Category: Singapuraku

  • Hussin Mutalib: There Are Better Ways To Remember Contributions Of Lee Kuan Yew

    Hussin Mutalib: There Are Better Ways To Remember Contributions Of Lee Kuan Yew

    As Singaporeans, we will remember Mr Lee Kuan Yew’s contributions, sacrifices and legacies. Let us forge a consensus on how best to value his imprint on Singapore.

    Some suggestions have been aired, including erecting a statue, declaring the date of his death a public holiday and renaming iconic edifices such as Merdeka Bridge and Changi Airport, with the latter the subject of an online petition.

    Garnering signatures and pressuring our Government via petitions is not the best way to pay tribute to him. In fact, it dishonours one of his governing principles, namely, not to rule by populist pressures.

    Lest we forget, our Government has turned down previous petitions with greater popular support.

    Before we proceed to find more meaningful ways to acknowledge his leadership role in transforming Singapore to what it is today, we should perhaps list the institutions, programmes, endowments, scholarships, et cetera, that already bear his name.

    This would enable us to see what can be done to accord greater credence to his contributions and to do so proportionately without going overboard.

    In our zeal to honour him, let us not ape what some countries have done, namely, deifying the status of their leaders. While Mr Lee’s standing as the founder of modern Singapore is recognised, we should not overlook the indefatigable support and sacrifice of his Cabinet lieutenants and other comrades since the 1950s, as well as many segments of Singapore society.

    His death also offers us a timely, if not golden, opportunity to reflect on his legacies. Our guiding principle should be the commitment to continue his positive, praiseworthy policies, and a determination to review and leave behind his less acceptable vestiges.

    If we approach his passing in this dignified, tempered manner, his contributions would not be in vain and we could prepare and look forward to the next phase of the Singapore story with an even greater sense of inclusiveness, commitment and confidence.

     

    *This commentary by Hussin Mutalib first appeared on  Voices, Today, on 6 Apr 2015.

     

    Source: www.todayonline.com

  • More Booking Tours On Long National Day Weekend

    More Booking Tours On Long National Day Weekend

    Following the announcement of a long National Day weekend from Aug 7 to 10, tour agencies said they are seeing a spike in bookings.

    According to some agencies, there has been a 30 per cent increase in tour bookings for the extended National Day weekend, with some saying trips to nearby countries such as Thailand and Hong Kong are almost fully booked.

    Numbers are expected to increase further, said the agencies, and companies have also approached the agencies for corporate bookings to reward staff.

    BOOKINGS IN LOCAL HOTELS UP

    However, not all are heading overseas, with local hotels reporting an increase in bookings for the weekend. Some hotels said that about 90 per cent of their rooms with a view of the parade have already been reserved, while others have introduced special packages to celebrate the nation’s Golden Jubilee.

    “If they have done a 3-day booking, we’re obviously going to contact them again and offer the package over the four days because it is not fair that they didn’t know, so this is the government generosity of adding an extra day, which is terrific,” said Antoine Chahwan, Regional Vice President, Four Seasons Hotel. “To celebrate Singapore’s 50, I’m sure a lot of people will stay in Singapore to be part of this great celebrations.”

    Previously, Speaker of Parliament Halimah Yacob urged Singaporeans to remain in the country during the long weekend to celebrate the nation’s 50th birthday instead of travelling overseas.

     

    Source: www.channelnewsasia.com

  • Former China Tour Guide Yang Yin Left Out Of Wealthy Widow’s Will

    Former China Tour Guide Yang Yin Left Out Of Wealthy Widow’s Will

    Former China tour guide Yang Yin will not be entitled to any part of Madam Chung Khin Chun’s assets after the Court recognised a new will drawn up by the wealthy widow.

    The will was made in December last year, and it leaves most of her assets to charity, and nothing to Yang. It replaces an earlier will made in 2010, in which the 88-year-old had left her entire estate — estimated at S$40million — to Yang.

    Mdm Chung had met Yang while on a trip to Beijing, where the latter acted as her private tour guide. A year later, Yang moved into Madam Chung’s Gerald Crescent bungalow to live with her. The widow’s niece, Madam Hedy Mok, later filed for legal action against Yang, accusing him of taking advantage of her aunt, who has since been diagnosed with dementia.

    Mdm Chung’s lawyer Peter Doriasamy told TODAY that the court had “acted in (her) best interest… in light of what we have found out about Yang Yin”. The new will was made under the Mental Capacity Act due to Mdm Chung’s condition, Mr Doriasamy said. He added that under the new will, Madam Chung’s fortune will go to various charities after she dies.

    Yang’s lawyer Daniel Zhu said that he has applied for permission to meet with his client — who has been in remand since Oct 31 last year — sometime next week, to receive instructions on how to proceed.

    Separately, Yang is facing more than 300 charges in total, including two for criminal breach of trust, for allegedly misappropriating S$1.1million of Madam Chung’s assets.

     

    Source: www.todayonline.com

  • Malaysian Sex Blogger Alvin Tan Prefers Malaysia Over Singapore

    Malaysian Sex Blogger Alvin Tan Prefers Malaysia Over Singapore

    PETALING JAYA: Malaysians who rave about how good life is in Singapore have probably never ever lived in the city-state and have a distorted view of the reality there, said controversial Malaysian sex-blogger Alvin Tan, who is living in self-exile in the US now.

