Refleksi:  Penulis "Bricklaying in Aceh" mengutarakan sebagai berikut: "On the 
other hand, if he can lay at that speed in Indonesia then it works out to Rp 33 
per brick plus a sun tan and a bowl of rice -- I wonder how much we are paying 
consultants in Aceh?"  Barangkali pertanyaan demikian dapat dijawab dengan 
melihat pada daftar gaji Badan Rekonstruksi dan Rehabilitasi di Aceh No: 
11/KEP/BP-BBR/1/1/2007 tentang Penetapan Nilai Renumerasi Pegawai  Badan 
pelaksana dan Pegawai Dewan Pengawasn.....". Menurut daftar tsb Ketua BBR, 
Kuntoro  Mangkusubroto,  bergaji Rp 69.648.000,--  Wakil Ketua BBR, Mustafa 
Abubakar, bergaji RP 546.620.000,-- per bulan.  Dalam daftar tsb. hanya 5 orang 
yang bergaji paling rendah Rp. 1.000.000,-- per bulan. [Daftar tsb pernah saya 
teruskan via e-mail kepada Anda sekalian, tetapi oleh Yahoo tidak diteruskan, 
karena terlalu besar volumenya]. Rupanya bekerja menolong orang dalam kesusahan 
bisa juga  banyak  rejeki duniawi yang dapat diperoleh. Jadi makin banyak 
bencana alam silih berganti di negeri seribu bencana, makin makmur bin 
sejahtera "penolong-penolong" yang menderita. 


http://www.thejakartapost.com/detaileditorial.asp?fileid=20070405.F07&irec=6

Bricklaying in Aceh 
I was looking back the other day at a letter in the British newspaper The Times 
as written by Professor H. H. Turner in January 1925, who was challenging the 
government's statement that a good British bricklayer would lay 500 bricks per 
day which made him the best in the world.

The professor claimed to have found one bricklayer who dealt with 2000 bricks 
in eight hours and another one who laid 890 bricks in just one hour -- one 
presumes the brickie ran out of steam after a while. 

It made me wonder just how many bricks were being laid in Aceh province, 
bearing in mind the climatic differences between gloomy old England and 
sun-drenched Indonesia. The heat factor alone could well in fact reduce the 
work rate by up to fifty percent, and then of course there are the incentive 
factors of salary and working conditions. 

An English bricklayer in 1925 would have earned about one shilling per week, 
and so in the case of the man who dealt with 2000 bricks per day, this equates 
to about one old English penny per 1000 bricks laid. I've got no idea about 
exchange rates re: the Indonesian rupiah in 1925, which was probably a sack 
full of rice (half filled) and two bunches of bananas, but in England labor was 
cheap almost beyond the slave trade. 

So who knows how many bricks an Indonesian lays in an hour or a day, and how 
does this equate with the Brits? Of course in today's world a British 
bricklayer earns a small fortune, as does a plumber who can command 35 UK 
pounds per hour. That is about Rp 625,000 per hour which would be around Rp 25 
million per week. 

If an Indonesian bricklayer earns on average about Rp 60,000 per day, he will 
need to work 10 days to earn the equivalent of what his counterpart in London 
earns in one hour. 

Now the cost of economy return airfare to the UK is about Rp 10 million, which 
could be recuperated by the Indonesian bricklayer in 16 hours of continuous 
bricklaying, if he can get a visa, a work permit and lay at least four bricks 
per minute. 

On the other hand, if he can lay at that speed in Indonesia then it works out 
to Rp 33 per brick plus a sun tan and a bowl of rice -- I wonder how much we 
are paying consultants in Aceh? 

DAVID WALLIS
Medan, North Sumatra 

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