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hk vs. sg

eatshitndie

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http://www.cnbc.com/2015/10/08/hong-kong-vs-singapore-which-is-asias-most-liveable-city.html

very powerful graphical comparisons between hk and sg:

image.jpg

sg has zero michelin-starred restaurants? i'm shocked! :eek:
 

gingerlyn

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first fact is fucking inaccurate.
hong kong is mountainous and their quite a lot of their land is unusable for buildings.
for example lantau island which is mountainous.
 

Agoraphobic

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Was talking to a European guy at a pub about his experience working in Asia (he has worked in HK and Sg) and when I asked which he preferred, this was his answer, "As a married man with a family, I prefer it here in Singapore, however if I were single, Hong Kong will be a clear choice for me."

Cheers!
 

eatshitndie

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first fact is fucking inaccurate.
hong kong is mountainous and their quite a lot of their land is unusable for buildings.
for example lantau island which is mountainous.

sg is more dense in terms of population at 7615 persons per sq mile. hk has much flatter land at the new territories which are vast, much larger than kowloon, hong kong island and lantau island combined. hongkies just like to cramp themselves near the harbor for fengshui reasons. while sg gov owns more than 86% of land in sg (so more affordable homes can be built for public housing), hk gov owns around 23% of land in hk and over 70% of hk land are owned by 6 wealthy families. there is no incentive to build affordable housing by these tycoons and their families, obviously. there's an excellent study published by 2 hk academics in detailing the awful housing situation in hk when compared to sg.

http://www.academia.edu/4295896/Comparative_Studies_Singapore_vs_Hong_Kong_Housing_Policy
 
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Semaj2357

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although we have celeb chefs such as testiclesuya, gordonram, wolfuckgang, etc to cash in on their reputation, their stars were attained in their home outlets, not here. even home-grown redstar can't get a star whilst heongkong can get one for their dimsum :cool:
 

drambuie

Alfrescian
Loyal
Was talking to a European guy at a pub about his experience working in Asia (he has worked in HK and Sg) and when I asked which he preferred, this was his answer, "As a married man with a family, I prefer it here in Singapore, however if I were single, Hong Kong will be a clear choice for me."

Cheers!

More ang moh cocksuckers there in Hong Kong and also more maids stay out so easier to meet and screw them.
 

eatshitndie

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although we have celeb chefs such as testiclesuya, gordonram, wolfuckgang, etc to cash in on their reputation, their stars were attained in their home outlets, not here. even home-grown redstar can't get a star whilst heongkong can get one for their dimsum :cool:

i'm wondering if my favorite macik-managed laksa ai hum stall in tampines will ever be rated one michelin moon. i guess not. :(
 

garlic

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Dont get any stars better lah... if not the price shoot up until dont know where. Now, no stars already so expensive...
 

eatshitndie

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Was talking to a European guy at a pub about his experience working in Asia (he has worked in HK and Sg) and when I asked which he preferred, this was his answer, "As a married man with a family, I prefer it here in Singapore, however if I were single, Hong Kong will be a clear choice for me."

Cheers!

housing allowance for an expat from an american company operating in either hk or sg is around us$4k per month. with that amount, i can live comfortably in a sizable 3 bedroom apartment or condo in a decent neighborhood in sg. in hk, that same amount will only pay for a tiny 1 bedroom with only 600 square foot of space. and it will be blocked out of any great view on all sides by other tall buildings. the single expat would be better off spending time away from bed in bars, nightclubs and restaurants.
 

Narong Wongwan

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Was talking to a European guy at a pub about his experience working in Asia (he has worked in HK and Sg) and when I asked which he preferred, this was his answer, "As a married man with a family, I prefer it here in Singapore, however if I were single, Hong Kong will be a clear choice for me."

Cheers!

