Poor Edmund Santhara Just Can T Catch A Break




Edmund Santhara, the deputy federal territories minister, has been in the news a bit lately but for all the wrong reasons. Five days ago, he implicated the mostly Chinese DAP and its base for fermenting anti-Rohingya xenophobia
In return, DAP politician Charles Santiago tore strips off Santhara. He called the Perikatan Nasional politician – and co-conspirator who brought down the Pakatan Harapan regime – is a desperate man “grasping at words to make his argument seem vaguely legitimate,” peddling humbug that’s “ignorant, vile, toxic and aimed at creating chaos and inciting hate.”Checkmate Santhara. He has shown a Donald Trumpian tendency for recklessness when casting blame without proof, and taking liberties with facts to shore up his relevance in a regime struggling to win broad-based legitimacy despite the public health crisis
Against the background of incurably barefaced racism, greed and corruption embedded in the Malaysian psyche, Santhara nevertheless turned to opportunism on the Rohingya issue. His fingering the DAP exemplifies that he, and the regime he serves, are bereft of real policies and real solutions
Santiago may have scuppered Santhara’s populist cheap shot but you wouldn’t know it: he raced off to chase his next rainbow. This time he pimped the idea that the Selayang wet market's closure, as a result of the enhanced control movement order, was a godsend. It has rendered foreign workers jobless but – voila! – turns out it’s a boon for unemployed locals
Or is it
“It’s a myth that without foreigners, wholesale markets cannot operate,” Santhara enthused. If that’s a myth, his next claim bears the seal of a hoax. He said the wet-market traders, who were paying foreign workers around RM55 a day, are now paying locals RM100 per day. It beggars belief. Which Malaysian employer willingly lifts his daily wage bill by 45 percent without at least a grizzle and, what’s more, in a recession? And where’s the evidence
It gets better. “It’s all about economics,” Santhara exuded next. Already the wet-market is trading at 65 percent capacity despite the enhanced movement control order (MCO). Bankrupt Malaysia Airlines would be envious. Perhaps Mydin Mohamed will now flag 100 percent capacity for his retail outlets since the May 4th economic re-opening. Loose tongues have a way of wagging fanciful assertions
Traders reminded Santhara that locals once just weren’t interested in working at the wet-market because they weren’t offered pension-fund contributions and social security (Socso). To any layman, this suggests the traders are now offering these entitlements to local workers. Why not before? Ripping off locals with latitude, perhaps, as they would have foreign workers
So why are locals now happy to work at the wet-market? Santhara will retell the economic imperative. What he won’t say is the economics of grinding poverty. Malaysians, particularly the low-paid and the jobless, are despairing about their future. Covid-19 has destroyed jobs. It might be a long haul out of economic gloom
Previously, more and more Malaysians weren’t interested in “low class” jobs. That’s on record. They wouldn’t be caught dead working in menial jobs with unsanitary conditions, zero job security, zero airconditioning, and their rights and entitlements abrogated by insanely regressive state laws
In 1996, the former international trade and industry minister Rafidah Aziz, had vehemently opposed lifting workers’ rights at the World Trade Organisation meeting in Singapore. That alone speaks volumes on successive regimes’ basis to labour market policy for contrived competitive advantage. So much, then, for the Malaysian free-market
Since the early 1980s “economics” also underscored Malaysian employers’ demand for foreign workers over locals. Foreigners, legal or illegal – some six million of them today – were infinitely cheaper than locals. Business profits boomed before firms turned to exploit human misery to rake in even more money. Locals, meanwhile, continued to shun jobs they felt were beneath their world-class academic qualifications and transferable skill-sets
Traders also told Santhara a modernised and clean wet-market would attract more locals to work there. Great idea on the cleanliness bit; the rest is spin. Here’s the rub: one, nobody yet knows what the unemployment rate will be in Malaysia. There’s more economic fallout to come. Last Tuesday, Bank Negara Malaysia dropped its overnight policy rate (OPR) rate to 2 percent from 2.5 percent, as expected; the lowest in 10 years. It spells trouble ahead. Worse if deflation sets in
Two, with the jobless peak still to come, a modernised wet-market will need only half the "normal" 3,000-strong workforce. Modernising the wet-market titillates Santhara, a businessman himself with RM132 million in wealth assets. But a modernised wet-market will dump more Malaysians onto the jobless scrapheap to face ever-dwindling employment prospects and incomes
This won’t help ramp up aggregate demand to get the economy out of recession any time soon. And nobody – not the Economic Planning Unit, the Economic Action Council, Bank Negara, Malaysia’s top economics guru, nor Azmin Ali – knows just how deep this recession could become
World commodity prices including oil and export markets have shrivelled up. Economies, governments and businesses are drowning in debt. World economic growth will be at least -3 percent for 2020 if we’re lucky. And a forecast 5.8 to 6 percent rebound in 2021 by the likes of Fitch Rating agency and the International Monetary Fund is fantasy
Thing is: can the Malaysian economy afford not to have these lowly-paid foreign workers? Even the Federation of Malaysian Manufacturers would admit its members’ addiction to cheap foreigners who are critical for lowering their marginal cost while locals still demand higher wages, salaries and air-conditioned workplaces
Business Malaysia is equally paltry. It has refused to pay to test their foreign workforce for Covid-19. They want taxpayers to foot the RM1 billion bill. Azmin Ali should hound the Malaysian Employers Federation the way he’s been harassing states defying his order to reopen their economies – an order made all the more laughable following his blunders and legal threat, from which he has tried to walk back
Edmund Santhara mustn’t be let off the hook. He needs to deal with the millions of foreign workers now unemployed and stranded in Malaysia. After tactlessly flying at the DAP with untested accusations, he has to take responsibility. Though he’s more likely to fob it off to the human resources and home affairs ministries
That said – and in a throwback to British colonial days – Santhara seems keen to ship the Rohingya people to the peninsula hinterland as indentured plantation labour in the regime’s out-of-sight-out-of-mind move that undoubtedly will placate legions of jingoists. Maybe Santhara is on to something here. Then again, maybe not
MANJIT BHATIA reads economics and international politics in New Hampshire in the US. - Mkini

