The Sun (Malaysia)

Salary man or entreprene­ur, take your pick

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TUN Dr Mahathir Mohamad has gone back to his negative-comment days of yore in his campaign for votes. It wasn’t enough that he took the oft repeated “Malays are lazy” campaign most of us were barraged with for 22 years, he now says it is demeaning to be a nasi lemak seller and a driver with a ridehailin­g company.

Let’s look at the facts. According to a Malaysian Industrial Developmen­t Finance Bhd (MIDF) report published last month, unemployme­nt stood at 509,000 in October after peaking in August at 519,000 – which puts the rate at 3.5% of 15.09 million officially employed workers in Malaysia.

However, the report notes that there were 145,200 job vacancies recorded in September.

There are a few reasons for this mismatch: first, it could be senior posts not made available to the unemployed youths. Second, it could be that the youths are not educated in the sector that is being demanded by the employers or find the sector not to their wants.

Or third, there are just people who choose to be nasi lemak sellers and drivers while also being entreprene­urs in their own right. Or fourth, they cannot get a job because they are discrimina­ted against.

The second reason is a given. The MIDF report points out that the jobs offered were not in glamorous sectors, with 75,600 vacancies in manufactur­ing, and 28,000 vacancies in services. There are also some 18,000 vacancies in constructi­on.

By job type, there was a need for 14,200 plant and machine operators and assemblers.

So, the government has not failed to create jobs, but there is a mismatch of jobs and skills of the new generation joining the workforce.

So, the failure of youths to gain employment is not a failure in government.

There is nothing wrong with selling nasi lemak, especially when you note that those running food stalls are those who may not have any other job opportunit­ies open to them in a company other than to be office boys or tea ladies.

Similarly, there are those who find it difficult to get jobs because of who they are and how they look. Case in point, the wellknown nasi lemak seller in Bandar Sri Permaisuri. Why? Because Jojie Kamaruddin is transgende­r. Of course, it also helps that her reputation has reached all the way to Canada, and that she’s rated four stars on Google.

You have to ask: Is this a failure in education, or is this the desire to venture out and do something to earn more than what an office job will pay?

Now, let us move on to ride-hailing drivers. I’m not sure who briefed Mahathir, but many drivers are those who retired early or were retrenched. Also, many of them drive part time because they want to supplement their income.

They are college students trying to avoid another “mahasiswa lapar” debacle and reducing the burden on their parents.

They earn commission­s selling insurance, property, and direct sales products, and are dependent on networking.

They are those who run their own cafes, teach music, or are involved in forex trading

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