Can Singapore's labor
crunch spark a robot revolution?
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[August 15, 2016]
By Aradhana Aravindan and Marius Zaharia
SINGAPORE (Reuters) - Sherine Toh says
her best days at work are when none of the 600-or-so staff at
Singapore's Tung Lok Restaurants quits, though such days are
rare.
The Chinese restaurant group is one of the thousands of businesses
struggling with a labor crunch caused by foreign worker curbs, that
threaten the city-state's already feeble growth rates.
"It has gotten much more tougher compared to the old days, five
years back," said Toh, who has at least 20 vacancies to fill at any
one time as head of human resources. The group closed some outlets
because of the shortage.
The city's restaurants, hotels and retailers have become the biggest
casualties of the labor crunch since Singapore accelerated
restrictions on foreign workers in 2011 as political disquiet about
immigration grew. But its highly-educated locals largely shun the
late hours and unglamorous work.
To address the constraints, Singapore is pushing businesses to look
to non-human solutions for their human resource challenges,
including greater use of automation and robotics.
At Chilli Padi Nonya Cafe near a leafy university enclave, a
tray-wielding robot roams the eatery, offering to collect plates
from patrons in a childlike voice. Navigating its way through
customers, it delivers the dirty dishes to the kitchen.
While tech powerhouses such as Japan, the U.S. and Germany invest
billions in robotics to compete commercially in the emerging sector,
Singapore's robots push is driven by a much more urgent need: the
survival of some labor-strapped small and medium sized businesses
may depend on them.
In the food and beverage industry, 90 percent of the businesses face
the shortage and about a third are "really struggling," according to
its lobby group.
"There is an increasing number of businesses that are up for sale,"
said Lim Rui Shan, executive director at the Restaurant Association
of Singapore, which represents 2,200 outlets. "Some of them just
shut down."
To encourage adoption, Singapore this year announced plans to spend
S$450 million ($333 million) over three years to fund robot
development and deployment.
Andrew Khaw, Infocomm Development Authority's senior director of
productivity growth through information and communications
technology, admits the take-up of robots is slower than he would
like.
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A robot collects dishes to be cleaned at Chilli Padi Nonya Cafe in
Singapore July 6, 2016. Picture taken July 6, 2016. REUTERS/Edgar Su
But he says the lack of manpower is a new operating reality
businesses now need to accept.
"It's a bit of 'let's see who blinks first'. As far as the
government is concerned, we can't go back on this policy," Khaw
said.
Service robots can be found in Singapore - in hospitals and restaurants, as
waiters or cleaners - but are less ubiquitous than might be expected for the
aggressively tech-oriented economy.
James Xia, director at Unitech Mechatronics, which built the busboy robot Chilli
Padi uses, sees export potential in his product but says development outlays
mean commercialization is slow.
Xia thinks more upfront government grants, rather than the current post-project
reimbursements, could accelerate development.
Another firm, Aitech Robotics and Automation, has developed a tea-lady robot
that delivers food and drinks throughout a seven-storey building to workers in
their offices.
But the company's business development manager, Eric Lee, says orders are slow
and doesn't expect to make any money on the showcase robot.
Weak capital expenditure amid the global economic slowdown has made it difficult
for a virtuous robot development cycle to rev up in Singapore.
"In a hypothetical situation where there were no foreign manpower curbs, then
(domestic) growth may have been a little bit higher," said Selena Ling, head of
treasury research for OCBC.
For now, manpower is just one of many economic challenges: Singapore cut its
2016 growth forecast this month after revising down its second-quarter growth as
the service sector contracted.
(Reporting By Aradhana Aravindan; Editing by Sam Holmes)
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