So .... the election pundits were right. (Singapore Pools should start a bet on when GST will reach 10%) GST did go up. Technically not till next year but all of us in Singapore knows how legislation / governmental policy is made in the last five years. Once its announced its as good as done.
7% consumption tax on a $126B (2005 CIA World Factbook estimate) GDP. Roughly works out to be $8.8B a year. Not including other indirect or direct taxes which take the figure up easily twice or more (personal income tax, corporate tax, ERP, COE, Parf, you name it).
What does one do with so much money? Is Singapore reaching a stage in developmental spending that rivals the US where (in the movie Independence Day) a hammer cost $25k and a toilet seat costs $30k now is it? Does porking go on in the Singapore budget?
Sure we have a high standard of living (as claimed) and just a few firm shades under developed nation status pay scales (GHSS survey median of $2,750 - about USD $1,720 - or close to that) and out civil service employs about 40% of the population directly and otherwise (gotta include FTs there now). Where does all the money go?
Social welfare? The PM claims that 'welfare' is a dirty word, so there, we have no welfare to speak of. Of course we have 'workfare' but isn't the whole concept of workfare detrimental the the normal operating circumstance of market forces and an open economy in which the government professes to believe in? If this is the case then there will certainly be more good years coming right up!
Then again I could be wrong. The first day of Parliamentary debates saw PAP MP Seng Han Thong (sp?) claiming that he was giving out so much charity from his CDC kitty that he has had to request for more. And I may be wrong but I think I heard him say that the government in 2005 (or the past year, whichever that was) spent $6B on social / welfare related spending.
So what exactly is it that we have in Singapore? Welfare? Workfare? Behind-the-scenes-fare? The only fare I know as a middle income Singaporean living in a HDB flat is that transport fares are going up! But now the Tranport Minister is considering what was raised by WP during GE2006 - to essentially nationalise public transportation - for the good of the people! What happened to respect for intellectual property?
Let's do a quick review on the recent announcements concerning the main tax areas in Singapore:
1. GST - up
2. ERP - mostly likely up once the distance based system comes online (remember the joke about being ERPed once you leave your carpark?)
3. Income Tax - trying to go down but more beneficial it appears to the upper crust
4. Corporate Taxes - 'must come down if we are to remain more competitive'
5. 'Sin' Taxes are going up - gambling, drinks, smokes but these taxes apparently just dissappear into thin air I think
I'm sticking a finger in the air and saying that we should expect a few good things to come our way.
A. CPF contributions from employers will be cut again soon - of course to make Singapore more wage competitive! But why are we fighting on wage competitiveness for blue collar jobs when we could open up our Universities more (in other articles) and compete on white collar jobs regionally and internationally? Sure help the bottom rung as all the Ministers have suggested but perhaps the best way is to help us help ourselves.
The government has spent an inordinate amount of time, money and manpower trying to understand 'The Cluetrain Manifesto' and visiting 'The Bootstrap Institute (Gary Hamel)' among other international personas / institutes so why are we still sticking to Mandarin like policies with regard to education and future employability?
B. Health insurance is already on the way up. All it takes is to start with a few dollars. Which dear Minister Khaw has already spoken on. No doubt the intentions are good but this is an area that deserves special attention because everyone, including the present government, knows that this is a critical and fundamental pillar of society.
Singaporeans should prepare themselves for a healthcare model that will see companies refusing to provide medical and/or medical insurance due to the 'exorbitant' cost of medicine in Singapore (which relative to Inda - wage comparison here - though they have some good facilities as well) vis-a-vis the climate for attracting corporations to bunk in Singapore. Which by the way should receive a review since now modern corporations are surely and steadily getting rid of physical locations where feasible. (Hint: you probably can't prop up the commercial market, which drives the housing market, forever.)
Apologies but I should repeat here what was written elsewhere. Sure! Go ahead and fund a global standards medical hub but get the foreigners to pay Full Rates + to subsidize Singaporeans. Raffles Hospital and Mount Elizabeth (among others) are crawling with people who have bank accounts that would take Singapore decades to spend if we all went on 100% welfare today!
Yep, I know its all been gripe so far. But a few things could work to make the gripes go away. A few thing could make Singaporeans better citizens and more participative citizens. And that's what today's Government wants is it not?
i. Transparency - and I'm not only talking about Temasek deals that went right or left. I'm talking about opening up non-security sensitive Ministry (Mindef only actually) budgets and governmental budgets to allow Singaporeans to question and critique or actually support spending in. Publish the balance sheet in detail. How much received from where exactly and how much is going where exactly and why. Not so summed up high level corporate numbers which nobody can decifer.
ii. Transparency - why are policies made the way they are and can the 'consultative' process begin a little earlier? Like say before the announcement in Parliament which we all know is as good as done and dusted? Agreed that it can be a bitch to handle 200k responses but it will certainly be more productive for the country as a whole rather then have the civil service in general running around like headless chickens attending to the whims and half-baked fancies of some 'higher ups' with two gagillion revisions of a presentation and proposal only to have it all scrapped two hours before the deal is inked. I mean for goondus' sake man! We are paying top brains to write and re-write papers? Whatever happened to value for money?
Besides, if the consultation were truly a consultative process and taxation is truly an inevitable part of the growth of our nation then I'm sure that the citizens would be more pleased to help out. For one there will be no articles of this nature.
iii. Healthcare, Housing & Education (as an intangible form of investment) - are our spending priorities in the right order? Healthcare should not be free but do we need the latest in technology to treat the everyday (forgive my simplification here as I'm not medically trained)? Is public housing in Singapore truly subsidised? Really? And virtually no other country is giving out scholarships the way Singapore is giving out to foreign students. Foreign students usually pay a premium so that the locals are subsidized yet here we are, Singaporeans, paying more in taxes to truly subsidize foreign students.
Note: no animosity to foreigners or foreign students - some of you add to the diversity which Singapore needs. Only animosity to governmental policies.
Farewell Encik Guna
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8th October 2017..
I was very busy at SA and managed to take a breather to check my phone
later in the evening... Was informed that the plug was pulled of...
7 years ago
5 comments:
Mr Perry, you are really thick-skinned.
The 7$ raise in GST will be used on frivolous matters like your police report.
I wonder how much public resources you are going to waste to protect your big fat ego, Mr Petty Tong?
Shame on you!
Perry Tong wrote:
"Apologies but I should repeat here what was written elsewhere. Sure! Go ahead and fund a global standards medical hub but get the foreigners to pay Full Rates + to subsidize Singaporeans. Raffles Hospital and Mount Elizabeth (among others) are crawling with people who have bank accounts that would take Singapore decades to spend if we all went on 100% welfare today!"
Errr, don't the foreigners pay full rates (and then some) already, especially if they are Non Resident category?
And how would you get foreign patients going to Private Sector hospitals to give all their capital to the Public Sector?
I catch no ball...
I believe Mr Tong loved to see more bikini clad women in the philippines than proposing real solutions to our problems
I wonder do you ever consider the merits of a system even you are an opposition.
Is a welfare system a perfect system? Is a non-welfare system a perfect system? I believe none is. But i prefer the latter, as it will creates greater sense of self-responsibility - a key quality necessary for the continual survival of a person in a society.
I would rather have an opposition which will critically assist in fine-tuning the current system or at least provides logical, wise, innovative and practical alternative policies that will bring about sustainable development to Singapore in long run and definitely a welfare state is impossible.
Dear Perry, all these assholes here just knows how to criticise oppositions. When they meet with really powerful people from the government they become chickens. Ever hear them criticise them? So don't bother with these chicken cluckings.
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