Tag: Elections

  • Concerned Voter: Is Our Vote Truly Secret?

    Concerned Voter: Is Our Vote Truly Secret?

    Hai.. I receive white envelope plain with just a stamp in my letter box. There is my name and my brother name on it. I was wondering from whom was it? And i was shocked when i open it? Guess what? Its a manefesto pamphlet from the PAP asked to vote for them? And i was wondering if our voting is confidential?

    I admit i vote for PAP last election but can it be this way to send their pamphlet to resident? It just like for me what i feel is they are so desperate? Now the main question is ‘HOW ON EARTH DO THEY KNOW OUR NAMES IN OUR FAMILY’?

    So what i can see is that election department has connection with PAP? Giving them out our particular? So after all voting is not private and confidential? What if we dont vote for PAP? Are they gonna treat us like 3rd class citizenship? “Profit Are Professionalism” all about money to them.

    Hope singaporean will realise who to vote for. How can singaporean to afford on buying Car and house for the low income n middle income? So expensive. No vote for me..

    Concerned Singaporean Voter

    Source: www.allsingaporestuff.com

  • Experts Point The Way Forward For Singapore Economic Growth

    Experts Point The Way Forward For Singapore Economic Growth

    Economists, government leaders and opposition politicians all agree Singapore must jettison its development model of “extensive growth” based on factor accumulation – the addition of more labour, talent and capital to the singularly scarce resource, land, that defines our territorial space.

    We must, like other developed countries whose ranks we supposedly lead on many metrics, rely on productivity increases to deliver output growth at a much lower but more sustainable rate of 1-3% per year.

    From our own experience and that of other rich countries, we know this is a difficult and long-term task requiring considerable behavioral adjustments at the individual and household as well as business and government policy levels.

    Our recent survey of numerous labor market studies* shows low labor productivity has characterized Singapore’s economic growth as long ago as the early 1970s and as recently as the last several years. The heavy reliance on imports of foreign labor has depressed wages for low-wage citizen workers, contributing to our higher income inequality (income-only Gini of 0.46, not including wealth inequality which is typically higher) and poverty rates (20 to 22%) compared with other rich countries.

    Cutting back on labor imports can deliver productivity increases in sectors such as construction, retail and F&B where our productivity greatly lags that in other rich countries. But the cutback will be painful for businesses and households whose profits and consumption have been subsidized for too long by cheap labor imports. Our capacity for imitation, flexibility and innovation should help us adjust at least as well as other developed countries.

    Productivity increase – producing more with less – is not the only way to income (not just output) growth and higher living standards and better consumer welfare for Singaporeans. The shares of our GDP derived from wages and devoted to household consumption are very low (35-40%) compared with other developed countries, where they typically range from 55% (Korea) to 75% (U.S.). Rebalancing our economy away from export-and investment-driven growth to consumption, and from state-to market-driven development (as China is also trying to do) will mean that a higher proportion of income from GDP will flow to Singaporeans.

    Domestic demand can also be increased through more social transfers, which in Singapore is again very low compared with other rich countries. Public spending as a proportion of GDP in Singapore is half that of many developed countries – 20% versus over 40% – and lower than it was in our first three decades. Recent budgets have increased government subsidies for health care (Medishield Life), training (SkillsFuture) and the elderly (Pioneer Generation and Silver Support). But these are narrowly tied to specific expenditures, many occurring primarily in the public sector, and so do not promote spending by a broader base of consumers (the majority who are neither poor nor elderly nor likely to need or want skills training) that could create demand for a wider range of goods and services to be provided by private entrepreneurs.

    Besides directly improving citizen welfare, social transfers reduce inequality and increase domestic demand as net recipients are mostly lower-income earners who have a higher marginal propensity to consume than the wealthy. More transfers are affordable given Singapore’s large accumulated public sector surpluses—which represent decades of transfers from households to the government chiefly via CPF mandatory contributions, annual budget surpluses, and off-budget user charges by statutory boards and GLCs.**

    In Singapore’s early decades, these transfers enabled the rapid construction of world-class infrastructure, provision of efficient public services and, most importantly, affordable housing for 85% of the population, without incurring government budget deficits and public sector debt. They also arguably contributed to citizens’ over-investment in housing relative to other assets, and relative to the consumption of other (non-housing) goods and services.

