Tag: Singapore

  • CPF Minimum Sum In Three Sizes

    CPF Minimum Sum In Three Sizes

    I was thinking of doing a listicle, a brainless but, hopefully, funny way of conveying information. Except that the CPF review panel’s recommendations have left me brain-dead and I am not feeling terribly funny. Bear with me please because I think this is too big an issue not to destroy some brain cells over.

    Now, the panel wants us to leave this gawdawful term “minimum sum’’ alone for the moment and work backwards. Let’s not think about how much money we have in our CPF when we turn 55, it says, but what we hope we will get when we turn 65, when monthly payments kick in.

    Here’s how the panel wants the changes framed:

    If you are 55 now, in 10 years, you’ll need about $650 to $700 a month. The panel has factored in inflation AS WELL AS rising standards of living. So it’s not just for bread and water, but kaya and kopi as well.

    To get this kind of payout means leaving $80,500 in your CPF. That is, if you own your home. Why? You can rent it out if you need money. If you sell it because you prefer to rent a home, the CPF money you used to pay for it will still go back into your CPF – so it’s back up again. (Forget everything that has been said about being able to pledge your property ecetera. Serious.)

    If you do not own property, that $80,500 is doubled to $161,000 (Yup, that’s the minimum sum for those turning 55 next year) It means higher payout which is also to cover for expenses like rent, which a homeowner wouldn’t have to worry about.

    If you actually want to put in more money into your CPF, you can. Up to $241,500. Now, why would anyone want to do it? Because, hey, the CPF pays better returns than the banks or even commercial insurance companies. And yes, even higher payout of close to $2,000 a month

    So that’s why the panel doesn’t want to use the term “minimum sum’’ anymore but RETIREMENT SUM. Besides sounding like a ransom demand, it now applies to three different S/M/L sizes – Basic, Full and Enhanced.

    To recap:

    Basic is $80,500

    Full is $161,000 (doubled)

    Enhanced is $241,500 (tripled)

    In case you’ve forgotten everything about what happens at 55…

    1. You can take out everything in excess of Basic if you own your home. If you don’t even have a Basic, you can take out $5,000. Yup, nothing has changed.
    2. What’s new: that Basic sum will increase by 3 per cent a year so that you wouldn’t be so suddenly surprised by an announcement when you’re 54.

    But quite a lot can happen in 10 years time when you hit 65.

    1. You can decide to withdraw 20 per cent of the sum you left inside. It’s been accumulating interest after all (and you need to pay for your son’s wedding or your daughter’s overseas education). Remember though that getting a lump sum early means smaller monthly sums later on. So you can expect some incentives from the G to get you to leave your 20 per cent alone. Now, for those with really really low balances, it’s no-go.
    2. You can decide to leave your money in there because you really don’t need it yet. Instead, you can accumulate even more interest and get a bigger pay-out – about 6 to 7 per cent more – later. You can do this at most for five years. (The CPF isn’t supposed to make your fortune but provide for retirement after all.)

    Okay, so far, the panel hasn’t said anything about those with not enough to meet even the Basic. First off, they aren’t going to be penalized or have their homes taken away from them. They will still get an income until they die, albeit a smaller sum. Still, what can be done to help them?

    There are some things in place already such as an extra 1 per cent interest for those with $60,000 in CPF balances. Plus there is the Work Income Supplement for the lower paid which also goes into their CPF. (I guess we have to see what the Budget will bring but there is a Silver Support in the offing in which the G is expected to give cash/CPF bonuses to older folk)

    The good news is that increasingly over the years, more and more people will be able to meet the Basic sum. Right now, 55 per cent of CPF members can. And by 2020, 70 per cent will be able to do so. Hey, that’s what the panel says okay…!

    Those are the panel’s key recommendations but it also raised other matters for the G to consider. For example, the panel…

    1. Agreed with the NTUC’s suggestion to bring back up the CPF contribution rates of those aged 50 to 55 who are working. This was cut to encourage employers to employ older workers and it’s working well enough already it seems.
    2. Like the NTUC, it wants the salary ceiling for CPF contribution, which is now $5,000, raised. In two swoops, voila! More CPF money! (Although how employers will react to this I don’t know)
    3. Wants spouses to be allowed to start CPF Life accounts for their non-working partners.

    As you can tell, I am not commenting on the changes because I am still trying to wrap my head around them! At first glance, they seem populist, a bid to satisfy as many differing demands as possible (except the Return my CPF at age 55 lobby). Or it can be framed as a matter of choice and giving people a bit more control over their money. The panel prefers to use the word “flexibility’’. Flexibility is so complicated isn’t it? And that’s just Part 1 of the recommendations. Part 2 will be about “flexible’’ payouts.

    Don’t forget that there isn’t just one CPF Life plan, but a few…you pick one. I’ll bet anything that most people have forgotten this.

