Agents of Exploitation

“Employment agents sometimes place migrant domestic workers with employers they know to be abusive. Singapore's regulation that employers can cycle through five domestic workers before they are subject to review endangers the well-being of domestic workers. Sometimes a second or third-round match is made in the name of finding a better fit, but many times agents are also aware that an employer has unreasonable expectations or does not treat domestic workers well. Despite this knowledge, agents prioritise keeping employers as clientele over ensuring that they place a domestic worker in a safe and fair working environment.”

– excerpt from ‘Maid to Order’, a report by Human Rights Watch

Background video by Christopher Chan

‘Shopping’ for Help

We posed as prospective employers at Singapore’s largest 'maid agency shopping centre’, to better understand the process of hiring help through local employment agencies. Each video addresses a different facet of exploitation and illustrates how this profit-making industry of middle-men operates on questionable and often unethical practices at the expense of other human beings.

In each interview, we asked a series of questions pertaining to the costs of hiring help, “loans”, “placement fees”, “agency fees', and the regulations around hiring help. We used common Singaporean backstories in order to elicit the responses that the average employer in these circumstances would receive. We also asked questions about the welfare and workload of helpers—that should have immediately raised red flags—in order to better understand how committed agencies are to protecting the workers they bring in.

Employment agencies brazenly shared information, including employment practices that put workers in vulnerable situations and that seem to be contrary to the laws put in place. We want to give the public a peek into the reality of hiring domestic help in Singapore, and how it is more akin to conditions of modern day slavery and human trafficking, as opposed to an innocuous story of demand and supply.

Watch in full screen to read translated subtitles.

Our interactions with these employment agents exposed a business model built on the commodification of workers, the normalisation of abuse and exploitation, and the circumvention of regulations meant to protect workers (presumably to make hiring help more attractive). This is not an issue of a "few bad apples". This—as one of the agents we spoke to put it—is "industry practice lah”. We were surprised when some of the questions we asked, such as "can we keep her passport?" or "can she work for our home-based business?” were not immediately met with a firm "no" and a refusal of our business. Instead, we were given workarounds to these regulations. The fact that agents felt safe and able to freely share this information with us, as well as condone employment practices that not only put workers in vulnerable positions but also contravene certain regulations, suggests how lax the enforcement of these regulations are. 

Below are a series of pictures depicting rules that a domestic worker received from her agency and her employer. Note the title ‘Working Rules in Singapore’ on the printed copy (from the agent) and ‘Working Rules in Singapore (MOM)’ on the handwritten copy (from the employer, adapted from the agent’s printed copy). These are not the MOM rules, but agencies and employers often co-opt official language—sometimes even brazenly appropriating the MOM’s authority—in order to threaten and intimidate workers into accepting exploitative working conditions. 

Misinformation & Intimidation

Rules like “Do not talk to other maids” or “You are not allowed to use or buy a handphone” do not appear in the MOM’s Work Permit conditions; at the same time, however, it is unclear what the Ministry is doing to regulate or clamp down on employment agencies that spread this misinformation. It appears that agencies and employers are able to create and enforce inhumane rules without repercussion, which has undue consequences on workers—in the example above, the rules permit employers to isolate their helpers, giving rise to conditions where abuse can occur and persist undetected.

Listen to Bhing and Maw Lwin share about their respective processes of coming to Singapore, and their thoughts on the exploitative practices of employment agencies— including what happens to workers who are displayed at Singapore shopping malls when the malls close.

Disclaimer from our team: On 7th Sept 2022, it was announced that the performance bond requirement for Filipino helpers was removed. Bhing talks about this from 17:14secs onwards.

The Middleman’s Debt Economy

We were shocked to learn about the 1-2 month “punishment” top-up that agencies are permitted—by the MOM regulation¹—to charge workers each time their employers “return” them to the agency (see ‘The Cost of Hiring Help’ video on the top of this page). This is especially appalling considering many can be “returned” at the arbitrary discretion of their employer, who is given the freedom to hire and terminate up to 5 helpers before the MOM subjects the employer to a review. In the ‘Chapter 1’ video, an agent says that the top-up is because “we need them [helpers] to feel a bit of pain” upon being “returned”. At the same time, agents encourage employers to “just try lah”, even if they suspect a helper might not be a good fit, because they can always be “returned” at no cost. Most agencies we visited offer these “free returns”, as if domestic workers are ill-fitting garments to be exchanged for something better. But, who bears the cost of these “free returns”?

