They have good taste :)

Are they those who use to spend time in Hong Kong as well?

Peace and best wishes.

Xi

On Jan 17, 2:35 am, "Mercury.Sailor" <[email protected]> wrote:
> Great!!! This is something you would never see in the U.S!!
>
> My in-laws love Singapore, They actually just returned from Singapore
> last Tuesday!
>
> On Jan 16, 9:20 am, "[email protected]" <[email protected]> wrote:
>
>
>
> > My comment: Honestly. I do.
>
> > Peace and best wishes.
>
> > Xi
>
> > Singapore Prescribes Shorter Showers, Less Meat to Fight 
> > Slumphttp://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=20601109&sid=a1qoV0psj3bY&refe...
>
> > 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.”
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