Ethnic discrimination amongst migrant workers : evidence from the construction industry in Singapore.
Despite the myriad of laws and policies enacted to ensure that workers are treated fairly by their employers, wage differences across foreign workers in the Construction Industry still persist. This paper seeks to investigate the existence of wage differences among foreign workers in the Singapore C...
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sg-ntu-dr.10356-738712019-12-10T14:31:40Z Ethnic discrimination amongst migrant workers : evidence from the construction industry in Singapore. Chew, Bang Ming Chew, Yi Wen Tai, Kai Zhen Leong Kaiwen School of Humanities and Social Sciences DRNTU::Social sciences Despite the myriad of laws and policies enacted to ensure that workers are treated fairly by their employers, wage differences across foreign workers in the Construction Industry still persist. This paper seeks to investigate the existence of wage differences among foreign workers in the Singapore Construction Industry, its prevailing type of discrimination and its corresponding magnitude. Using the Ordinary Least Square (OLS) method, we show that despite all workers possessing almost similar ability, Chinese workers on average earn S$7/hour while the Bangladeshi and Indian workers earn S$3/hour and S$3.50/hour respectively. Furthermore, wage gap across Chinese and non-Chinese workers worsen when firms hire more non-Chinese workers. Robustness checks involving a pooled OLS method also confirm the existence of wage differences. Given that meritocracy forms one of the governing principles in Singapore, the results obtained highlight huge policy implications for the Singapore Government to ensure a safe and fair working environment for workers, regardless of ethnicity. Bachelor of Arts 2018-04-17T08:31:38Z 2018-04-17T08:31:38Z 2018 Final Year Project (FYP) http://hdl.handle.net/10356/73871 en Nanyang Technological University 46 p. application/pdf |
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DRNTU::Social sciences Chew, Bang Ming Chew, Yi Wen Tai, Kai Zhen Ethnic discrimination amongst migrant workers : evidence from the construction industry in Singapore. |
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Despite the myriad of laws and policies enacted to ensure that workers are treated fairly by their employers, wage differences across foreign workers in the Construction Industry still persist. This paper seeks to investigate the existence of wage differences among foreign workers in the Singapore Construction Industry, its prevailing type of discrimination and its corresponding magnitude. Using the Ordinary Least Square (OLS) method, we show that despite all workers possessing almost similar ability, Chinese workers on average earn S$7/hour while the Bangladeshi and Indian workers earn S$3/hour and S$3.50/hour respectively. Furthermore, wage gap across Chinese and non-Chinese workers worsen when firms hire more non-Chinese workers. Robustness checks involving a pooled OLS method also confirm the existence of wage differences. Given that meritocracy forms one of the governing principles in Singapore, the results obtained highlight huge policy implications for the Singapore Government to ensure a safe and fair working environment for workers, regardless of ethnicity. |
author2 |
Leong Kaiwen |
author_facet |
Leong Kaiwen Chew, Bang Ming Chew, Yi Wen Tai, Kai Zhen |
format |
Final Year Project |
author |
Chew, Bang Ming Chew, Yi Wen Tai, Kai Zhen |
author_sort |
Chew, Bang Ming |
title |
Ethnic discrimination amongst migrant workers : evidence from the construction industry in Singapore. |
title_short |
Ethnic discrimination amongst migrant workers : evidence from the construction industry in Singapore. |
title_full |
Ethnic discrimination amongst migrant workers : evidence from the construction industry in Singapore. |
title_fullStr |
Ethnic discrimination amongst migrant workers : evidence from the construction industry in Singapore. |
title_full_unstemmed |
Ethnic discrimination amongst migrant workers : evidence from the construction industry in Singapore. |
title_sort |
ethnic discrimination amongst migrant workers : evidence from the construction industry in singapore. |
publishDate |
2018 |
url |
http://hdl.handle.net/10356/73871 |
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1681040494024458240 |