Tag: young

  • Young Punks The Bane Of Taxi Drivers

    Young Punks The Bane Of Taxi Drivers

    Instead, the easy-going veteran cabby prefers to take everything in his stride.

    He told The New Paper: “To tell you the truth, the bad overrides the good most of the time (in this industry). Perhaps it is my nature to forget them and not take them to heart.

    “The day is still long, tomorrow will be a better day. So as far as possible, I try to make it easier on myself so that the job is less stressful.

    “We give and take, we cannot take things too hard to survive in this world.”

    So how does he deal with difficult passengers or bad days?

    Mr Gan takes coffee breaks, sometimes with his ‘kakis’ to recharge. TNP PHOTO: Noor Ashikin Abdul Rahman

     

    “If I can sense that the passengers are (up to no good) and purposely making me drive all around the island, I will advise them to split cabs as that is more cost-effective for them. Usually, I’m pretty successful,” he said.

    And if passengers end up evading the fare, he let it slide.

    “If it’s only $10 or $20 then it’s not a big bomb. Is it worth making you so unhappy? Forget it,” said Mr Gan, who drives a Trans-Cab taxi.

    Mr Gan, who does the early shift, became a taxi driver in 1990 after his renovation business failed.

    The sole breadwinner and father of three grown children has been with multiple taxi companies over the years, including Comfort and CityCab.

    On weekdays, he usually starts at about 6.30am and ends at 5.30pm.

    Mr Gan with some of his fellow cabby buddies at lunch. TNP PHOTO: NOOR ASHIKIN ABDUL RAHMAN

     

    He might be in his 60s and has been in the trade for far longer than his younger counterparts but he is far from “jaded”.

    Eager to learn and improve himself, Mr Gan signed up as a driver-partner with ride-hailing service GrabCar in 2013.

    He had initial reservations about the service but was eager to try it out for himself.

    He admitted that many of his friends – both taxi drivers and non-taxi drivers alike – constantly debated the pros and cons of ride-hailing services like GrabCar.

    “There was even quarrelling among ourselves, with some saying that it was stealing their rice bowl. I told them, ‘If you can’t beat them, join them. Why not?” he said.

    According to Mr Gan, he has enjoyed a 15 per cent increase in income since joining GrabCar.

    Before this, he earned anything from $20 to $100 daily.

    But a steady income is little comfort for some of his cabby friends within his age group.

    “Some of them are not willing to learn, some are also stubborn. But I always tell them that is they are not willing to change or upgrade, they will become obsolete one day,” he said.

     

    Source: www.tnp.sg

  • Today’s Young Singaporeans Will Be In Relatively Good Shape To Retire

    Today’s Young Singaporeans Will Be In Relatively Good Shape To Retire

    Singaporeans who work regularly and make prudent housing choices should have no worries in meeting their retirement needs through the mandatory Central Provident Fund (CPF) system, Manpower minister Tan Chuan-Jin has said, as he told the House that the retirement picture for younger Singaporeans was “relatively healthy”.

    He was addressing concerns that Singaporeans might not save up enough in their CPF accounts to meet the Basic Retirement Sum, now that they will be given more flexibility and options to use their CPF savings.

    Citing the example of a 25-year-old polytechnic graduate earning S$2,200 and assuming this CPF member works 32 out of 40 years, the minister estimated that this worker would have a nest egg of about S$55,000 by the age 65. With compounded interest earned in the Special Account, he would have about S$165,000 at age 65 – three times what was put in.

    “This is not magic – it is just basic mathematics and is a very conservative estimate because I did not account for any wage growth at all and whatever savings he has accumulated in his Ordinary Account after paying off his flat. And if you add those, clearly, he would have even more.”

    As he walked the House through a typical CPF member’s stages in life, Mr Tan said that at age 65, the member would have to decide whether to withdraw up to 20 per cent of his Retirement Account savings in a lump sum.

    The minister also announced that from January 2016, members will need to choose from among the three payout streams to subscribe to under CPF Life from age 65 – up from the current 55. They will also have to decide whether they want to start receiving CPF Life payouts at age 65, or between age 65 and 70.

    The Manpower Ministry (MOM) will also restore the contribution rates for workers aged 50 to 55 to the same level as younger workers, as employment rates for this age band have improved and are almost on par with that of younger workers, he said.

    During Monday’s Committee of Supply debate, MP David Ong suggested raising CPF contribution rates for workers above 55 to the same level as younger workers.

