Tag: Little Red Dot

  • K Shanmugam: We Don’t Live In Fear Of Anyone Else

    K Shanmugam: We Don’t Live In Fear Of Anyone Else

    SINGAPORE — Singapore may be small, but it is respected and successful, and “we don’t live in fear of anyone else”, says Home Affairs and Law Minister K Shanmugam, in response to ‘taunts’ by an Indonesian minister.

    In a Facebook post on Saturday (July 23), Mr Shanmugam said he did not understand why “there is this constant attempt (by Indonesian ministers) to put us (Singapore) down and taunting us that we are small”.

    He said that both countries benefit from good relations over the last 50 years and have cooperated on many matters. But he noted, “every now and then, someone in Indonesia will tell us that we should know our place, a little red dot.”

    “Yes, we are a little red dot. We may be small. But we are respected and successful. And our people lead meaningful lives. And we don’t live in fear of anyone else,” Mr Shanmugam wrote.

    His remarks came after Indonesia’s Finance Minister Bambang Brodjonegoro was quoted in Indonesian media on Tuesday saying that he was “not afraid of Singapore which is just a small country like that”.

    Mr Brodjonegoro and other Indonesian ministers this week have made several remarks about Singapore as their country attempts to recover millions stashed by Indonesian citizens overseas via a tax amnesty programme. Several Indonesian media reports have accused Singapore and its banks of coming up with a special scheme for Indonesians to leave their assets in Singapore instead of repatriating them home.

    The Ministry of Finance (MOF) and the Monetary Authority of Singapore (MAS) refuted these claims on Saturday.

    “Recent claims in the Indonesian media that Singapore is implementing policies to ‘thwart’ Indonesia’s tax amnesty programme are untrue. Singapore has not cut tax rates or changed any of our policies in response to Indonesia’s Tax Amnesty Programme,” said the MAS and MOF in a joint statement.

    “We subscribe to internationally agreed standards for combating money laundering and for exchange of information. If there is any case of suspected cross-border tax evasion, concerned authorities can approach Singapore – we have assisted and will continue to assist in line with the international standards,” the two agencies added.

     

    Source: www.todayonline.com

  • Isu Di Malaysia Boleh Bawa Kesan Kepada Singapura

    Isu Di Malaysia Boleh Bawa Kesan Kepada Singapura

    Masyarakat dan ekonomi Singapura dan Malaysia saling bergantung rapat antara satu sama lain.

    Disebabkan pergantungan tersebut, masalah Malaysia dengan mudah boleh menjadi masalah Singapura, kata Perdana Menteri Lee Hsien Loong.

    “Jika Malaysia mengalami masalah, tidak mantap atau berpecah-belah, ia akan menjejas ekonomi kita, masyarakat kita dan keselamatan kita juga,” jelas Encik Lee.

    Justeru, Perdana Menteri berkata Singapura memantau dengan dekat apa jua perkembangan yang berlaku di Malaysia.

    Encik Lee menggariskan beberapa masalah dan isu yang menjadi kebimbangan utama Malaysia.

    Pertama, sesetengah rakyat Malaysia menjadi radikal termasuk beberapa anggota pasukan bersenjatanya.

    Sesetengahnya telah pergi ke Timur Tengah bagi menyertai pertempuran militan Negara Islam di Iraq dan Syria (ISIS) di sana dan apabila mereka pulang, mereka akan membawa ideologi pengganasan itu bersama ke tanah air.

    Kedua, Malaysia juga bimbang tentang ketegangan kaum dan agama.

    Masyarakat boleh berpecah-belah dengan mengikut sentimen perkauman.

    Insiden rusuhan di Plaza Low Yat antara orang Cina dan Melayu misalnya boleh menegangkan isu sentimen perkauman.

    Ketiga, Malaysia juga bimbang tentang isu politik wang.

    Isu 1Malaysia Development Berhad (1MDB) menjadi bahan berita setiap hari.

    Encik Lee juga berkata Perdana Menteri Malaysia, Datuk Seri Najib Tun Razak baru menubuhkan sebuah panel nasional bagi membangunkan undang-undang mengenai “pembiayaan politik dengan kewibawaan”.

     

    Source: http://beritaharian.sg

  • The Lion City Needs More Pride

    The Lion City Needs More Pride

    I don’t mean pride in a great airport, getting good maths scores or in super trees.

    I mean pride in what you do, taking responsibility, having integrity.

    Singapore produces great results. Our government has operated with a budget surplus for years, we have a brand new downtown in Marina Bay, our students consistently produce top grades internationally; our list of achievements goes on — and you would assume that behind this stellar score sheet is a mass of high-performance workers leading us down this path of success.

    Yet productivity in Singapore is lower than is should be, and lags behind other high-performing Asian countries like Hong Kong, Taiwan and South Korea. This issue came up again at the Forbes CEO Global Conference held at Shangri-la Hotel in late October, where Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong spoke about various ways to increase productivity here. A recent report by McKinsey Global Institute also spoke of the need for ASEAN economies to double their productivity by 2030 to sustain economic growth.

