Migrant labour brings enormous economic benefits, and wrenching heartache
EATING
chips in a Singapore McDonald’s with his press clippings proudly spread in
front of him, Mohammed Mukul Hossine is revelling in his status as a published
poet. The 25-year-old Bangladeshi’s day job is working on the piling for a new
block of luxury flats. With a father back home undertaking the haj
this year, and one of his eight siblings still in school, he needs the money.
His book of poems, “Me Migrant”, which he paid to have translated from Bengali
to English, and which were then “transcreated” by Cyril Wong, a Singaporean
poet, will not be a bestseller. But it has drawn some attention to a large,
often overlooked slice of Singapore’s population: its 1m “work permit”
holders—migrant workers on two-year contracts.
The
poems suggest, unsurprisingly, that their lives are pretty miserable.
The International Labour Organisation estimates that the Asia-Pacific
region was host in 2013 to 25.8m migrant workers. They have done wonders for
both their home and destination countries. Rapidly ageing societies such as
Japan, Singapore, South Korea and Taiwan are short of workers. Younger, poorer
places such as Bangladesh, India, Nepal and the Philippines need the money
their emigrants send home. So Cambodians work on South Korean farms; young
Chinese men work in Tokyo’s convenience stores; and South Asians toil on
Singapore’s building sites. The World Bank estimates that of the ten countries
that receive the most in remittances from overseas workers, five are in Asia.
In the Philippines, remittances are equal to 10% of GDP.
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