My comment: Honestly. I do.

Peace and best wishes.

Xi

Singapore Prescribes Shorter Showers, Less Meat to Fight Slump
http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=20601109&sid=a1qoV0psj3bY&refer=home

By Shamim Adam

Jan. 16 (Bloomberg) -- Until a few months ago, Amit Singh dreamed of
buying a car. Now, with S$75,000 ($50,100) in the bank, the lawyer is
holding back, saying he’ll continue to make the one-hour commute to
work on the Singapore subway.

“In these bad times, the buzzword is save, not spend,” says Singh, 34.
“It’s not the right economic climate to be lavish or to have a
luxurious lifestyle.”

Singapore is asking its citizens, the world’s third- wealthiest
adjusted for purchasing power, to be prudent as analysts predict the
worst economic slump in the nation’s 43- year history. In speeches,
pamphlets and ads, the government is advising people to switch to
cheaper frozen meats, take shorter showers and skip the top-of-the-
line mobile phone.

The island’s strategy contrasts with that of other countries such as
Japan and Taiwan, which are trying to boost consumer spending to spur
economic growth as exports falter. Singapore, whose 4.8 million
population is one of Asia’s smallest, doesn’t have a big enough home
market to make up for falling sales overseas, so officials “are not
even going to try” to tell people to spend more, says Vishnu Varathan,
an economist at Forecast Singapore Pte.

“There’s no way the domestic economy can make up for the slack in the
external sector,” he says. The message “is to bear with pay cuts and
live frugally.”

Dwindling Incomes

The government is preparing people for dwindling incomes as the
nation’s fourth recession in a decade forces companies including
lender DBS Group Holdings Ltd., manufacturer Stats Chippac Ltd. and
state-owned investment company Temasek Holdings Pte. to fire workers
or trim salaries.

Singapore last year unveiled more than S$5.4 billion in cash payouts,
utility rebates and special funds, or S$1,700 for each of the nation’s
3.2 million citizens, to help the poor cope with rising food and
energy prices.

Officials say people also need to help themselves during the economic
crisis. If everyone depends on the government, “we’ll weaken ourselves
as a society,” Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong said on Jan. 11,
according to the island’s main English newspaper, the Straits Times.
“We’ll cultivate a sense of reliance.”

The World Bank predicts Singapore’s $161 billion economy will be East
Asia’s worst performer this year. The government forecasts it may
shrink as much as 2 percent, after expanding 1.5 percent in 2008 and
7.7 percent in 2007. Kit Wei Zheng, an economist at Citigroup Inc. in
Singapore, says the contraction might be as much as 2.8 percent -- the
most severe since Singapore gained independence in 1965.

Rising Unemployment

The unemployment rate may more than double to 5 percent from 2.2
percent in September 2008, says Leong Wai Ho, a regional economist at
Barclays Capital in Singapore. More than 30,000 jobs may be lost, he
says, after about 400,000 new positions were created in the past two
years.

That could boost the default rate on mortgages for government-built
apartments, which house 84 percent of Singaporeans. The rate has risen
to 8 percent from 5 percent in 2003.

Governments elsewhere in Asia are encouraging their more- sizeable
populations to spend to counter the deepening global recession. Taiwan
extended the New Year’s holiday an extra day and is scheduled to
distribute NT$3,600 ($108) shopping vouchers to citizens on Jan. 18.
Japanese Prime Minister Taro Aso has pledged to give households 2
trillion yen ($23 billion) in handouts.

Private Consumption

That may not work for Singapore, where private consumption accounted
for 38 percent of gross domestic product in 2006, compared with more
than half in Australia, Hong Kong, South Korea and Japan, according to
the World Bank.

Singapore’s leaders have traditionally preached restraint amid
economic difficulties. In 2001, when the economy contracted 2.2
percent, the government refused to cap electricity prices and instead
gave utility rebates to help the poor and encourage people to “save
and not over-consume,” then-Prime Minister Goh Chok Tong said in an
August 2001 speech.

The government’s latest campaign began last year when prices of food
essentials including rice and cooking oil surged. As inflation soared
to a 26-year high of 7.5 percent, Prime Minister Lee urged people to
switch to frozen meats and in-house brands of supermarket products,
which are typically cheaper.

‘Healthier’ Vegetables

The national power company ran television ads telling consumers to set
air conditioners several degrees higher and use energy-efficient bulbs
to combat rate increases of about 42 percent. A government-run
community-development council distributed a brochure to homes in
Singapore’s most-populous district, suggesting people use less water
and substitute meat with “cheaper and healthier” vegetables.

MoneySense, a national financial-education program run by the central
bank, sponsored an advertisement in the Straits Times last month
featuring a cartoon of a man showing off his new cell phone, then
skipping lunch and subsisting on water because he had no money left.

Not everyone is getting the message. Alicia Leong, 29, received a 32-
page booklet in her mailbox in December with tips on saving money. The
next day, she spent S$1,200 on new clothes and a handbag, charging
them to two of her seven credit cards.

“I still have a job, so I don’t see the need to tighten my belt,” says
Leong, a teacher at a local high school. “I’ll probably stop when my
credit cards are maxed out.”

Credit-Card Debt

Singaporeans rolled over a record S$3.5 billion in credit- card debt
last November, about 18 percent higher than the year before.

Other people are taking the advice to heart. Jack Oh lost his job as
an electrician when his employer went out of business in October. The
father of three school-age children now drives a taxi and says he’s
cutting back on the Lunar New Year celebration, which begins Jan. 25.

“Last year, we went to a restaurant for the reunion dinner with my
family, parents and siblings and spent over S$1,500,” says Oh, 44.
“This year, we’re doing it at home, and I told my wife to get the
cheaper abalone.”
--~--~---------~--~----~------------~-------~--~----~
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups 
"World-thread" group.
To post to this group, send email to [email protected]
To unsubscribe from this group, send email to 
[email protected]
For more options, visit this group at 
http://groups.google.com/group/world-thread?hl=en
-~----------~----~----~----~------~----~------~--~---

Reply via email to