In a Facebook post about #CleanSG Day at his constituency, Sengkang GRC, Workers’ Party Member of Parliament Jamus Lim wrote that he had once aspired to be a garbage collector as a young boy.

The MP, an Associate Professor in economics at ESSEC Business School, wrote that “perhaps I was enamored by the trucks” by way of explanation for wanting to have been a garbage collector, but added that at present, part of his estate walk routine every week is to inspect rubbish chutes and collect trash, plus holding the now quarterly #SengkangGRC #CleanSG Day. 

He had appeared to have forgotten about this childhood ambition but had been reminded about it over breakfast recently by his mother.

“So in some ways, things have truly come full circle!” he added.

In the rest of his Apr 24 post, he made two important points. 

One, that the cleanliness of one’s surroundings is everyone’s job, and that no one should think that it’s someone else’s responsibility to clean up after them.

“After all, the trash we generate is because of our own choices about what we consume and dispose,” the WP MP wrote, adding that he sees cleaners “as being there to help us along the way.”

And perhaps more importantly, he tackled the issue of a minimum wage.

Assoc Prof Lim said that when he had first gone overseas for his studies, he had been surprised to learn that garbage truck drivers “are able to earn a respectable, middle-class income,” adding that “today, their average salary in Australia is $60,000 a year.”

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He explained this substantial amount of pay as partially due to minimum wages, heightened productivity from mechanization, and a factor economists term as “‘compensating differential’; the premium a worker receives for taking on a job that is risky or unpleasant.” 

The WP MP then wrote that his dream is that Singapore’s economy “will evolve into one where all workers—not just those at the high end of the educational and talent spectrum—receive sound, living wages that reward them for honest jobs, done well.”

This is the reason why he embraces #CleanSG, as it serves not only to remind everyone of their responsibility for the surroundings but also “as a way to appreciate the value of simple but essential jobs.”

Assoc Prof Lim added, “As restrictions on larger gatherings have relaxed further, we took this opportunity to also make it a community event, and we were fortunate to have Sengkang General Hospital staff, Sengkang Town Council folks, #TeamSengkang volunteers, and even a good number of resident families join us this morning. Thanks to them all, and I hope the experience was as valuable for them as it was for me.”

In a Facebook post about #CleanSG Day at his constituency, Sengkang GRC, Workers’ Party Member of Parliament Jamus Lim wrote that he had once aspired to be a garbage collector as a young boy.

The MP, an Associate Professor in economics at ESSEC Business School, wrote that “perhaps I was enamored by the trucks” by way of explanation for wanting to have been a garbage collector, but added that at present, part of his estate walk routine every week is to inspect rubbish chutes and collect trash, plus holding the now quarterly #SengkangGRC #CleanSG Day.

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He had appeared to have forgotten about this childhood ambition but had been reminded about it over breakfast recently by his mother.

“So in some ways, things have truly come full circle!” he added.

In the rest of his Apr 24 post, he made two important points.

One, that the cleanliness of one’s surroundings is everyone’s job, and that no one should think that it’s someone else’s responsibility to clean up after them.

“After all, the trash we generate is because of our own choices about what we consume and dispose,” the WP MP wrote, adding that he sees cleaners “as being there to help us along the way.”

And perhaps more importantly, he tackled the issue of a minimum wage.

Assoc Prof Lim said that when he had first gone overseas for his studies, he had been surprised to learn that garbage truck drivers “are able to earn a respectable, middle-class income,” adding that “today, their average salary in Australia is $60,000 a year.”

He explained this substantial amount of pay as partially due to minimum wages, heightened productivity from mechanization, and a factor economists term as “‘compensating differential’; the premium a worker receives for taking on a job that is risky or unpleasant.”

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The WP MP then wrote that his dream is that Singapore’s economy “will evolve into one where all workers—not just those at the high end of the educational and talent spectrum—receive sound, living wages that reward them for honest jobs, done well.”

This is the reason why he embraces #CleanSG, as it serves not only to remind everyone of their responsibility for the surroundings but also “as a way to appreciate the value of simple but essential jobs.”

Assoc Prof Lim added, “As restrictions on larger gatherings have relaxed further, we took this opportunity to also make it a community event, and we were fortunate to have Sengkang General Hospital staff, Sengkang Town Council folks, #TeamSengkang volunteers, and even a good number of resident families join us this morning. Thanks to them all, and I hope the experience was as valuable for them as it was for me.”

/TISG

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