The Foreign Domestic Workers in Singapore, Hong Kong, and Taiwan: Should Minimum Wage Apply to Foreign Domestic Workers?

被引:12
|
作者
Wang, Chieh-Hsuan [1 ]
Chung, Chien-Ping [2 ]
Hwang, Jen-Te [3 ]
Ning, Chia-yang [4 ]
机构
[1] Fo Guang Univ, Dept Appl Econ, Yilan, Taiwan
[2] Shih Chien Univ, Dept Int Business, 70 Dazhi St, Taipei 104, Taiwan
[3] Kainan Univ, Dept Banking & Finance, Taoyuan, Taiwan
[4] Natl Taipei Univ, Dept Econ, Taipei, Taiwan
关键词
foreign domestic workers; long-term care; minimum wage;
D O I
10.1080/10971475.2018.1447831
中图分类号
F [经济];
学科分类号
02 ;
摘要
With the number of foreign domestic workers increasing in different countries around the world, governments have also begun to pay attention to issues related to the rights of foreign domestic workers. This article presents a comparison and analysis of foreign domestic workers employment policies, working conditions, and minimum wage in Singapore, Hong Kong, and Taiwan. We found foreign domestic workers in Asian countries lack access to regular forms of migration and safe migration channels; low wages; long working hours; exploitative working conditions; non-recognition of domestic work under labor laws, and mistreatment in domestic work conditions. In addition, this article investigates from social welfare, economic, and legal perspectives, the feasibility of applying minimum wage to foreign domestic workers. The results show that foreign domestic workers' wages should not be decoupled from the minimum wage, and foreign domestic workers should not be treated as a separate group of workers in minimum wage policy. Long-term care systems should incorporate the foreign domestic worker labor pool, which could provide the additional personnel necessary for the nation's long-term care.
引用
收藏
页码:154 / 174
页数:21
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [41] Sexuality and discipline among Filipina domestic workers in Hong Kong
    Constable, N
    [J]. AMERICAN ETHNOLOGIST, 1997, 24 (03) : 539 - 558
  • [42] A Confucian Case for Equal Membership for Foreign Domestic Workers
    Kim, Sungmoon
    [J]. GLOBAL POLICY, 2019, 10 (01) : 122 - 129
  • [43] Negotiating citizenship: The case of foreign domestic workers in Canada
    Stasiulis, D
    Bakan, AB
    [J]. FEMINIST REVIEW, 1997, (57) : 112 - 139
  • [44] Not one of the family: Foreign domestic workers in Canada.
    Mirchandani, K
    Doucet, A
    [J]. CANADIAN REVIEW OF SOCIOLOGY AND ANTHROPOLOGY-REVUE CANADIENNE DE SOCIOLOGIE ET D ANTHROPOLOGIE, 1999, 36 (02): : 288 - 290
  • [45] "I NEED YOUR HELP!" - PSYCHOSOCIAL CORRELATES OF INTENTIONS TO SEEK HELP FOR DISTRESS AMONG FOREIGN DOMESTIC WORKERS IN HONG KONG
    Yeung, Nelson C. Y.
    Kan, Karon K. Y.
    Ma, Lu
    Jia, Jing
    [J]. ANNALS OF BEHAVIORAL MEDICINE, 2019, 53 : S118 - S118
  • [46] Finding a Home Away from Home: An Explorative Study on the Use of Social Space with the Voices of Foreign Domestic Workers in Hong Kong
    Mok, King Him
    Ho, Hung Chak
    [J]. ANNALS OF THE AMERICAN ASSOCIATION OF GEOGRAPHERS, 2021, 111 (05) : 1403 - 1419
  • [47] "We also deserve help during the pandemic": The effect of the COVID-19 pandemic on foreign domestic workers in Hong Kong
    Lui, Ingrid D.
    Vandan, Nimisha
    Davies, Sara E.
    Harman, Sophie
    Morgan, Rosemary
    Smith, Julia
    Wenham, Clare
    Grepin, Karen Ann
    [J]. JOURNAL OF MIGRATION AND HEALTH, 2021, 3
  • [48] Foreign Domestic Helpers (FDH) in Hong Kong A Study of Premarital Pregnancies
    Ullah, A. K. M. Ahsan
    [J]. INTERNATIONAL MIGRATION IN SOUTHEAST ASIA: CONTINUITIES AND DISCONTINUITIES, 2016, 2 : 167 - 179
  • [49] Fertility of Female Filipino and Indonesian Migrant Domestic Workers in Hong Kong
    Liao, Tim F. F.
    [J]. INTERNATIONAL MIGRATION REVIEW, 2023, 57 (03) : 1049 - 1068
  • [50] The present of forgetting: diasporic identity and migrant domestic workers in Hong Kong
    Lai, Ming-Yan
    [J]. SOCIAL IDENTITIES, 2011, 17 (04) : 565 - 585