the Great Resignation, it’s likely that different industries are experiencing varying turnover rates and the average “hides a lot of change,” he told CNBC.
Talent is in high demand in some segments of the workforce, such as life sciences and tech, he added.
“That creates an environment where HR functions continue to predict increased competition for talent and therefore, take action,” he added.

Ang of Kerry Consulting said that around one in five offers the company handles is now met with a “significant counter offer” from the candidate’s current company.
The number of job vacancies in 2021 was at its highest in at least a decade, and 35% of those openings remained unfilled for six months or longer — up from 27% in 2020 and bucking a broad downtrend, data from the Ministry of Manpower showed.
Attrition has increased in Singapore’s public service, with the resignation rate among management executives reaching a 10-year peak of 9.9% last year, according to government data.
On Sunday, Singapore’s Public Service Division announced that 23,000 workers would receive salary increments of between 5% and 14%, according to media reports.

Talent retention success?​

How effective are employee retention efforts? It depends, workers told CNBC.
The senior DBS employee said pay adjustments “stemmed the tide of the Great Resignation” for the bank.
“Our voluntary attrition rates in 2021 were comparable to pre-pandemic levels, and were in fact either on par or lower than the market average in our core markets,” Lee, head of group human resources at DBS, said.
An employee at SPH Media Trust, who got a 20% pay rise, said she isn’t in a hurry to look for a new job now that her salary is higher. “In that sense, it did change a bit of the perspective,” she said.


But other factors still matter.
The former lawyer who received a 40% increment said he left practice “in search of better hours.”
The employee at a local media company who observed more promotions in his firm, whose salary has increased by around 40%, said he would still look for a new role if he wants to advance his career. But he acknowledged that it would be more difficult to find a more attractive alternative, given his pay bump.
For Finn Partners, employee referrals have increased by 100% since the referral bonuses were increased, said Samian, noting that it’s important to have more candidates in a competitive job market.

Looking ahead​

However, competing aggressively on pay may not be sustainable in the longer run, said Garrad of Mercer.
Some companies are already starting to wind back financial incentives for all but “mission critical” roles, he said.
Things could also take a turn as economic fears rise.
“Some are now starting to look at hiring freezes in their organization to preempt recession risk,” he said.
Kerry Consulting’s Ang said it looks like the economic cycle is in the middle of an upswing where companies are still expanding and hiring.
“I believe in another six to maybe potentially 12 months’ time, this might potentially taper a little,” she said.

Still, benefits that were introduced during the Covid pandemic will remain important and may become the norm, Ang said.

She also said companies that don’t provide flexible or hybrid work arrangements could lose workers or potential hires.

Benefits such as mental health coverage can send a signal about the company’s culture, and that’s partly why there has been a growth in non-traditional benefits, Mercer’s Garrad said.

“Competing on company culture is becoming more common,” he said.
That’s true. Talented people are thousand times more worth than oil and gas in the basement.
 
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While Singaporeans are fuming, stupid elites keep testing water on their vision of 10 millions population on a land area of 700 sqkm.



Only way to make that happen is to cooperate with Indonesia on co-developing those nearby islands and come up with some kind of visa scheme where people can easily work/live in those islands connected to Singapore.
 
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That’s true. Talented people are thousand times more worth than oil and gas in the basement.

Singapore is not attracting any talent but doing wage arbitrate of India and Singapore workers. China is really wooing talent.

For example. we look at Huawei salary for fresh talented grad is 2 million RMB a year, or 300k USD a year. In fact, Huawei is still stingy, a lot of talented fresh graduate in China can get much more.

10 years in Huawei, talents can easily make 10 x n milions USD.

Despite having top university in the region, GoS say Singaporeans are stupid and lazy. But the government give themselves high salary.


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The only one getting well paid are government and their relatives. Other than official payrolls of millions, their wife get to sit on director board of big companies, sometimes they can held directorship of 20-30 companies.

They can run the countries into sht and still call themselves talents.

Meanwhile these elites keep telling people that people deserve low pay because they are lazy and stupid.

Singapore never never pays STEMI well. Unlike elsewhere STEMI can write lots of good papers and government you never get the pay level of the parasitic government planners.


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Singapore definition of talent is fully at the discretion of elites. If elites say you talent, you can become a CEO of big tech company even with zero experience or totally non relevant experience.

A lot of elite relative landed in $$$$$ jobs.

Then you get large sum of $$$$$. And elites will say you are underpaid.

Even if you are top maths olympiad or really high IQ, you can just a life of dog and stay forever as a poor researcher -- even to the point of driving taxi.

Below Stanford PHD Taxi driver in Singapore.



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There are reports a lot of people are not able to find a job, while MSM frequently parrot Singapore job market is tight and salary is rocketing.

Insiders told me that PAP government finally aware on the trend that majority of young people hate them. They are desperately rolling employment scheme for the fresh graduate with little prospect changing their odious reputation.



This bias in perception is pretty common across countries.

Truly skilled talent is rare , what you mostly find are employs that will run you aground either due to lack of subject mater expertise or just plain conmanship.

People that actually make you money rather than loose you money are rare.

Corporations does not survive under incompetence. IF there paying money they for hell are looking to make money from it.
 
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Singapore is not attracting any talent but doing wage arbitrate of India and Singapore workers. China is really wooing talent.

For example. we look at Huawei salary for fresh talented grad is 2 million RMB a year, or 300k USD a year. In fact, Huawei is still stingy, a lot of talented fresh graduate in China can get much more.

10 years in Huawei, talents can easily make 10 x n milions USD.

Despite having top university in the region, GoS say Singaporeans are stupid and lazy. But the government give themselves high salary.


View attachment 852783
Huawei paying 300k USD? Where did you get the number? Years ago I applied for a job they hesitated to pay 4k per month or 48k per year. Wages in Germany and Singapore are same same I believe.
 
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Huawei paying 300k USD? Where did you get the number? Years ago I applied for a job they hesitated to pay 4k per month or 48k per year. Wages in Germany and Singapore are same same I believe.

If you are top STEMI fresh grad in China or every nations, the world is your playground and you can get high salary everywhere -- except Singapore.

Even if Huawei do not want you, you can apply Google. Huawei is forced to up the salary in such environment because China love talent.

You wont get this salary in Singapore Inc doing STEMI work as fresh grad while everyday GoS keep saying they are hiring talents.
 
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If you are top STEMI fresh grad in China or every nations, the world is your playground and you can get high salary everywhere -- except Singapore.

Even if Huawei do not want you, you can apply Google. Huawei is forced to up the salary in such environment because China love talent.

You wont get this salary in Singapore Inc doing STEMI work as fresh grad while everyday GoS keep saying they are hiring talents.
Seems China is the new paradise. $300k is more for middle management level. Normal blue people get much less. I know someone who graduated at a top US university now works as tax consultant (Steuerberater) at a top company. His salary is about $120k per year plus bonus. Germany pays at medium level. Luxemburg or Swiss pay much higher. I was offered a position for several years in the Swiss. $250k per year, plus benefits. That’s extremely high. However everything is double expensive there.
 
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