Whay should we care for Dubai and there opinion lol
Smooth-Reading-4180 on
bro you are posting same shit everyday but, I don’t know man, your personal fucked ups nothing to do with malta or dubai. Does it change anything if clone or not? Can you elaborate?
MountainBlock on
Yes
The government opened its legs for mass immigration and now Maltese wouldn’t dare work in hospitality or construction
That’s the cheap labour model
I know I’ll be called racist for it but hey import the third world and you become the third world. When was the last time you saw a Maltese server in a restaurant? Nowadays I’m impressed when someone Maltese serves me
And not to mention the standard of living feels like it’s gone down a lot. Watching people dig through trash for bcrs bottles or being asked for my cans on the beach. Granted it can be anyone but it’s sad to see
Atoonix on
I agree with the comparison to be honest.
When I used to work in catering, the consensus was always that if an employee doesn’t pick up the role quickly or if they have an attitude/authority problem, it’s easier to replace them over trying to “fix” them, even when we offered only minimum wage salaries, because people from impoverished countries will take the risk to try and improve their survival.
Moreover, poor working and living conditions very rarely sway impoverished people away because most of these workers come from countries were those same conditions would be considered good, while a Maltese citizen would not be comfortable living and/or working in such conditions (for example sharing a bedroom with 3 other people).
I don’t think there is an easy solution to this problem. If we terminated immigrant workers from countries like India, we wouldn’t be able to replace them with local (or even EU) works alone because there are a lot of jobs which people aren’t comfortable doing for the current salary.
On top of that, a lot of business models, especially on the catering side have been built with the idea that most of their staff is paid minimum wage or slightly above that threshold, so if the government forces some form of wage reformation, it is very clear that most of these establishments will close, and create an unemployment issue.
Honestly, I wish we found a solution to this issue without further growing the problems on hand, but I’m not very hopeful, and my circle of friends would rather move countries, instead of staying and trying to fix things.
4 commenti
Not the Dubai sub.
Whay should we care for Dubai and there opinion lol
bro you are posting same shit everyday but, I don’t know man, your personal fucked ups nothing to do with malta or dubai. Does it change anything if clone or not? Can you elaborate?
Yes
The government opened its legs for mass immigration and now Maltese wouldn’t dare work in hospitality or construction
That’s the cheap labour model
I know I’ll be called racist for it but hey import the third world and you become the third world. When was the last time you saw a Maltese server in a restaurant? Nowadays I’m impressed when someone Maltese serves me
And not to mention the standard of living feels like it’s gone down a lot. Watching people dig through trash for bcrs bottles or being asked for my cans on the beach. Granted it can be anyone but it’s sad to see
I agree with the comparison to be honest.
When I used to work in catering, the consensus was always that if an employee doesn’t pick up the role quickly or if they have an attitude/authority problem, it’s easier to replace them over trying to “fix” them, even when we offered only minimum wage salaries, because people from impoverished countries will take the risk to try and improve their survival.
Moreover, poor working and living conditions very rarely sway impoverished people away because most of these workers come from countries were those same conditions would be considered good, while a Maltese citizen would not be comfortable living and/or working in such conditions (for example sharing a bedroom with 3 other people).
I don’t think there is an easy solution to this problem. If we terminated immigrant workers from countries like India, we wouldn’t be able to replace them with local (or even EU) works alone because there are a lot of jobs which people aren’t comfortable doing for the current salary.
On top of that, a lot of business models, especially on the catering side have been built with the idea that most of their staff is paid minimum wage or slightly above that threshold, so if the government forces some form of wage reformation, it is very clear that most of these establishments will close, and create an unemployment issue.
Honestly, I wish we found a solution to this issue without further growing the problems on hand, but I’m not very hopeful, and my circle of friends would rather move countries, instead of staying and trying to fix things.