Artikel ini hanyalah simpanan cache dari url asal penulis yang berkebarangkalian sudah terlalu lama atau sudah dibuang :

http://malaysiansmustknowthetruth.blogspot.com/2020/05/poor-edmund-santhara-just-cant-catch.html?utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=feed&utm_campaign=Feed%3A+MalaysiansMustKnowTheTruth+%28Malaysians+Mus

Kempen Promosi dan Iklan
Kami memerlukan jasa baik anda untuk menyokong kempen pengiklanan dalam website kami. Serba sedikit anda telah membantu kami untuk mengekalkan servis percuma aggregating ini kepada semua.

Anda juga boleh memberikan sumbangan anda kepada kami dengan menghubungi kami di sini
5 Best Muslim Halal Cafes You Can Check In Kuala Lumpur

5 Best Muslim Halal Cafes You Can Check In Kuala Lumpur

papar berkaitan - pada 29/4/2020 - jumlah : 536 hits
Assalamualaikum hai readers Alhamdulillah pejam celik pejam celik kita dah pun tempuh 5 Ramadan kan Ramadan kali ni dalam suasana PKP So macam mana pada korang semua Pada cik mimi semua tu takde masalah Everything dalam keadaan yang terkawa...
In Malaysia Anything Can Be Stolen Even A Parliament

In Malaysia Anything Can Be Stolen Even A Parliament

papar berkaitan - pada 30/4/2020 - jumlah : 164 hits
In a country where the people s elections money and certain constitutional freedoms have been stolen is it hard to perceive that their parliament has also been stolen In a Malaysiakini Prime Minister Muhyiddin Yasin said Malaysians do not w...
5 Virtual Bazaars You Can Visit This Ramadan

