The Star Malaysia

Employers ordered to consider flexible work arrangemen­ts

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Workers can now ask for four-day work weeks, more workfrom-home days and staggered work timings starting from Dec 1, underscori­ng the global trend of government­s and companies relaxing office arrangemen­ts in order to retain talent.

The new guideline was announced yesterday by the Tripartite Alliance for Fair and progressiv­e employment practices, an agency set up by the Manpower Ministry, the National Trades union Congress and the Singapore National employers Federation.

employees will also be entitled to ask for other arrangemen­ts such as flexible work locations come the end of this year.

While the guideline isn’t enforceabl­e by law, it does require all firms in Singapore to set up a process for employees to submit a formal flexible-working arrangemen­t request.

employers can reject the request on the grounds it would result in a significan­t worsening of productivi­ty, a significan­t increase in cost or because it’s not feasible given the nature of the work. Companies couldn’t however reject a request on the basis that it runs counter to a firm’s traditions or management simply doesn’t believe in such flexible work styles.

Singapore’s move is in line with other countries including Ireland and the uk, where government­s require businesses to consider flexi-work requests.

While working from home became a mainstay during the pandemic, the practice has been on the decline as the world recovers from Covid and employers, mindful of expensive real estate sitting empty, demand staff get back to the office. But retaining more flexible arrangemen­ts may be good for business, with those giving employees freedom to choose how and where they work proven to attract talent at a faster rate and generate more revenue.

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