3 Lessons Young Singaporeans Can
Learn From the Retrenchment of Middle Aged PMETs
Once upon a time, getting a cushy PMET job and rising to senior
management was the Singaporean dream. Claw your way to the top of the corporate
ladder and you’d be in for a lifetime of cruising around in your Porsche and
golfing at the country club.
But those days are gone, and middle-aged, highly-trained PMETs are
now first in line for retrenchment at many companies. These people have not
only been most affected by the increased spates of retrenchment last year, but
are also having the hardest time finding jobs. Many of those who do find jobs
take a huge pay cut or end up doing things like driving taxis.
Now, all this might sound awful, but is life really worse for
someone who’s been earning $10,000 for the past 10 or 20 years only to lose his
job, or for a lower income earner who’s been toiling away for 30 years but
earning only $1,000 a month?
Obviously, the PMET should be in a much better place than his
lower earning counterpart if he has played his cards right in his economically
active days and saved and invested wisely. Unfortunately, we often get the
reverse scenario, where PMETs are so mired in debt and their lifestyles are so
expensive to upkeep that losing their job immediately becomes disastrous.
You might be young now, but in a decade or two you could be facing
the same risk of being made redundant. Here are 3 things to never forget along the way.
Jump start your retirement
savings and investments when you’re young
Judging by the number of Chanel handbags you see on the streets,
young Singaporeans aren’t prioritising saving and investing, figuring they can
handle that when they’re older, more boring and have higher earning power.
A 2014 report revealed that 36% of young Singaporeans had no
savings at all, while 25% had less than $6,000. The generation before didn’t
fare too well either, with an average of just $60,000 in savings.
The problem with this mentality is that it’s premised on the
belief that it’ll be easier to save money at a later age. That isn’t the case
for many of the PMET’s who’ve been retrenched and found that they were bogged
down by car loans, housing loans and dependents to support.
If these people had prioritised saving and investing when they
were younger, getting laid off might not have been as scary as it is right now.
Sure, they would have been earning much less in their younger
days. But with the help of compounding interest and the benefit of a burgeoning
economy, their money could have grown significantly over time—probably much
more than it will ever grow in their remaining years before retirement.
The best time to start saving for retirement is when you’re young.
Even if you can’t save as much as you think you will when you’re older, if you
invest it wisely your money can work a lot harder than it can if you only start
in middle age.
When you reach your forties or fifties and your risk of getting
retrenched rises, if you already have a decent nest egg saved up you might see
your derailed career plans as a rather welcome sign that it’s time to take it
easy. If you haven’t, however, good luck.
Be wary of inflating your
lifestyle as you rise through the ranks
The most recent Straits Times report on PMET retrenchment
mentioned that some of the retrenched folks complained about being bogged down
by financial obligations like car loans and housing mortgages, and lamented
having to adjust their lifestyles.
That makes you wonder just how much of their lifestyle inflation
was necessary to begin with, and how much was due to their wanting to live the
high life and being complacent enough to think they’d be able to enjoy such
high salaries for the rest of their careers.
Sure, your financial obligations do increase when you buy a home
or have kids. But is it really necessary to go into debt just so you can be
seen driving a BMW or pay more than a million bucks for a condo?
Young Singaporeans who are lulled into a false sense of security
by a job market that makes employment readily available to the young and
relatively cheap should take heed that the higher you climb, the more
precarious your position will be, unless you are in field that renders you more
or less immune to retrenchment (meaning you’re a teacher, doctor, data
scientist, civil servant or similar).
You don’t really want to live like a king when the throne can be
snatched from under you at any moment.
Never get complacent at work
Retrenchment might sound unfair to an outsider—after an employee
has given a company the best years of his life, casting him aside sounds
barbaric.
But ask any young Singaporean who’s been subject to the incompetent
tyranny of middle and upper management folks well past their prime, and you’ll
receive a different opinion.
Complaints about supervisors who are even less competent than
rookie hires and manage their teams terribly are sadly quite common, and it’s
not very difficult to say why these folks would be the first to get laid off.
Due to the fact that workplaces in Singapore are generally very
hierarchical, many employees who are senior enough to become supervisors or
managers get complacent about their jobs, thinking they can now rely on their
subordinates to take the rap if things go wrong at work. Of course not everyone
is like that, but ask around and you’ll find it’s more common than you think.
As a young employee who might one day be promoted, never forget
that the higher your salary is, the harder it is to show you deserve it. You
have to be more knowledgeable and better at your job than your subordinates are
or risk being replaced.
That means constant upgrading, learning new things and at times
being made to feel like an old dog trying to learn new tricks. It may sound
like a bother, but that’s what you’re really being paid for.
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