Tag: country

  • New Long-Term Visa For Singaporean Travellers To Australia

    New Long-Term Visa For Singaporean Travellers To Australia

    From next year, Singaporeans travelling to Australia can apply for a new visa which allows them to enter the country for up to three months at a time, over a six-year period.

    The new visa is “exclusive” to Singaporeans, and will begin by Jan 1, 2018. This was announced on Friday (Jun 2) by Australian Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull on the first of his three-day visit to Singapore.

    Also announced was a new Work and Holiday Maker programme, which will allow young people from Australia and Singapore to undertake short-term work or study.

    The programme begins on Aug 1, 2017, and 500 places are available to citizens of each country.

    Last financial year, more than 230,000 visitor visas were granted to travellers from Singapore, up 16 per cent compared with the previous year.

     

    Source: http://www.channelnewsasia.com

  • Filipina Scolds Woman Who Questioned Her For Having ‘Singapore’ Emblazoned In Shorts

    Filipina Scolds Woman Who Questioned Her For Having ‘Singapore’ Emblazoned In Shorts

    A reader sent us a video of a commotion in a hawker centre. According to the reader the woman, a Singaporean, questioned the Filipina about why she had ‘Singapore’ emblazoned in the back of her shorts. The Filipina who got upset with the woman’s question went ballistic with her attracting many onlookers.

    According to the reader, the woman is a maid who had engaged in a game of weekend netball before the incident.

    Do you think the word ‘Singapore’ should be better respected?

     

    Source: www.theindependent.sg

  • Singapore’s Stagnant Start-Ups

    Singapore’s Stagnant Start-Ups

    Facebook, Amazon, eBay. Other than cultures of innovation, disruption and now serious valuations, something that all these once start-ups now tech-giants have in common is that they aren’t Singaporean.

    Ok, obviously global tech start-ups are largely an American phenomenon. But even at the level of local and regional start-ups, the Little Red Dot is lagging behind with very few recognisable names in the start-up game.

    What about Grab taxi, you ask? Well, it is Malaysian-founded, though now Singaporeanised thanks to investment and this too is another recurring problem where local start-ups are struggling despite Singapore’s financial ecosystem pouring money into regional ventures.

    With strong intellectual property legislation, excellent connectivity, a range of government programs in support of innovation and diverse options for funding, Singapore is — on paper at least — a paradise for start-ups.

    However, as regional ventures have flourished on Singapore’s soil local entrepreneurs appear to be missing out. According to a recent Tech in Asia article, local ventures have raised only a fraction of the funding raised by their foreign counterparts.

    Singapore has much to celebrate and be proud of… but it needs to relook its start-ups policy. This after billions of dollars’ worth of government funding directed at local start-ups for several years.

    To some extent, of course, the discrepancy in the performance between local and regional ventures is inevitable. Start-ups operating in Indonesia, India or China benefit from huge domestic markets and are an attractive proposition to investors.

    Also there are clear gaps to be filled in these markets that don’t always exist in Singapore where international companies already operate comfortably.

    However, Singapore with its sizeable economy and talent pool should be producing internationally and regionally competitive start-ups. Just look at Israel, a country with a similar population, GDP and high-tech base, which is churning out start-ups at a formidable pace including the home-grown navigation app Waze which was bought by Google for US$1 billion (RM4.47 billion).

    Something isn’t quite right, our start-up ecosystem is not working for local entrepreneurs and this is a problem.

    Though some might say it’s simply meritocracy with foreign start-ups having better revenue models and harder working teams, the reality is that Singapore as a nation must develop its core at every level particularly at the level of tech-innovation and entrepreneurship.

    If you look at the labour market, Singaporeans are now heavily favoured — with restrictions on S-passes and employment passes benefiting qualified Singaporeans.

    But in terms of the start-up ecosystem, we seem to be at an active disadvantage, seen as consistently less worthy of investment than those operating in larger markets with lower barriers to entry.
    Here’s my hypothesis:

    1. Singapore start-ups haven’t moved to capitalise on the country’s competitive advantages. While we don’t have a large market we do have a sophisticated research base, and a more complex financial ecosystem than most of our neighbors. This means Singapore can compete in niche products like genetics and robotics, but for too long our local start-up offerings have been along the lines of retail solutions, payment gateways etc. simple clones that haven’t developed deeper technologies even though we should have the talent to do so.

    2. The second problem may also be the government’s own largesse. Billions of dollars’ worth of grants, incubators and ambitious funding programs don’t guarantee success. One of the dangers of these schemes is that a lot of start-ups become vehicles for obtaining funding and don’t have the business plans and commitment needed for success. Better targeted funding which offers to co-fund or match funding raised by founders with clearer milestones is essential to propelling a healthy start-up economy.

