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Foreign workers in Malysia

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Foreign workers in Malysia
Construction Management and Economics (2001) 19, 789-798

Foreign workers and labour segmentation in
Malaysia 's construction industry
ABDUL-RASHID ABDUL-AZIZ
School of Housing Building and Planning, Universiti Sains Malaysia, Minden 11800, Penang, Malaysia

Received 1 September 2000; accepted 24 May 2001

One of the profound changes to have taken place over the last two decades in the construction industry in
Malaysia is the emergence of foreign site operatives as an indispensable component of the labour force. This research shows that they have been exposed to some degree of discrimination at the hands of local employers.
Labour segmentation has prevailed as a consequence of variability in country-specific traits. Schisms between the foreign nationals and local workers and between the various foreign nationals operate to the employers ' advantage in that greater control can be exerted. Labour violations have always been an inexorable feature of the Malaysian construction industry, with little prospect of reform. As there seem to be no signs of the dependence on foreign workers attenuating, future waves of migrant workers can expect to be subjected to the same employer treatment, and hence labour segmentation.
Keywords: Labour, Malaysia, segmentation, site operatives, treatment

Introduction
The 1986-1997 period of rapid economic expansion in Malaysia stimulated contemporary labourflowsfrom abroad of unprecedented proportions (Kassim, 1996).
A labour void the resultant of fairly inelastic domestic manpower unable to meet rising demand was the driving force. From the approximately 500 000 foreign workers in 1984 (Abella, 1996), numbers swelled to in excess of 1.2 million by 1991 (Pillai, 1992). By the mid-1990s, foreign workers made up 15% of the labour force (Lin, 1996). Even, after the tumultuous Asian
Currency Crisis, which led to retrenchment, the official assessment was that the number of foreign workers in Malaysia had doubled



References: Hiebert, M. (1995) Give and take. Far Eastem Economic Review, 25 May, 54-6. Abdul-Aziz, A.-R. (1995) Foreign Labour in the Malaysian Construction Industry, Sectoral Activities Programme Work- Hsieh, T.-Y Abdul-Aziz, A.-R. (1999) The hegemony of Indonesian Hugo, (1982) Circular migration in Indonesia ILO (1995) Social and Labour Issues Concerning Migrant Abdul-Aziz, A.-R Jackson, R.N. (1961) Immigrant Labour and the Development of Malaya 1786-1920, Government Press, Federation of Abella, M.I. (1996) Challenges Facing Labour Importing Malaya. Jansen, C.J. (1970) Readings in the Sociology of Migration, in Asia National Policies and Regional Cooperation, organPergamon Press, Oxford. Arudsothy, P. and Linler, C.R. (1993) State regulation and union fragmentation in Malaysia Kassim, A. (1986) Indonesian immigrants and urban squatOrganised Labour in the Asia-Pacific Region, Cornell ting in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia Kassim, A. (1996) An Overview of Migrant Workers in Malaysia Assaad, R. (1993) Formal and informal institutions in the labour market: with applications to the construction sector Khan, M. F. (1986) Pakistan. In Gunatilleke, G. (ed.). Balaisegaram, M. and Pillai, S. (1996) Looking beneath the surface Bale, J. and Drakakis-Smith, D. (1993) Population Movement and the Third World, Routledge, London. King, R. (1996) Migration in a world historical perspective. Ball, M. (1988) Rebuilding Construction: Economic Changes In van den Broek, J. (ed.), TTie Economics of Labour and the British Construction Industry, Routledge, London. generating 25 000-30 000 skilled local workers annually is overly optimistic (Abdul-Aziz, 2000). While labour supplying nations can propose regulations and legislation to protect their citizens against labour violations, these are hard to enforce extra-territorially (Gunatilleke, 1986a; Wells, 1996) Kosinski, L.A. and Prothero, R.M. (1975) People on the Pillai, P. (1992) People on the Move: An Overview of Recent Move, Meuthen, London. Rist, R. (1979) Migration and marginality: guestworkers in Lalonde, R American labour market: quality, assimilation, and distriSiew, N.C. (1961) Labour and tin-mining in Malaya. In butional efifects Stalker, P. (1994) The Work of Strangers: A Survey of Marshall, R Wells, J. (1996) Labour migration and international

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