    I assume that this comment about productivity is meant for different industries, not just manufacturing or construction, and refers to not only volume of output but also quality and added value of what’s being produced.

    A range of measures to raise productivity were suggested — increasing wages, using better technology, improving infrastructure, providing training and evolving businesses — all of which are relevant, of course. But there are some things that a training course cannot deliver and money cannot buy; and these are values.

    Pride and integrity motivate one to do a good job and step up, not because your boss is looking over your shoulder or because you have a KPI to meet, but simply because it matters, to you. And here is where Singapore falls short.

    Our culture places a lot of emphasis on what’s on paper, often much more than on what’s really happening, what’s authentic and true. Our kids are taught this in school from the start. Scoring well in exams matters more than understanding, questioning and creating. Mock tests are relied on heavily, along with answer sheets and ‘model answers’ that tell kids there is only one right answer, when in many cases there clearly isn’t.

    There is more drill than discussion. It doesn’t matter if you don’t fully understand what you’re being taught as long as you can handle the exam.

    If a student came up with a good answer that was not on the answer sheet, they would probably get zero marks for it instead of being given credit for having initiative, being original or daring to take a risk. Stick to the ‘right’ answer, they will be told. And if a teacher did try to open this up for discussion, they would probably not be given credit for that either and be told to stick to the syllabus. From an early age, we become overly attached to ticking all the boxes instead of exploring, thinking and making sure there is integrity in what we do.

    This mentality then carries through to the workforce, especially in large Singapore organizations. Too many workers wait to be told what to do and then do only that. It keeps them in line with their bosses and covers their behinds. It keeps them free from blame. People shy away from stepping up, from taking ownership of what’s in front of them. People look to their bosses to provide, like their teachers did, the answers and the instructions, and stick to that. Because from day one, we’ve been sent the message that it’s just not worth it to do more.

    This diminishes jobs and roles, and people. When hiring, and this happens more at junior and mid level, instead of looking for people who can come up with their own ideas, contribute, take things to the next level, employers end up with yes men, administrators, hacks — deliverers rather than owners. Sometimes it’s the employers’ own doing because they are too top down in the way they manage people. Sometimes employees don’t step up even when given a chance because they are just not culturally conditioned to do so.

    Top down management does not inspire employees to take responsibility for their work. The idea of being ‘top down’ is not a positive one, and most managers would prefer not to see themselves that way. Yet managers who purport to want workers who are independent, able to think laterally and come up with their own ideas — because that is the way good managers are supposed to think — too often really don’t.

    They are really micro-managers, not trusting of their staff and feel the need to see everything, because that is how they themselves have been managed; it’s culturally ingrained. Again, stepping up is not rewarded. The result? Workers are obedient, but make less effort, get frustrated, feel unappreciated and produce work that is pedestrian.

    So, many people end up bored or unfulfilled in their jobs. And what happens when people are bored or unfulfilled? They waste time, they work less — even if they stay cooped up in their work place for long hours.

    Every society glorifies certain professions, while eschewing others, although in some societies the range of admired professions is wider than in others. In our society, the highest status is accorded to best scholars, senior government officials, senior executives, the wealthy, certain high-status professions; and this gives rise to a rather narrow path of aspirations. Everyone wants to be a banker, lawyer, accountant, engineer, civil servant. Or at least, everyone’s parents want that.

    While these are great professions, this blinkered view of ‘success’ erodes the status of a lot of other work, with varying degrees of ‘highness’ or ‘lowness’ attached to different types of work. The pride that we would help get the ‘lower’ status jobs done well doesn’t exist much here. A plumber in Singapore is low-paid and semi-skilled, for instance; while a plumber in Australia or the United States can make decent money and commands a degree of respect.

    But occasionally you see flashes of this pride. I used to take my dry cleaning to a launderer run by a middle-aged Filipino gentleman. It was a hole-in-the-wall place, filled mainly with laundry on clothes rails, with only a small counter for him. He had so much pride in his work; he was cheerful, took his job seriously and tried hard to help his customers. It was like he owned the business; except he didn’t. If there was a stain on one of my clothes, he would say ‘we should be able to do get it out, no problem’, rather than be dour and say ‘I’ll just put your clothes through our cleaning process, if the stain doesn’t comes out don’t blame me’ — which unfortunately is the attitude we see too much of.

    I also met two tow truck drivers when my car broke down on the ECP. One was from Myanmar and the other Malaysian. Both of them were exceedingly nice and helpful, and towed my car to a place where I could get it fixed. Far from viewing their job as lowly, they spoke about how they felt it was a good one. You could see the pride in their faces and body language; they were capable men handling a heavy, complex machine, not mere drivers.

    And I know a Singaporean hawker who runs a zhi char stall in Tanjong Pagar Market. I once complimented him on how fresh and well made his food always is. Beaming with pride, he started talking about how he makes every dish himself, his food often sells out at lunchtime and that his har cheong kai is just the best. Listening to him, it was obvious that he cared immensely about what he did.

    This is what we need more of. Workers with more pride in what they do, employers who value their workers stepping up, so that both sides will want to give a little more and everyone becomes more productive.

     

    Source: www.theonlinecitizen.com

     

  • 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