    But Mr Tan said the employment rate for those above 55 was still much lower than those who were younger, so it would not be prudent to raise contribution rates of this group too quickly. The higher rates would also put employers off hiring older workers, he said.

    To encourage the employment of older workers, Senior Minister of State Amy Khor said the government has launched an additional Special Employment Credit (SEC); employers who hire Singaporean workers aged 65 and up and who draw up to S$4,000 a month will receive up to 3 per cent of the monthly wage bill under this SEC.

    This is on top of the current 8.5 per cent SEC for hiring Singaporean workers above 50.

    The government is supporting employers in improving workplace practices so as to attract and retain mature workers, said Dr Khor, who added that the government is putting in place legislation to extend re-employment to 67 in two to three years.

    Employers should also tap existing measures available to put in place age-management practices, so that they can be better prepared to hire older workers, she added.

    Mr Tan urged CPF members to be prudent with their housing purchases, especially when buying or upgrading a property later in life.

    “I think it’s important to pay attention to this because older members may have to take on loans with shorter tenures, higher monthly instalments; they should also factor in any decline in CPF contributions as they age, which may mean that they may need to service their monthly housing instalments with cash on top of CPF.”

    In response to calls for more targeted help for non-working women with low CPF balances, MOM’s support for this group is two-fold, noted Mr Tan.

    Firstly, it has encouraged non-working women to rejoin the workforce, which has led to higher Labour Force Participation Rates (LFPR) among women; as a result, the difference in average CPF balances between men and women have started to narrow, he said.

    Secondly, with families remaining a pillar of support for women, the rules have been tweaked to make it easier for CPF members to transfer their CPF savings to their spouse’s CPF.

    He added that the government is providing attractive interest rates to encourage such transfers: from next year, those aged 55 and above can earn an extra 1 percentage point of interest for the first S$30,000 in their combined CPF balances.

    As for Ms Foo’s suggestion that such transfers be made automatic or require spouses’ joint consent before withdrawals from the Retirement Account, Mr Tan replied that those were ‘very personal decisions” and “best left to couples to decide”, as it would be intrusive for the government to intervene.

    MPs Zaqy Mohamed and Seng Han Thong asked how MOM was communicating the various changes to its members.

    The House was told that, under efforts in this direction, a guided one-to-one retirement-planning service to CPF members would be launched so they can get a better understanding of the various CPF options before making their choices.

    The ministry has completed a three-month trial project and will pilot a retirement-planning service in the second half of the year. The plan is to ramp up the service gradually from next year, with priority given to those turning 55, said Mr Tan.

    In his speech, he stressed that the fundamental principles of CPF will not change and that retirement adequacy remained the scheme’s primary objective.

    And while Singapore’s social safety nets for the vulnerable need to be strengthened, the government and the CPF system alone will not be able to solve all problems.

    “There is a role of collective responsibility – individuals, families, employers, social groups. We all need to step in to provide the assistance and support.”

     

    Source: www.businesstimes.com.sg

  • Children In Singapore Start Consuming Alcohol At Increasingly Younger Age

    Children In Singapore Start Consuming Alcohol At Increasingly Younger Age

    Ben had his first drink of whiskey and cola when he was 13 and in Secondary One. It was with a group of friends, after school at a staircase near his Redhill home.

    It was not a big deal, insists Ben (not his real name), now 18. “My older brother was already drinking and my father drank at home all the time,” he said.

    He is part of a new generation of teenagers who are beginning to drink younger, say social workers concerned about a trend they started noticing about four years ago.

    “In the past, most teenagers would start drinking at 15 or 16, but now we are seeing 12- or 13-year-olds,” said Dr Carol Balhetchet, senior director for youth services at the Singapore Children’s Society.

    One of the main reasons is a growing tolerance for social drinking. “Nowadays, it’s not uncommon for adults to drink socially in front of children,” said Dr Balhetchet.

    That was how a seven-year-old girl had her first drink.

    “The mother was drinking wine and left it unfinished on the table, the girl just went up and took a sip,” she said.

    Figures for alcohol abuse among youth are mostly anecdotal, with VWOs saying they deal with between five and 10 cases each year.

    The National Addictions Management Service (NAMS) deals with 10 to 15 cases of problem drinking among youth aged 19 or below each year.

    Dr Gomathinayagam Kandasami, a NAMS consultant and head of addiction medicine at the Institute of Mental Health, said that while some teenagers might miss classes because of a drinking binge or argue with their parents, they are unlikely to experience the serious loss in functioning long-time alcoholics grapple with.

    “Younger people may not experience the full range of alcohol-related problems,” he said.