    3. The global start-up narrative has focused on a small number of visionaries — fearless leaders in their garages and basements ingeniously disrupting their way to success. It must be noted though that most successful businesses in Asia are family businesses with family and community support structures. It might be time our funding and development models reflected this with family units encouraged to fund projects and ownership structures, loans etc that facilitate this. While this is somewhat unconventional, involving the family/community has the advantage of removing the fear of failure many isolated Singaporean entrepreneurs have — as risks are now shared.

    4. Finally, the key weakness in terms of creating successful start-ups is our increasing distance from  our immediate region. Despite amazing transport connectivity to every part of Asia, Singaporeans are too used to seeing the country as a bubble. As such, Singapore’s conditions do not reflect those of the region and Singaporeans are not geared to solving the regional problems which present the largest opportunities. A population that’s increasingly speaking Mandarin and English but not Malay, leave alone Tagalog or Bengali, is not well-equipped to succeed where we have the greatest competitive advantage – our neighbourhood. Raised to see our neighbours as dirty and dangerous, young Singaporeans are not willing or able to scrap it out on the streets of Jakarta or Dhaka but this is where the opportunities are and if we don’t break down these psychological barriers, start-up success will remain elusive.

     

    Source: themalaymailonline

  • Being a Singaporean Is NOT Easy!

    Being a Singaporean Is NOT Easy!

    It ain’t easy being Singaporean.

    Your life is run by a series of acronyms like ERP, COE, CPF, PSLE, NS, PMS; you have to endure the relentless tropical heat; you have nothing to read butThe Straits Times; your national culture consists of shopping and whining (I’m nothing if not patriotic); and it’s still considered a crime to strangle Gurmit Singh. You get called names like ‘little red dot’, ‘useless piece of snot’ and even Jacky Chan craps all over you. Let’s face it, when a man who made his living jumping around like a monkey says you have “no self-respect”, well, it ain’t been a good week.

    But still, you try. The great Romantic poet John Keats once wrote:

    It matters not what the crowd bays

    Or what the angry gods may say

    For all that matters is the heart

    And the values you cling hard

    What beautiful lines. It means that regardless of what people may say or think about you, what matters is what you believe in. Words deserving of colourful embroidery indeed. Ok, I completely made the lines up. Keats never said that. I could have looked him up but I really can’t be bothered. Laziness is one of my many charms. But don’t let that take anything from the message. It’s still pertinent.

    And so I try, as a citizen, to narrow the gulf between our national values and what we do as a country. After all, if morality means practicing what you preach, then being a great country means practicing what you teach. Under George Bush, America tore up their Constitution, practiced torture, invaded the wrong country and became the pariah of the international community. Under Barack Obama, America is heeding the call of its ideals and founding principles and, in the process, is becoming great again.

    I think a little red dot can be great too. I think greatness is not limited to the measure of size and might, but the loftiness of one’s ideals and one’s faithfulness to them. By this definition, Singapore can be great.

    And so I turn my eyes towards our ‘Shared values’. Phrases like “Nation before community and society above self” ring so sweet. They stir up a sense of pride deep inside. They make me want to do something. Oh shut up, it’s true. They really do make me want to give of myself.

    But then I see our ministers’ legendary salaries and their need to “facilitate the recruitment and retention of the quality of talent we need for the government and public sector.” My enthusiasm becomes more flaccid than an 80 year old man in a cold shower.

    What about Shared value #3 -“Community support and respect for the individual”? Pretty uncontroversial, we can’t go wrong here. 377A, AWARE new exco, Thio Su Mien – enuff said.

    What about Asian values and Confucian ethics ? I think to myself, well, perhaps cynicism aside, the clarion call to be moral, ethical and righteous, regardless of their political intent, is worth heeding. My cynicism is about to slip away when I also recall our on-going manufacture of landmines, their sale to war-torn countries, our economic dealings with the Myanmar junta, our medical offerings to Robert Mugabe, and most recently, our welcome of North Korean President Kim Yong Nam. Ah well, you know what they say, we’re just a little red dot and must look out for our national interests.

    Pragmatism is a wonderful device. It allows you to do anything you want, however you want, and then blame it on reality. It’s an excuse for abandoning higher morals and ethics without looking like a dick. It makes you a man because you’re seen to be ‘realistic’ and ‘grounded’. It’s the ultimate backstage pass, allowing you to bypass everyone to get straight to the goodies. And being pragmatic also means that you have to pretend to have values, whether shared or of the Asian variety because there are idealistic saps out there who, believe it or not, romanticise principles. It’s just pragmatic to be an ethical Confucianist.

    It’s hard being Singaporean. It’s damn hard. Screw it. I’m going shopping.

     

    Article first appeared on groundnotes.wordpress.com

    Source: www.allsingaporestuff.com