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 Singapore Medical Career: RM30,450 Monthly Salary, Annually S$110k - Malaysia's Brain Drain

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TSxenotzu
post Jul 12 2025, 10:03 AM, updated 5 months ago

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Singapore Recruitment Fair for Medical Officers and Clinical Associates in Aug 2025 at KLCC. All Malaysian Doctors & Medical Graduates are welcome. Hold basic Medical Degree. Completed Housemanship. Benefits:
1. Estimated Basic Annual Package SGD110,000 annually (SGD9,166 monthly);
2. Monthly Accommodation Allowance;
3. One-time Relocation Support;
4. Overtime Pay (night duties, weekend rounds);
5. Bonuses (13th month);
6. Flight Ticket & Insurance;
7. Leave Entitlements.
For a Malaysian junior doctor, the pay package and benefits are irresistible. More importantly, this an opportunity to be talent spotted for further training in Singapore as well as an opportunity for Permanent Resident status or even marriage in Singapore. It's a meritocracy in Singapore, where race or religion does not count at all, as almost 2 million Malaysians who have migrated to Singapore have found.

Singapore has signed up to and ratified ICERD (International Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Racial Discrimination) This is a United Nations treaty that commits its members to eliminating racial discrimination and promoting understanding among all races. Malaysia, Myanmar, Brunei, North Korea, and several island nations like Palau, Niue, and others have not signed up to or ratified ICERD.

Remember the Anti-ICERD Rally or Himpunan Aman Bantah ICERD or Himpunan 812 ("The 8th of December Rally")? This was a rally that was held in Dataran Merdeka, Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia on 8 December 2018. It was organised by opposition Islamist political parties Malaysian Islamic Party (PAS) and United Malays National Organisation (UMNO), with the support of various non-governmental organisations. It was held in response to the new Malaysian government's plan to ratify ICERD. The opposition parties from UMNO and PAS alleged such ratification was contrary to the Constitution of Malaysia. The argument that this was contrary to the Federal Constitution was strongly opposed by most leading constitutional legal scholars in the country. The constitution recognizes special rights for the Malay and Bumiputra. Even though the government announced that it would not ratify the convention on 23 November 2018, the organiser decided to push on with the rally and shifted its main focus towards celebrating the government's decision on not ratifying ICERD.

Many non-Malays who are straight-A students cannot get a spot in any of the country’s 20 public universities. Many can’t afford private universities by themselves, so it is their parents who have to take out crippling loans for private universities. And the ongoing controversy over Matriculation places for straight-A non-Malay students! Such racial quota in education foster division rather than unity.

I wonder which ethnic race would be the majority of applicants that take up these places in Singapore, then to take up PR, and build a new and economically better life for a new tomorrow?

This post has been edited by xenotzu: Jul 15 2025, 01:49 PM
TSxenotzu
post Jul 13 2025, 11:20 AM

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NST 12 Jul 2025 - BETTER CAREER PROSPECTS, WORK ENVIRONMENT FOR DOCTORS AND NURSES TO STEM BRAIN DRAIN.
QUOTE
KUALA LUMPUR: The Health Ministry (MOH) has given its assurance and continued commitment to resolving public health issues, including the welfare of healthcare workers.

Health Minister Datuk Seri Dr Dzulkefly Ahmad said it was intensifying reform efforts to stem the brain drain of healthcare professionals following reports of recent recruitment drives by Singapore-based talent agencies in local institutions and high-profile venues. He said the government is aware of open interviews conducted in Malaysia by foreign recruiters targeting medical professionals, especially young talent graduating from local universities. "Malaysia is internationally recognised as a source of world-class healthcare professionals. "While this reflects the strength of our training ecosystem, it also poses an ongoing challenge in retaining these professionals within our national health system," he said in a statement.