Can't be true! How can Hk have more SPGs than Sg?
 

yinyang

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Can't be true! How can Hk have more SPGs than Sg?

housing allowance for an expat from an american company operating in either hk or sg is around us$4k per month....live comfortably in a sizable 3 bedroom apartment or condo in a decent neighborhood in sg. in hk, that same amount will only pay for a tiny 1 bedroom with only 600 square foot of space...single expat would be better off spending time away from bed in bars, nightclubs and restaurants.
HK's just as cosmopolitan with all the kweilos. On real estate, if you can handle the claustrophobia on confined space.
With no lack of floozies, and we are not only talking about likes of Wan Chai or Lan Kwai Fong. And Sg's comparatively laid back vs HK what with the hordes (except for outlying New Territories and Lantau).
 

frenchbriefs

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No need for mechelin star restaurants when sinkies tastebuds are simple and u can make a fortune selling curry chicken rice and kaya toast and golden pork floss buns.
 

Asterix

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Singapore is only the 12th best place in the world to die, that is according to some Sinkie foundation, though their MiniSTARS are the highest paid and governing one of the smallest countries.

Revealed: The best and worst places in the world to die...

The Quality of Death Index ranks the quality of palliative care in 80 countries. In its second report, the US ranks 9, Hong Kong and China at 22 and 71 respectively


No one likes to think about the end, even if everyone knows it’s coming. We prefer to prepare for more joyful milestones: birthdays and marriages, graduations and employment. These all factor into our measures of well-being – our quality of life.

We’re repeatedly told to plan for retirement, yet we rarely talk about what will happen at the end of that slow sunset. As a result, according to The Economist Intelligence Unit, we neglect to think about “dying better”.

In its second Quality of Death Index, The Economist ranks the quality of palliative care in 80 countries. As it did in 2010, the United Kingdom comes out on top. The US ranks 9, Hong Kong and China at 22 and 71 respectively.

The report distinguishes between end-of-life care and palliative care, which is defined by the World Health Organisation as limited not only to care in the final stages of a terminal illness, but also includes early assessments, psychological attention and support systems.

Commissioned by the Lien Foundation, a Singaporean philanthropic organisation, the index looks at indicators across five categories: palliative and health-care environment, human resources, affordability of care, quality of care and community engagement.

By and large, the greatest predictor of how a country fares on these measures is wealth. The list’s top 20 is dominated by wealthy Western and Asian-Pacific countries. Australia and New Zealand are just behind Britain in second and third, while Taiwan and Singapore are sixth and 12th.

Though America’s score of 80.8 (out of 100) is respectable, it’s far below the 93.9 garnered by its mates across the pond. The report cites comprehensive national policies, the extensive integration of palliative care into its National Health Service and a strong hospice movement for Britain’s superior showing.

In America, the Medicare programme for individuals aged 65 and over plays a large role in its high rank. But affordability remains a key issue.

“The financing systems in the US have created significant problems,” says James Tulsky, an expert on psycho-social oncology and palliative care in Boston. “So one of the recommendations of the report is to break down barriers between medical and social funding.”

Across the markers of Quality of Death, the US scores poorest on affordability of care, ranking 18th.

The Economist Intelligence Unit credits the Affordable Care Act with helping deliver sweeping changes throughout the US health-care system, though the private sector has also developed ways of delivering on the increased demand for palliative services.

The action from the private sector has a drawback, however. “The obvious disadvantage is that private sector is beholden to shareholders to provide quarterly returns,” says Diane Meier, director of the Centre to Advance Palliative Care at Mount Sinai Hospital’s medical school, in the report. “So the worry is that important needed care that is expensive might not be offered.”

The index’s surprise successes are Mongolia and Panama – 28th and 30th overall – two poorer countries that ranked above ostensibly more advanced places like South Africa and Brazil.

Mongolia owes its impressive record to a single doctor, Odontuya Davaasuren, who is leading the push for a national palliative care program.

Before she helped establish the Mongolian Palliative Care Society in 2000, the report notes, the country had no hospices or palliative care teaching programmes, and used just two pounds of morphine a year.

“No one talked about it,” Davaasuren tells The Economist. Now, there are 10 palliative care facilities in Mongolia’s capital alone.

http://www.scmp.com/news/world/article/1865227/best-and-worst-places-die
 

laksaboy

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The Lien Foundation is slowly but steadily pushing for legal euthanasia.
It has been making its moves over the years, talking about hospice care and palliative care.

This was from them back in 2008.
 
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