     

    Source: https://berthahenson.wordpress.com

  • 3 Arrested For Trouble At Thaipusam

    3 Arrested For Trouble At Thaipusam

    Singapore police on Tuesday evening arrested three individuals for rowdy behaviour at the annual Thaipusam procession after a scuffle that ended with one policeman being sent to hospital.

    In a statement posted to its Facebook page on Wednesday afternoon, police said its officers were sent to the junction of Serangoon Road and Desker Road at about 6:50pm, after a group there refused to stop playing drums despite being requested to by Thaipusam organisers.

    SPF Statement On Thaipusam Incident

    The Hindu Thaipusam procession is an annual event held in Singapore where devotees make the journey on foot either carrying kavadi structures or other items such as milk pots in offering to Murugan, the Hindu God of War. The walking route covers a roughly 4km distance from Sri Srinivasa Perumal Temple in Serangoon Road to Sri Thendayuthapani Temple on Tank Road.
    Friends or relatives of devotees who participate in the procession often support them with musical accompaniment, but in Singapore, the use of musical instruments during processions has been banned since 1973.

    While the officers were speaking to the group of drum-players, police said a 33-year-old man confronted them in a “rowdy manner”, and another two men, a 28-year-old and a 32-year-old, came forward to try to stop the police from arresting him.

    The 32-year-old assaulted three officers in the process, police said, and both were placed under arrest as well.

    One police officer who was injured was then sent to Tan Tock Seng hospital for treatment.

    “The three men, all Singaporeans, also used vulgarities against the officers,” the statement said. “All three men were believed to have been drinking earlier as they smelt strongly of alcohol.”

    Police said they are investigating the incident.

     

    Source: https://sg.news.yahoo.com

  • Petition To Mdm Halimah Yaacob To Reinstate Thaipusam As A Public Holiday

    Petition To Mdm Halimah Yaacob To Reinstate Thaipusam As A Public Holiday

    In Singapore, every major race is given two days of religious or cultural holiday. The Chinese have Chinese New Year (CNY), which lasts for two days. Malays, who are predominantly Muslim, are given holidays for Hari Raya Haji and Hari Raya Puasa. Indians are given Deepavali and Vesak Day. Hence, Thaipusam could not be made a holiday for Indian Hindus.

    However, who observes Vesak Day? It is a Buddhist holiday. Buddhism originated in India, but by and large, the world’s biggest population of Buddhists, are East Asian. In Singapore, this means it is the Singaporean Chinese who are mostly Buddhist. Why is it gazetted as an Indian holiday when there are so few Indians celebrating it?

    Thaipusam should be made a holiday in Singapore from 2016 in the interest of fairness to all races in Singapore.

    Please sign this petition that will be sent to the Public Petitions Committee of the Parliament of Singapore asking to make Thaipusam a holiday in Singapore.

    Thaipusam Petition - Change

    LETTER TO

    Chairman, Public Petitions Comittee, Parliament of Singapore Mdm Halimah Yacob

    In Singapore, every major race is given two days of religious or cultural holiday. The Chinese have Chinese New Year (CNY), which lasts for two days. Malays, who are predominantly Muslim, are given holidays for Hari Raya.

     

    Sangeetha Thanapal

    Source: www.change.org

     

  • Accident On PIE Left Car In Upright Position

    Accident On PIE Left Car In Upright Position

    Stompers Hakim and Ong came across this unusual sight on the PIE near the Tampines Avenue 5 exit at around 11am.

    Based on the photos sent in by the Stompers, a grey coloured car was left hood-first in a vertically upright position on a grass patch between two lanes.

    A white cloth resembling an air bag can also be seen near the driver’s seat.

    Stomper Ong mentioned that recovery works are still ongoing as at 11.50am.

    The SCDF were alerted to the accident at 10.40am and dispatched one ambulance.

    The passengers, one man and one woman, were then conveyed to Changi General Hospital.

    The man is in his 60s and the woman is in her 50s.

     

    Source: http://singaporeseen.stomp.com.sg

  • Make Thaipusam A Public Holiday In Singapore Again!

    Make Thaipusam A Public Holiday In Singapore Again!

    I got this message yesterday. Anyone knows what the dish is?

    Ng Yi-Sheng

    Angelina who is a local Singaporean born Hindu who converted to Christianity will be filing an application this afternoon to challenge the banning of the drums during Thaipusam by the Law Minister Shanmugam. She will also be challenging the removal of Thaipusam as a public holiday by Lee Kuan Yew with its purported replacement Vesak Day.

    Further, Angelina will tomorrow be carrying a kavadi at Sri Perumal Temple, Desker Road and she invites all members of the public to turn up to show solidarity with her. Her legal team from M Ravi’s practice will also be there to witness her religious observances.

     

    Source: Ng Yi-Sheng

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