NEWS

ECONOMY | Staff Reporter, Singapore
Published: 17 Jan 12
479 views


What you need to know about political salaries in Singapore

What you need to know about political salaries in Singapore

DPM Teo Chee Hean said the proposed framework strikes a balance between the ethos of public service with an appropriate salary.

In a speech at the Parliamentary Debate on Political Salaries on 16 January 2012 he said:

Mr Speaker, Sir, the Prime Minister had already announced that the government intends to accept the recommendations, with the new salaries taking effect from 21 May 2011, the date when the new government took office. While the President’s salary is protected under the Constitution, Mr S R Nathan has voluntarily agreed to move to the new framework with effect from 21 May 2011.

As announced earlier by Mr Speaker, the President, Speaker and Deputy Speakers as well as former President Mr S R Nathan, former Speaker Mr Abdullah Tarmugi and former 22 Deputy Speakers, Mr Matthias Yao and Ms Indranee Rajah have agreed to adopt the new salaries as recommended by the Committee.

Presently, Ministerial salaries and the salaries of senior civil servants in the Administrative Service, as well as judicial and statutory appointment holders, such as judges, the Auditor-General, and the Attorney General adopt similar benchmarks. Our basic philosophy for all civil service salaries has been to benchmark against market comparables, but not to lead the market.

Where there are no comparable jobs (e.g. very demanding jobs with high social value such as in the Singapore Armed Forces or the Home Team), we have looked at comparable pay drawn by people with similar qualifications and backgrounds.

With the proposed changes in the political salary framework, I have asked the Public Service Division to study how relevant principles may be applied to the civil service.

The Government agrees with the view of the Committee that “the element of significant discount or sacrifice expected of political appointment holders” should not be applied to civil servants, other statutory appointment holders and judicial appointment holders as they are professionals and hence should not be subject to the same degree of sacrifice as political appointment holders.

View the full speech here.

View the Summary of Recommendations here.

View the Previous/Revised Salaries here.

Sign up for our weekly newsletter

Do you know more about this story? Contact us anonymously through this link.

Click here to learn about advertising, content sponsorship, events & rountables, custom media solutions, whitepaper writing, sales leads or eDM opportunities with us.

Tags: political salaries in Singapore, DPM Teo Chee Hean

TOP NEWS
Tiger Airways' return to profit hinges on two-fold action
Tiger Airways\' return to profit hinges on two-fold action It will need to save its Singapore operations from the red and ramp up utilization in its promising new Australia base, says PhillipCapital.
Transport equipment leads foreign wholesale trade rebound in 1Q12
In face of loss, Tiger can find hope Down Under
More Singapore SMBs securing data with virtualization
Ascott websites get smartphone-friendly
Scoot to possibly tie up with Tiger
Mayday, mayday: Tiger Airways reports net loss of $104.3m
ST Engineering embarks on collaborations for A330 conversion
Bad news for retailers: Sales to continue downtrend
Singapore banks in a sweet spot?
OTHER ECONOMY NEWS
Annual labor force survey begins
33,000 selected households will be asked to provide data on employment-related matters starting May 23.
Domestic wholesale trade recovers in 1Q12 as volumes rise
Transport equipment leads foreign wholesale trade rebound in 1Q12
Defending the Singapore brand
Singapore way behind in inflation control