Study under way to implement progressive wage model in retail sector
Move could have major impact on industry that employs many low-wage staff
Low-wage workers in retail may see their earnings rise if a study to implement the progressive wage model (PWM) in the sector bears fruit.
Salespeople and cashiers in supermarkets, convenience stores and fashion outlets may benefit from the move to extend the PWM to the retail sector, Senior Minister of State for Manpower Zaqy Mohamad said.
It could have a major impact on a sector that employs a large number of workers, many of whom earn low wages.
Mr Zaqy said the Tripartite Workgroup on Lower-Wage Workers, which he chairs, hopes to provide an update on the study soon.
First introduced in 2012, the PWM sets out minimum salaries for local workers in various roles along a career and skills progression framework. Wages rise in tandem with productivity.
Currently, the PWM is mandatory in the cleaning, landscaping and security sectors, covering about 80,000 workers. It will become mandatory for the lift and escalator maintenance sector next year.
Mr Zaqy, who visited the Adidas store at Changi Jewel Airport yesterday, did not say how many workers in the retail sector would benefit, if a PWM were to be implemented.
Meanwhile, the National Trades Union Congress, which has been pushing for a PWM in the food services and retail sector, has estimated that 70,000 workers may see gains if the two sectors implemented the wage model.
About 45 per cent of resident full-time employees in the retail sector receive salaries that are at or below the bottom 20th wage percentile of the local workforce, said Mr Zaqy.
EVERY SECTOR
Last year, the 20th percentile income of resident full-time employees was $2,340 including CPF contributions.
In his Budget speech on Feb 16, Deputy Prime Minister Heng Swee Keat said the Government's aspiration is for every sector of the economy to have some form of progressive wage.
Mr Zaqy yesterday noted that the retail sector, which is among those employing the highest numbers of lower-wage workers, is a diverse one, with businesses ranging from sporting goods stores to supermarkets and fashion outlets.
Businesses that are tourist-driven may be harder hit by the Covid-19 pandemic while those in the heartland are doing better, he said.
"Some, like supermarkets, were doing very well in the early parts of the pandemic. So we have to look at different sub-sectors and the varied recovery (processes)."
He added that the workgroup would have to study how to include e-commerce players in their discussions and how to regulate the retail sector which is unlicensed.
The Singapore Retailers Association supports the uplifting of low-wage workers, said its executive director Rose Tong.
She added: "However, timing for its implementation is a concern (if) full business recovery is not in the next two to three years."
The move will result in rising business costs which retailers will be hard pressed to absorb, she noted.
Since it was formed in October last year, the tripartite group has been studying various sectors that could potentially implement PWMs, and aims to provide an interim update by the middle of this year.
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