5 Virtual Bazaars You Can Visit This Ramadan

papar berkaitan - pada 28/4/2020 - jumlah : 477 hits
In our country we celebrate food and find great joy in eating And Ramadan bazaars are definitely something all Malaysians look forward to While visiting physical bazaars is not feasible during these trying times we can still satiate our pal...
Plan B For When You Can T Get A Hold Of Mom S Cooking

Plan B For When You Can T Get A Hold Of Mom S Cooking

papar berkaitan - pada 28/4/2020 - jumlah : 519 hits
As the holy month of Ramadan arrives some of us may not be able to break fast with mom s incredible cooking While we may not be able to exactly replicate your mother s dishes we can share with you ours through a Ramadan menu we ve specially...
You Can Now Get Huawei S Latest Flagship P40 Series With Digi From Rm48 Per Month

You Can Now Get Huawei S Latest Flagship P40 Series With Digi From Rm48 Per Month

papar berkaitan - pada 28/4/2020 - jumlah : 314 hits
It comes with the HUAWEI Freebuds 3 that s worth RM679 small Cover image via SAYS Android Authority small HUAWEI recently launched their P40 series which comes with some of the best features in photography and connectivity Now you can get t...
Can You Imagine Your Bathroom In Wood

Can You Imagine Your Bathroom In Wood

papar berkaitan - pada 28/4/2020 - jumlah : 282 hits
It is often thought that putting wood in the bathroom is a bad idea because it can swell and deteriorate with the ambient humidity of the room However once water repellent and protected wood no longer The post appeared first on
Life In Lockdown With Expired Papers When Sickness Can Turn Deadly

Life In Lockdown With Expired Papers When Sickness Can Turn Deadly

papar berkaitan - pada 2/5/2020 - jumlah : 198 hits
Charity workers of Nahdlatul Ulama Malaysia deliver aid to a group of Indonesians in a plantation There are some 2 5 million Indonesians in Malaysia many of whom live in desperate conditions during the MCO PETALING JAYA While governments wr...
Sabah Govt Can Be Sued

Sabah Govt Can Be Sued

papar berkaitan - pada 5/5/2020 - jumlah : 225 hits
KOTA KINABALU The Sabah and other state governments may face legal action from various parties particularly industry players if they stop businesses from resuming their operations from May 4 2020 says Datuk Seri Mohamed Azmin Ali The Senior...
Hiburan Gagal Bayar Tunggakan Rm4 96 Juta Untuk Pesanan Pelitup Muka Jovian Apparel Disaman Pembekal

Article 153 Of The Federal Constitution Does Not Bar Opening Uitm To Non Bumiputera

Stay Fashionably Fit With Huawei Fit 3 Now Available From Rm559

Bayaran Balik Ptptn Tarikh Pengecualian Penangguhan

Proses Pengubahsuaian Malaykord Baru

Pekerjaan Firma Prop Dalam Mencari Pedagang Terbaik

Pas Showing It Should Lead Pn Says Analyst

Diet Suku Suku Separuh Jom Amalkan



Info Dan Sinopsis Drama Berepisod Anggun Mikayla Viu Malaysia

Keputusan Markah Mingguan Senarai Lagu Tugasan The Hardest Singing Show Astro Malaysia

Biodata Syad Mutalib Pelakon Drama Berepisod Aku Bukan Ustazah TV3 Bunga Salju Astro Ria

Info Dan Sinopsis Filem Vina Sebelum 7 Hari 2024 Adaptasi Kisah Benar Kini Di Pawagam Malaysia

Biodata Founder Leeyanarahman Nur Liyana Abdul Rahman Yaana Yana Lee Usahawan Tudung Yang Terkenal Bersama Suaminya


Kangen Band Setengah Mati Mengejar Dia Chord

Airasia Santan Menu Baru Harga

Ulu Tiram Attack Suspect Not Ji Member Initial Link Made Due To Father S Past Says Igp

Muslims Rebuke Rais Yatim S No No To Sarawak S Proposal Of Conducting Friday Sermons In English

Resepi Sos Hijau Vietnamese Rolls

Koleksi Kad Pokemon Dilelong Rm330 000