βThe company he worked for decided to move production to Malaysiaβ: Daughter upset after fatherβs layoff, says he βworked hard and stayed loyalβ

SINGAPORE: A young Singaporean woman expressed her anger online after her father suddenly lost his job despite spending years working hard and remaining loyal to his company.
On a Reddit forum called βr/SingaporeRaw,β the daughter said she found it rather unfair that her father was laid off after the company decided to relocate its production operations to Malaysia.
βMy dad did everything society and this government tells you to do,β she wrote. βWorked hard for years, paid taxes, contributed to CPF, raised a family, and stayed loyal to his company. Yet all it takes is one decision to move jobs elsewhere, and suddenly our familyβs future becomes uncertain.β
She also shared that her father had not been acting like himself in the weeks before the retrenchment.
According to her, he became βquieter, more distantβ and would spend long periods staring at his phone after work.
βMy mum kept asking if something was wrong, but he just brushed it off and said he was tired,β she said.
The truth finally came out a few days later when he broke down and admitted he had lost his job.
The daughter explained that her father is the sole breadwinner of the family, while her mother is disabled and unable to work. She and her sister are also still studying and are financially dependent on him.
She added, βPeople always say thereβs financial assistance available. Maybe there is, but anyone who has actually needed it knows it doesnβt magically solve everything, like school fees, transport, groceries, utilities, and medical expenses. [They] donβt disappear overnight.β
Seeing her father quietly worrying over finances at the dining table has also caused her to reflect on whether ordinary Singaporean workers are truly protected in their own country.
She said, βEvery election, weβre told Singaporeans will be protected and that good jobs will be created for locals. But when I look at my dad sitting at the dining table, wondering how heβs going to support the family and pay next monthβs bills, I canβt help but wonder what that protection actually means.β
βMaybe there are economic reasons, or maybe companies have to do whatβs best for business, or maybe my family is just unlucky; policies donβt work in favour of us. For families like mine, those explanations donβt make paying the bills any easier.β
βI would suggest you contact social workers.β
In the comments, one Singaporean Redditor remarked, βThis is sadly the price of capitalism. With a mix of monopoly, it makes it worse.β
Hoping to be of some help, another user wrote, βI would suggest you contact social workers for assistance for your family. I am not familiar with schooling assistance, but for your mumβs disability, see if you can get HGC, which can be S$600/month.β
A third wrote, βVery sorry that this has happened to your family. I believe your father is already at an age where upskilling and other nonsense schemes by the govt wonβt be easy or produce any results.β
A fourth added, βGuess itβs time for your family to take stock of any expenditure that is not necessary. And for you and your sister to get part-time jobs if possible.β
In other news, a fresh university graduate in Singapore has found themselves caught between practicality and ambition after receiving a job offer paying S$3,000 a month βa salary they admitted feels difficult to accept, yet equally difficult to walk away from.
Compared with recent graduate salary figures, which place median starting pay anywhere from S$3,840 for βArts, Design and Mediaβ graduates to around S$5,500 for those in βInformation and Digital Technologies,β the offer struck them as rather low.
This article (βThe company he worked for decided to move production to Malaysiaβ: Daughter upset after fatherβs layoff, says he βworked hard and stayed loyalβ) first appeared on The Independent Singapore News.