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Written Answer to PQ on Full-time resident employees receiving only seven days of annual leave

NOTICE PAPER NO. 3387 OF 2025 FOR THE SITTING ON OR AFTER 5 FEBRAURY 2025 QUESTION NO. 6500 FOR WRITTEN ANSWER

MP: Assoc Prof Jamus Jerome Lim

To ask the Minister for Manpower (a) what percentage of full-time resident employees who receive only seven days of annual leave are from the bottom 20th percentile wage group; (b) what are the top five sectors where workers commonly receive only minimum annual leave entitlement; and (c) among these workers, what percentage are employed by companies with annual revenue exceeding $10 million.

Answer:

1. The Employment Act stipulates that employees are entitled to a statutory minimum of seven days of annual leave in their first year of service if they have worked with their employer for at least three months. With each year of service, an employee's statutory annual leave entitlement increases by one day, up to a minimum entitlement of 14 days.

2. As mentioned in our earlier replies to related PQs read on 14 October 2024 and 13 November 2024, 18,800 full-time resident employees aged 25 to 64 who were in their first year of employment in 2023 received seven days of paid annual leave. This forms a small percentage (1.1%) of full-time resident employees aged 25 to 64.

3. Persons who worked less than one year in their current job are a small group. More detailed estimates about this group, such as by income, industry and firms’ annual revenue, are therefore not available.