News

Championing Lifelong Learning: How Budget 2024 Supports Singaporeans To Upskill And Develop Their Full Potential

Ensuring we have a lifetime of opportunities.

As Singaporeans, we grow up learning that people are our most precious resource. That is why adopting a culture of lifelong learning is key for Singapore to remain a prosperous home for future generations. From the speech delivered by DPM and Minister for Finance Lawrence Wong, we learnt how Singaporeans can work towards achieving their full potential, and how the government will continue to support our lifelong learning journey. While the real median gross monthly starting salary of graduates has increased over the past decade, there is a growing gap in the starting salaries of ITE graduates compared to polytechnic and autonomous university graduates. Source: To narrow this income gap, and to encourage younger ITE graduates to upgrade their skills earlier in their career, the government has introduced a new . Singaporean ITE graduates, aged 30 and below, can look forward to . This will help to offset some of the costs of obtaining a diploma. Once they graduate, they will receive a further . As taking on a diploma requires both financial and time commitment, the OA top-up will give the graduates a boost in purchasing a home or saving for their retirement. Skills rarely go from being up-to-date one day to irrelevant the next. Rather, it is a gradual process – with your skillsets slowly becoming outdated in the working world or your entire industry on the sunset. But mid-career workers, who have been out of school for a longer period of time, are at greater risk of skills obsolescence. To better support mid-career workers, the government introduced the . From 1 May 2024, Singaporeans aged 40 and above can expect a This top-up is meant to be more targeted than previous tranches of SkillsFuture top-ups, with usage confined to selected training programmes with improved employability outcomes. For example, it can be used to offset out-of-pocket course fees when enrolling into around 7,000 part-time and full-time diploma, post-diploma, undergraduate programmes, and courses for the Progressive Wage Model sectors. Younger Singaporeans can also look forward to this $4,000 SkillsFuture top-up once they turn 40. To further defray the cost of reskilling, those aged 40 and above who . So, on top of the existing Mid-Career Enhanced Subsidy, where a mid-career worker can reduce his potential course fees by up to 90%, he can also use his $4,000 SkillsFuture Credit (Mid-Career) top-up to offset partially, or all, of the remaining 10% out-of-pocket expenses. Source: Often, trying to reskill requires careful consideration as it spans many months. This will be supported through . The allowance is capped at $3,000 a month. This support will cover the length of a SkillsFuture Career Transition Programme, and more than half the duration of most qualifications issued by our Institutes of Higher Learning. A support scheme for the involuntarily unemployed was also mooted during Budget 2024. While losing a job can be a major setback in life, it does not have to define the trajectory of an employee’s career. A temporary financial support scheme for those involuntarily unemployed, while they undergo training or look for better-fitting jobs, will be introduced – details will be shared later in 2024. Potentially, such employees may also be able to benefit from reskilling themselves through the SkillsFuture Level-Up Programme – while receiving up to 50% of their previous salary. Singapore must be an economy that provides opportunities for all; that benefits the many rather than the few. The government is thus focused on uplifting lower-wage workers. More support will be provided to employers who raise salaries for their lower-wage workers through the . Introduced in 2022, the PWCS provides transitional support to employers for mandatory wage increases under the Local Qualifying Salary (LQS) and Progressive Wage Model (PWM), as well as voluntary wage increments for lower-wage workers. In 2024, the government will increase its support by co-funding up to a maximum of 50% of the increments for those earning less than $2,500, and a maximum of 30% of the increments for those earning between $2,500 and $3,000. Next year, the government will raise the wage ceiling from $2,500 to $3,000, and there will only be a single wage ceiling tier of $3,000 for 2025 and 2026. The government will be co-funding 30% and 15% of the wage increments in 2025 and 2026 respectively. Source: Finally, the government has also committed to raise payouts for lower-wage workers. As announced in Budget 2024, the qualifying monthly wage cap for workers to receive WIS payouts will be raised from $2,500 to $3,000 from January 2025. The maximum payout per year will also be raised from $4,200 to $4,900 from January 2025. Source: If we’ve learned anything as Singaporeans, it’s that change is the only constant. Lifelong learning will not only give Singaporeans an advantage; but is vital for Singapore to continue punching above its weight in the global marketplace. That’s why the Government’s investment in SkillsFuture is key. Workers will be in the driving seat to overcome new challenges that we choose to face and, ultimately, unlock our full potential. While we await the roll-out of the in May, we can start considering what we need to learn to become better versions of ourselves today.