    As a result, Singaporeans are “asset-rich but cash-poor”. This phenomenon poses problems for the support of a rapidly-ageing population as well as the housing and living standards (and perhaps fertility and emigration rates) of younger Singaporeans.

    Restructuring the Singapore economy requires not just microeconomic resource reallocation to increase productivity at the firm level. Macroeconomic rebalancing and institutional change to boost domestic demand are critical too. Cost reduction must form part of this transformation – with reduced property prices and rental costs as a necessary component, as well as reduced fees and user charges for transportation, utilities and other basic needs. Together with productivity increases, this rebalancing will preserve and even enhance Singapore’s international competitiveness.

    Reducing the numbers – and we recommend an absolute reduction and not just a slower inflow – of foreign workers will remove this longstanding disincentive to increasing productivity, and also reduce excess demand pressures on property and infrastructure congestion. Wages of lower- and medium-skilled Singaporeans will rise, boosting consumer demand. The selective importing of foreign talent should continue, focusing on permanent immigrants who will stay with us for the long haul to build our nation.

    There is much that Singaporeans need to do to ensure a smooth transition to becoming a fully First World nation. In terms of labour, we could revert to doing more for ourselves – like “keeping Singapore clean” which we used to do without armies of short-term low-wage foreign cleaners picking up after us. Equalising gender relations within the family could raise our female labor force participation (58%) to the higher rates (65%) prevailing in many other developed countries. We could also reap what some call the “gender equity demographic dividend” of higher fertility found in developed countries with better gender equity.

    In terms of capital, we could invest our savings in productive assets and entrepreneurial ventures (including enterprises catering to the services needs of our fellow Singaporeans such as working parents and the elderly) rather than devote them disproportionately to property speculation in the hopes of earning monopoly rents and unproductive capital gains.

    Slower GDP growth with an absolutely falling number of foreign workers can improve the welfare and quality of life of Singaporeans. The challenge is to adopt a development strategy based on realistic expectations of productivity gains, reduced non-labor costs, higher market wages and consumer spending, and larger but sustainable social transfers.

    *Pang Eng Fong and Linda Lim, “Labor, Productivity and Singapore’s Development Model”

    ** Mukul Asher, Azad Singh Bali and Chang Yee Kwan, “Public Financial Management in Singapore: Key Characteristics and Prospects”

    Both in Singapore Economic Review Vol. 60 No. 3 (2015), Special Issue on A Fifty-Year Retrospective on the Singapore Economy

    Pang Eng Fong is Professor of Strategic Management (Practice) at the Lee Kong Chian School of Business, Singapore Management University. Linda Lim is Professor of Strategy at the Stephen M. Ross School of Business, University of Michigan.

     

    Source: https://sg.news.yahoo.com

  • The Most Brilliant Poster Placement In Propaganda War

    The Most Brilliant Poster Placement In Propaganda War

    The knives are out, the words are sharp, the war is well and truly underway – and so too the battle for visibility.

    The political parties rushed to put up their political posters soon after Nomination Day was over, with the usual face shots of candidates being hung in all the constituencies.

    They were the usual posters, really, which we have seen from past elections – smiling faces, all groomed meticulously to look their best. After all, these will be hung out to dry (literally) on streets and poles.

    They are made to look good because, you know what they say about “show face” – it can matter when it comes to the vote.

    But one political party has turned the poster war on its head with its brilliant placement decision.

    The Singapore Democratic Alliance (SDA), which is really a very small opposition party, has not gone the way of the rest, and has instead chosen not to have its candidates faces appear on its posters.

    Instead, the posters have words and numbers which remind Singaporeans of the ruling party’s plans and failures.

    The decision to place these posters is the brilliance of this – they are placed under the posters of that of Lee Hsien Loong, the secretary general of the People’s Action Party (PAP), who is also the Prime Minister.

    Mr Lee’s posters are hung all over Singapore, even in constituencies where he is not the candidate. This has led to questions of whether it is against the elections laws.