    Many of them only get help for their drinking habits when the law catches up to them for other offences.

    For Ben, that was in 2012 when he stole a bottle of blackcurrant-flavoured vodka from a convenience store.

    “I hadn’t had a drink in two weeks and I couldn’t afford alcohol. I couldn’t control myself,” said Ben, who is from a single-parent family and currently serving national service. He was caught on the store’s CCTV cameras and arrested.

    The legal age for buying alcohol is 18, but younger people do not have difficulty getting their drinks, social workers said.

    “They can easily get older friends to buy drinks for them,” said Ms Lena Teo, assistant director of counselling at the Children-at-Risk Empowerment Association (Care Singapore). “Some buy rice wine from supermarkets, and easily say it is for their mothers to use in cooking.”

    Ms Sheena Jebal, principal counselling psychologist at NuLife Care and Counselling Services, said teenagers may pour the liquor into soft drink cans so they can drink undetected in public – under void decks and in parks. “I can say now every youth-at-risk would have experienced drinking at least once,” she said.

    The problem is worrying because many go on to more serious vices, she noted. “It’s thrill-seeking behaviour. One starts with smoking first, then drinking – and if they can smoke and drink and not get caught, they will move on to the next level,” she said, adding that some move on to drugs such as Ice and Ecstasy.

    This appears to corroborate Central Narcotics Bureau data which shows that drug addicts under 30 now make up two-thirds of new abusers.

    Mr Moses Huang, counselling therapist at Ain Society, said the common thread that unites young alcohol abusers tends to be parental neglect. “They can come from low-income families or the super rich. If parents don’t spend time with them to educate them about drinking, they can be easily influenced,” he added.

    The VWOs said a concerted effort is needed to address the problem – with education both in schools and in the home.

    The Liquor Control Bill – which bans public consumption of alcohol after 10.30pm, and is expected to come into force in April – will also help, said Ms Sheena.

    She said the ban is coming at the right time, and added: “If not, you would see more and more young people wasting their lives away drinking.”

     

    Source: www.straitstimes.com

  • Irfan Fandi To Work Even Harder After Top 40 Achievement

    Irfan Fandi To Work Even Harder After Top 40 Achievement

    SINGAPORE: Irfan Fandi, son of Singapore’s football icon, Fandi Ahmad, was recently named in a list of top 40 best young talents in world football. The 17-year-old was the only Singaporean among six Asian youngsters on the list that was posted on British news site, The Guardian.

    In an interview with Channel NewsAsia on Tuesday (Nov 11), the teenager, currently training in Chile, said he first got wind of it on social media.

    “My teacher from my old school, the Singapore Sports School, told me about this through Instagram,” said Irfan. “At first, I thought she was joking, then she sent me more links to it and then I realised that it was all real.

    “Then after a few hours, I got tweets from people and Instagram pictures, and I felt really happy because I have been working really hard for the past few years. This doesn’t mean that I stop working hard, it only means that I have to work even harder for the next upcoming years.”

    At 1.86 metres tall, Irfan has a significant height advantage over other Asian footballers. He is hoping to gain valuable experience from his training stint in Chile.

    “The biggest change for me is adapting to the weather and also adapting to the playing style here,” he said. “The style of play in Chile compared to Singapore is totally different. Here, it’s really fast, really technical. So I have to work really hard to be at their standard, and then be better than them to play in a higher level than them.”

    His father, Fandi, was the first Singaporean footballer to play in Europe, and said going west is the aim.

    “Definitely, their main target is to play professionally in Europe, anywhere in Europe,” said Fandi. “But because they love football too much, so much, that’s why they are on this path, and they want to carry the name of Fandi Ahmad.

    “Right now, I think focus is on Irfan, as he is already 17 years old. I know it’s not easy for a 17-year-old to sign a contract. It’s against the rules. But slowly, surely, I am sure he will get there.”

    CIMB has offered a 6-figure sponsorship deal to both Irfan and his 15-year-old brother, Ikhsan.

    “I am sure all soccer-loving Singaporeans must feel very proud that one of our home-grown young football talents has been voted one of the Top 40 best footballers,” said CIMB Bank Singapore CEO Mak Lye Mun. “I also read that Irfan’s stint in Chile has made him a better footballer and that was one of the reasons why he was voted, so CIMB is happy that we played a part in that sponsorship.”

    With football scouts sniffing around, there could be a chance that Irfan will eventually follow in his father’s footsteps and play for a European club.

     

    Source: www.channelnewsasia.com