Each time a helper is charged this “top-up”, she is literally paying the price of a system that treats workers like goods—a system that situates some in cycles of poverty, and others in profit. As we mention in the videos above, this is far from an innocuous story of demand and supply. Instead, it is systematic exploitation and wage theft that persists because of unregulated costs and practises including: outsourcing the task of protecting workers to actors who are profit-driven, and making access to work more complex and costly than direct hiring—a process that almost all other non-migrant workers have access to. 

Agents also spoke to and about helpers in a dehumanising manner, informed by preconceived racist cultural stereotypes (see Chapter 6 video). When it suits them, however, these same helpers become selling points for the business. On 24 April 2010, Puji Astutik, a 28-year-old Indonesian domestic worker, died after being hit by a bus while it was making a turn. She had saved her employer’s baby by flinging her to safety, but ended up being trapped under the bus herself. When we asked the agent why the article talking about her “selfless act” was displayed in their store, they said it was because Puji was from their agency. On that same day we saw these agents berate workers, talk down to them, and scold them for chatting amongst themselves. We doubt things were much different for Puji during her time. In death, however, she is turned into a marketing tool—almost as if to say, “get your helpers from us, we have the good ones”. 

Scans of pricing sheets from maid agencies

Newspaper report on Puji’s death displayed outside her ex-employment agency

Both Bhing and Maw Lwin’s sharing emphasise how oversight is severely lacking at Employment Agencies, both in terms of how agents are able to encourage or recommend unlawful behaviour as well as how agents are able to carry out unethical and inhumane business practise, even as it is ‘legal’. Would any Singaporean tolerate being managed by an employment agent who believes off-days are negotiable? Or one who has preconceived notions of workers as “lazy”, and “unhygienic”; who teaches potential employers to work around MOM regulations; who abuses workers by underfeeding them and putting them to work without pay under the guise of training? How many of us would accept being charged a top-up fee as “punishment” if things don’t work out with our boss? Why are these conditions considered industry practice for some and unthinkable for others? 

Employment Agencies should be looking out for the rights and needs of the workers that they place in homes across the country. What we learnt, however, is that they are key actors who normalise exploitative practices while profiting handsomely from this industry.

Listen to Sharif speak to a Male Migrant Workers’ experience with agents and middlemen, as well as how some NGOs make use of migrant workers.

Md Roni Miya Md Rajaul Karim was a 20-year-old Bangladeshi worker who hanged himself on 27 October 2011. It is believed that he was driven to suicide due to mental distress over the inability to repay loans. He and 6 other Bangladeshi workers were also scammed by a man known only as Pabal, who fled with their Work Permits and other documents under the guise of offering them part-time work. The ‘recruiter’ and other such unofficial middlemen are some of the agents of exploitation whose work is unregulated, especially in the movement and placement of Male Migrant Workers. 

It is almost impossible for MMWs to apply to companies directly from their home countries, and as Sharif points out, “agent fees” are completely arbitrary. There is hardly ever a paper trail or itemised receipts, which allows illegal hiring practises such as overcharging and supplying fraudulent In-Principal Approval (IPA) letters to take place. We have found that for MMWs especially, the process of engaging with an agent is very opaque and every worker has a different experience. The absence of standard hiring practises is one of the key reasons that workers are taken advantage of while coming to Singapore, and end up beginning their employment in debt. 

The icons below represent some of the other ‘actors’ that migrant workers encounter along their journey: from the point they decide to come to Singapore to their return home. Every one of these actors were mentioned to some extent by Bhing, Sharif, and/or Maw Lwin in their videos. 

Not all of them play a role that is as directly exploitative as employment agencies or employers. Some occupy a position that is complicit, while others simply do not act despite being positioned (or paid) to. Although they often appear to function independently of one another, they are all linked in long chains of command; diffused lines of responsibility obscure the very real violence that migrant workers experience every day. 

There are, of course, many other ‘agents’ who a worker interfaces with while in Singapore. These include, but are not limited to, dormitory operators, telephone companies, religious organisations, food catering services, and fundraising platforms. We did not expound on these agents because they are —in most instances—not overtly or directly associated with migrant death, but they are nevertheless inextricable from the conditions of migrant life in Singapore. 


Sources to the ‘Who Are They?’ cards can be found here.

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