    In such a case, in the SDA’s placements of its posters, the message is unmistakable – to remind voters of what Mr Lee stood for or what his government has in its plans.

    And they are not flattering, when the two posters – Mr Lee’s and the SDA’s – are taken together.

    One of them has the number “55” on it – a clear reference to the age of 55 when Singaporeans are supposed to have their CPF returned to them, except that the PAP government has refused to do so, despite its own promise.

    shiyun2

    The other poster has the number “6.9” on it – alluding to the 6.9 million population which the ruling party is using as a “planning parameter”, an issue which has unsettled and angered Singaporeans since it was revealed in the Population White Paper in 2012, one year after the last elections.

    Lin Shiyun had who posted the photos on his Facebook page:

    shiyun3

     

    Source: www.theonlinecitizen.com

  • 5 Kinds Of First Time Voters That Will Endanger Singapore’s Future

    5 Kinds Of First Time Voters That Will Endanger Singapore’s Future

    Having spoken to many young or first time voters, I drew a personal conclusion that there will be 5 kinds of voters who will surprisingly and unknowingly turn the fate of Singapore to a dangerous state.

    1) One who knows that opposition parties are not ready to take over the government yet still vote for them
    2) One who wants opposition to be in parliament for the sake of having one and therefore vote for them
    3) One who decides to vote the opposition party because they assume that “anyway PAP is going to win”
    4) One who is easily sweetened by promises, blinded in reality and vote for the sales MP
    5) One who is angry with the government yet doesn’t look at the bigger picture of certain policy and do not even know what the other parties can offer.

    If you are one those 5 mentioned, you are endangering your own future and your children’s future. Look around you and ask

    A) Who can represent me, my children and my future?
    B) Which party is sensible, credible and honest
    C) Will I see a future in this country governed by a new party?
    D) Which party will be for you and with you even in times of crisis?
    E) Who will you vote if you are that one deciding vote for your own future?

    So I urge you to vote wisely and vote with your future in mind. Don’t be short term and naive, look at every candidate and see if this is the person you want to represent you. I am not asking you to vote for a particular party but to use not just your heart and also your brains to look beyond the promises and proposals made at party rallies. ‪#‎ge2015‬
    Share this with your friends and parents who are voting.

    Source: www.allsingaporestuff.com

  • The Arab Spring-Democracy Will Not Work In Singapore

    The Arab Spring-Democracy Will Not Work In Singapore

    This election is not our Arab Spring.

    I remember lots of folks cheering for the spread of democracy in the Middle East, fueled by social media and a surge of emotion for change.

    “This is it! This will make history!”

    It happened, Egypt had her revolution and soon after the heroes became villains and the excited bystanders in the media and ordinary people like you and me looked away.

    But old habits die hard. It doesn’t matter that we see America’s export of democratic experiments failing time and again. We can’t let go of the movies of “one man against the world” or “giving it to the man”.

    But many of those upheavals were in countries that were having problems.

    Not First World Problems.
    Not “I can’t buy a car” problems.
    Or “you don’t make me feel like I am complete” problems.

    No, people in those countries were staring down a barrel of a gun.
    They were being trafficked and raped and beaten.

    So that they reached for some desperate promise of freedom is almost understandable.

    But here in Singapore?

    What are we wanting in our version of democracy?

    It seems many of the opposition parties
    are posturing for our Arab Spring.
    “Vote for us and you will truly democratic! You know, like the West!”
    “Cos more dissenting voices in parliament is always better, right?”

    And more of the same old boring ideas:
    Minimum wage as the cure all.
    Extravagant government spending with no talk of higher taxation to pay for it.

    Look, we just need to fire up a browser and look at how countries around the world are doing.

    Just look.

    What Singapore has doesn’t look like the “norm” because some folks have been innovating this little red dot out of those knots for years now.

    Do you think water independence could have been had in an American context?

    Look at the hoops Obama had to jump through for Obamacare. Singapore pretty much turned on a dime there.

    What we have is very different.

    We need to think whether drinking the koolaid of being more like the democratic world will work when the world doesn’t stick around when things falls apart.

     

    Source: Wally Tham

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