Wednesday, June 11, 2008

Employment In Government Sector

On 8th June, 2008, the Road Transport Department or Jabatan Pengangkutan Jalan (JPJ) published the list of successful candidates for ‘Jawatan Pembantu Penguatkuasa Gred N17’ in Mingguan Malaysia.

It is alarming to note that out of 751 successful candidates, only 15 were non-Bumiputras. It constitutes less then 2% of successful candidates. Out of this, only 10 candidates or 1.3% were Indians.

Grade N17 is for support staff and it is open for applicants with SPM or equivalent qualification. Most applicants for this grade are from lower and lower middle income group families. More often then not, they discontinue their studies after Form Five to find a suitable job to support their families.

How is the government to alleviate the socio-economic problem faced by the Indian Community if they offer such a low percentage of job opportunities to Indian Youths? Unemployment rate amongst Indian Youths is on the rise and unemployed youths below the age of 21 are susceptible to unhealthy activities that are detrimental to them and the society.

Whenever the issue of low percentage of Indians being accepted into government employment is raised, the standard answer is that there were insufficient number of applicants. However, the feed-back from divisional level MIC Youth Leaders is that many Indian Youths do apply for government jobs but are not called for interviews and out of those called, a very small percentage have been successful.

The JPJ and other government departments should be transparent and publish on the internet the name list of those that applied and also those that were successful. At present there is no mechanism for anyone to verify the number of applicants for a particular government position and we are solely dependant on the statistics provided by the respective department.

Government departments should also drop the practice of hiring based on the percentage of applicants from each race, i.e. if 80% applicants are Malays, 10% Chinese and 10% Indians, then the percentage of those offered employment by race will be 80:10:10. This methodology of percentage by number of applicants is not used elsewhere by the government (e.g. for PSD Scholarships and matriculation intakes) and therefore should not be used here when determining government employment. If at all the government is to set a quota for employment, then it should follow the percentage of racial composition in this country, not the percentage of applicants.

It is unhealthy for government departments to be constituted overwhelmingly by a single race in a multi-racial Malaysia. It is a hindrance towards nation building and does not reflect our true Malaysia.

The government should issue a directive to all government departments to correct this imbalance and be proactive in ensuring more non-Malays are employed in the civil service.

Murugesan Sinnandavar

1 comment:

Anonymous said...

When it is convenient, we are all Malaysians.
When they need us, we are one nation.
But in what really matters there is segregation,
In any requirement, in all application.
Can you even savor my frustration?

Malay, Chinese, India, and lain lain,
Are we so different, what is this game?
What ever it is, the excuse is lame,
Depravation fuels anger, a fire no one can tame.
Why can’t we be equal, has your greed no shame?

Though I am Malaysian, I am not equal,
Don’t I work just as hard; don’t I give just as much?
Why can’t we be treated like any individual?
Why are the lame kicked down and,
And the healthy given a crutch?

Is the land that I was born in?
A land once filled with promises to brim.
But now my future here looks grim.
Malaysia, your fate, I lament within,
Will you sink or will you swim!


The Absent Poet