    In a Facebook posting on April 1, Alvin wrote, “They (Malaysians) have this utopian, idealistic view of the city-state, and they even think that the high GDP per capita actually trickles down to ordinary folks like them (har har har).

    Listing six “truths” about Singapore, Alvin slammed the cramped quarters that Singaporeans called housing, saying their flats were “smaller than even the upstairs area of your terrace house”.

    He also talked about how tough it was to own a car and how Singaporeans had to depend on “riding trains that break down” despite the fares being pricey.

    He said many became “bitter, cynical individuals early on in life” due to the compulsory national service they attended in Pulau Tekong and spent their working lives “competing fruitlessly” with foreigners who stole their jobs.

    Noting that monthly commitments were sky-high, he said many simply resigned themselves to their corporate lives and paid chunks of their salaries into a “compulsory saving scam” called CPF that he likened to a Ponzi scheme.

    In comparison, he said life in Malaysia was relatively better.

    “Our day-to-day cost of living is high, but at least the biggest things – transportation and housing – is more affordable. Hell, you can rent a room for RM250 in Kuala Lumpur (instead of S$700 in Singapore); what more do you want? And lastly, our EPF isn’t a Ponzi scheme to fund god knows what,” Alvin said.

    He argued that the clean, safe streets of Singapore did not make up for all that was wrong with the country and that so many could not gain access to their “world-class education system” that Singapore boasted of and had to obtain an education overseas instead.

    “I was offered Singaporean Permanent Residence (status) in 2007. I tossed the letter into the rubbish bin. I had no intention of becoming a cog in the wheel to fund the CPF, Temasek Holdings, and your ministers’ million-dollar salaries.”

     

    Source:www.freemalaysiatoday.com

  • Singapore: A Fascinating Alternative To The Welfare State

    Singapore: A Fascinating Alternative To The Welfare State

    Lee Kuan Yew, the first prime minister of Singapore, died last week at age 91. Almost every obituary has remarked on the radical transition his leadership heralded. As John Fund wrote at National Review:

    By embracing free trade, capital formation, vigorous meritocratic education, low taxes, and a reliable judicial system, Lee raised the per capita income of his country from $500 a year to some $52,000 a year today. That’s 50 percent higher than that of Britain, the colonial power that ruled Singapore for 150 years. Its average annual growth rate has averaged 7 percent since the 1970s.

    Part of the reason for Singapore’s remarkable climb up the international income ladder is bread and butter capitalism. The Fraser nstitute’s Freedom of the World report lists Singapore as the second freest economy in the world — right behind Hong Kong. As Frasier scholars have demonstrated year after year, economic growth and free markets go hand and hand.

    But Singapore has done something even more remarkable than its economic accomplishments. It has built an alternative to the European style welfare state. Think of all the reasons why people turn to government in other developed countries: retirement income, housing, education, medical care etc. In Singapore people are required to save to take care of these needs themselves.

    At times the forced saving rate has been as high as 50% of income. Today, employees under 50 years of age must set aside 20% of their wages and employers must contribute another 16%. These funds go into accounts where they grow through time until specific needs arise. For example, one of the uses for these savings is housing. About 90% of Singapore households are home owners – the highest rate of home ownership in the world.

    In health care, Singapore started an extensive system of “Medisave Accounts” in 1984 – the very year that Richard Rahn and I proposed “Medical IRAs” for America in the Wall Street Journal. Today, 7 percentage points of Singapore’s 36% required savings rate is for health care and is deposited in a separate Medisave account for each employee. Individuals are also automatically enrolled in catastrophic health insurance, although they can opt out. When a Medisave account balance reaches about $34,100 (an amount equal to a little less than half of the median family income) any excess funds are rolled over into another account and may be used for non-health care purposes.

    For many years, the only two scholars in the Western world who paid much attention to Singapore were Washington University economist Michael Sherraden and me. Michael approached the Singapore experience from a left-of-center perspective and I came from the opposite direction. We both ended in the same place: this is an alternative to the welfare state that works.

    Lately, quite a number of other scholars have discovered Singapore, especially its health care system – again, with both right and left finding a lot to admire. It’s taken almost three decades, but Singapore is now the subject of a book by Brookings Institution, a whole slew of posts by Austin Frakt and Aaron Carroll, and a good overview by Tyler Cowen, with links to other studies and comments.

    Sherraden recently summarized some of Singapore’s major social policy innovations as follows:

    Step by step, the Singapore state created a new social policy system that had asset building as its central structure…. In the world of social policy, it would be hard to overstate the exceptionality and the extent of this innovation…. During the past 25 years, Singapore policy has taken important steps toward lifelong asset building, beginning very early in life.  These innovations include EduSave, the Baby Bonus, Child Development Accounts, and related asset-building incentives.

    For John Fund, Singapore’s most significant accomplishment is the avoidance of the mistakes of other countries:

    I believe that the least appreciated part of Lee Kwan Yew’s legacy is his method of ensuring that one generation won’t bankrupt future generations by selfishly living beyond its means. It’s a welfare state that works, and one he always said was available to any political leader with the courage to tell his people the truth about the limits of government’s power to pass out goodies.

    For my part, I would summarize the philosophy of Singapore as follows:

    • Each generation should pay its own way.
    • Each family should pay its own way.
    • Each individual should pay his own way.
    • Only after passing through these three filters should anyone turn to the government for help.

    If the United States had adopted a similar approach to public policy, there would be no deficit problem in this country.

     

    Source: www.forbes.com

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