Although there is no explicit regulation or legislation that provides for this, it can be implied under the anti-discrimination laws in Singapore that employers are permitted to take affirmative action in the workplace in Singapore in certain limited circumstances.
In Singapore, there are currently no express provisions or regulations which provide for, or prohibit, affirmative action in the workplace. Similarly, there are currently no binding laws on workplace discrimination. Despite this, employers are generally expected to abide by the guidelines set out by the Tripartite Alliance for Fair and Progressive Employment Practices (TAFEP), an agency set up by the Ministry of Manpower in 2006 to promote fair and progressive employment practices in the workplace.
In 2021, the government announced that these guidelines are expected to be enshrined in legislation, which is meant to complement the existing guidelines and is expected to be enacted in 2024. Since then, the Singapore government had accepted the final set of recommendations in the final report, that was released in August 2023 by the Tripartite Committee on workplace fairness, which put forth several recommendations for the upcoming workplace discrimination legislation. It is expected for this Workplace Fairness Legislation to be enacted by some time in the second half of this year of 2024.
Most notably, recommendation 1 prohibits workplace discrimination in respect of “protected characteristics”: (i) age, (ii) nationality, (iii) sex, marital status, pregnancy status, caregiving responsibilities, (iv) race, religion, language, and (v) disability and mental health conditions. However, employers will still be allowed to consider a protected characteristic in employment decisions if it is a “genuine and reasonable job requirement” (recommendation 8). For example, when the job requires the applicant to be able to speak certain languages such as language tutoring, the employer is allowed to use language proficiency as a metric to assess potential hires.
There are two exceptions to the recommendation to prohibit discrimination: first, for religious organizations to make employment decisions based on religion and religious requirements (recommendation 10), and second, for employers to favor persons with disabilities and seniors aged 55 years and above over other groups in hiring decisions (recommendation 11). Overall, these recommendations show that the government is willing to take affirmative action to ensure that meritocracy does not come at the expense of the country’s diversity goals.
This summary was contributed by Mayer Brown PK Wong & Nair Pte. Ltd., now in a Joint Law Venture with Mayer Brown.