The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Survey shows fresh graduates not expecting unrealisti­c salaries

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KUALA LUMPUR: Claims by employers that fresh graduates often ask for ridiculous starting salaries have turned out to be unfounded, Khazanah Research Institute’s (KRI) latest survey on the employment market for youths shows.

The school-to-work transition survey (SWTS), which was released yesterday, gathered crucial insights about salary expectatio­ns that found fresh graduates have a very low reservatio­n wage — that is the lowest pay rate which they would be willing to accept for a particular type of job — starting from as little as RM1,550 a month.

The highest expectatio­n is more pronounced among first-time job seekers, the report added, but decreased as they got more experience of the labour market.

But the low wage reservatio­n, born out of disillusio­nment, has driven today’s fresh graduates to move between jobs quicker than in previous generation­s, which employers have convenient­ly exploited to brand millennial­s as “too demanding.”

“What is interestin­g is the low reservatio­n wage of those who are currently employed,” the study, conducted in late 2017 to early this year, said.

“The main reasons for this group to seek another job are to have better prospects or higher pay, yet the minimum salary they would accept for a job is on average RM1,550 per month and the modal salary is only RM1,000 a month.”

A survey by hiring agency Jobstreet in 2017 indicated that more than two-thirds of employers complained that fresh graduates are “asking too much” with starting salaries, typically between RM2,400 and RM3,000.

Only 2 per cent of managers said they are willing to pay fresh graduates the expected salary, the same survey found.

Yet data compiled by KRI showed the median salary expectatio­n by Bachelor degree holders to be much lower than what is popularly believed, at RM1,900 while those with higher qualificat­ions were asking as little as a hundred ringgit more.

The median salary expectatio­n from postgradua­tes, on the other hand, averaged at RM2,200.

The SWTS found that the average salaries that young workers would be prepared to accept for a particular type of job is a monthly average of RM1,555 while the modal income, indicated by the most number of respondent­s, is just RM1,000.

And they are not lofty expectatio­ns, KRI argued in its summary of the findings, considerin­g the average reservatio­n wage is not far off the present national minimum wage, at RM1,100, and that over half of young workers today have tertiary qualificat­ions.

The minimum wage is targeted at the poor and those without qualificat­ions, it added, and not meant to be used as the baseline to structure starting salaries for job seekers with qualificat­ions.

KRI also defended fresh graduates as having every right to ask for what the institute described as a living wage that would allow them to sustain a decent standard of living.

“It does not seem unrealisti­c for young people to want a living, fair or decent wage that will allow them to sustain a socially acceptable minimum standard of living, beyond the basic necessitie­s like food, clothing and shelter,” the report said.

“A minimum wage is not necessaril­y a living wage.”

Bank Negara Malaysia stated in a cost of living report released earlier this year that RM2,700 is the minimum needed to “survive” in the country’s major cities. The Malaysian Trade Union Congress, on the other hand, argued that a starting salary of RM3,000 is reasonable by today’s standards.

The SWTS report noted that the Graduate Tracer Study showed most local working fresh graduates with first degrees earn below RM3,000 and those with diplomas less than RM2,000.

The same survey also found that more than half of unemployed degree holders expect salaries of less than RM2,500 and close to two-thirds of unemployed diploma holders expect to earn less than RM2,000.

At the same time, the 2017 Cost of Talent report issued by Universum Global, an employer “branding” firm, showed “Malaysian graduates have one of the lowest expectatio­ns in the world for starting salaries.”

The findings underscore the deeper structural problem beleagueri­ng the job market today, KRI said, where supply of graduates far exceeds demand, industries continue to prefer cheap labour and mismatch in skills and requiremen­ts is widespread thanks to a backward education policy that puts too much focus on paper qualificat­ions.

As a result, the study found a staggering 85 per cent of workers with tertiary qualificat­ions taking up low-skilled or manual jobs.

 ??  ?? Khazanah staff Atiqah Azlan with Khazanah’s ‘School to Work Transition Survey Report’ in Kuala Lumpur yesterday.The Khazanah Research Institute’s latest survey found the lowest pay rate which fresh graduates would be willing to accept for a particular type of job is as little as RM1,550 a month.The MalaysianT­rade Union Congress has argued that a starting salary of RM3,000 is reasonable by today’s standards.
Khazanah staff Atiqah Azlan with Khazanah’s ‘School to Work Transition Survey Report’ in Kuala Lumpur yesterday.The Khazanah Research Institute’s latest survey found the lowest pay rate which fresh graduates would be willing to accept for a particular type of job is as little as RM1,550 a month.The MalaysianT­rade Union Congress has argued that a starting salary of RM3,000 is reasonable by today’s standards.

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