Although the Health Ministry has no legal grounds to stop Malaysian healthcare professionals from seeking employment abroad, nor can it prevent licensed recruitment agencies from offering overseas placements, Dzulkefly said, the onus is on the government to ensure better retention. He said the ministry's strategies are anchored on improving career prospects, upgrading work conditions, and introducing structural reforms, he said.

"Among the key initiatives are a 13 per cent salary hike under the new Public Service Remuneration System (SSPA) starting 2025, and amendments to the Medical Act 1971 to officially recognise alternative specialist pathways, including the Parallel Pathway programme. "MOH has also enhanced the ePlacement system to provide more transparent job placements and mobility, while reducing dependency on the Contract of Service model."

In July, the ministry approved 2,248 permanent appointments for contract medical officers, the largest intake since the contract system's introduction, he said. He said these steps are aimed at offering clearer and more structured career progression, including for contract officers.

"The ministry is also tackling non-monetary factors such as workplace burnout, bullying, and toxic work environments. "There is a serious focus on creating fair, safe and supportive working conditions. "This includes stricter internal guidelines, investigations into misconduct, and direct engagement with healthcare facility leaders," he said.

He said MOH has also commissioned a study titled The Future of Health Workforce in Malaysia, conducted by the Strategic Engagement Group (SEG). The report recommends forming an inter-ministerial Human Resource in Healthcare (HRH) Governance Board, to coordinate long-term workforce sustainability strategies across multiple agencies.

Dzulkefly acknowledged that solutions require collaboration beyond the Health Ministry, involving the Public Service Department (PSD), Finance Ministry, Ministry of Higher Education (MOHE) Human Resources Ministry. He said Malaysia, as the 2025 Asean Chair, also plans to elevate the discussion on healthcare workforce mobility and regional accountability. "MOH remains fully committed to building a vibrant, robust healthcare system, not just by reforming healthcare financing but also by modernising care delivery through digitalisation, AI and new technologies," he said.

Experts raised concerns over Singapore's move to hold an open recruitment exercise for doctors here next month, saying that it could further exacerbate the nation's healthcare brain drain.
Trying to close the stable door after the horse has bolted.

20 May 2025 - 'CHEAP BUT HIGH QUALITY': M'SIAN DOCTOR SAYS 40% OF S'PORE'S MEDICAL STAFF ARE M'SIAN UNIVERSITY GRADUATES

This post has been edited by xenotzu: Jul 13 2025, 12:11 PM
sweet_pez
post Jul 16 2025, 10:56 AM

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QUOTE(xenotzu @ Jul 13 2025, 11:20 AM)
Malaysia had always been Singapore's talent farm.

Not enough pilot? Offer a super irresistible package and you'll have multiple application from Malaysians flocking over.
Lack of specialized doctors? Throw in high-remuneration package with great benefits and get them over to SG.

Everyone has a price. What else is new? laugh.gif
TSxenotzu
post Jul 16 2025, 01:41 PM

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QUOTE(sweet_pez @ Jul 16 2025, 10:56 AM)
Malaysia had always been Singapore's talent farm.

Not enough pilot? Offer a super irresistible package and you'll have multiple application from Malaysians flocking over.
Lack of specialized doctors? Throw in high-remuneration package with great benefits and get them over to SG.

Everyone has a price. What else is new? laugh.gif
*
And Malaysia, keeps parroting and pressing the same repeat button. "The definition of insanity is doing the same thing over and over again and expecting different results" - Albert Einstein.
sweet_pez
post Jul 16 2025, 05:05 PM

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QUOTE(xenotzu @ Jul 16 2025, 01:41 PM)
And Malaysia, keeps parroting and pressing the same repeat button. "The definition of insanity is doing the same thing over and over again and expecting different results" - Albert Einstein.
*
We fail to keep good talent locally. While in a way it's positive news that not everyone is 100% open to jumping over, we can't deny we're losing talent that we've spent time training and cultivating.

It's a repetitive loop unless there's something in line to keep people here.

 

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