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Challenge to FAP - Take 80% Pay Cut for Your "Mistakes" to Back White Paper

makapaaa

Alfrescian (Inf)
Asset


The whole article is another scare tactic. In fact, Japan is a good example on how the elderly is being well taken care of! Why donch the FAP learn a thing or two from Japan in this respect?


Silver tsunami & dwindling workforce can destabilise economies: Lee Yi Shyan
By Imelda Saad | Posted: 06 February 2013 2136 hrs
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Elderly people gather to play a checkers game next to their housing area in Singapore. (AFP/Roslan Rahman)

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SINGAPORE: Senior Minister of State for National Development and Trade & Industry Lee Yi-Shyan has painted a sobering picture of an ageing population and shrinking workforce.

Speaking in Parliament on the Population White Paper and Land Use Plan on Wednesday, Mr Lee pointed to the experience of Asian neighbours like Japan and Taiwan as examples of how the silver tsunami and dwindling workforce can destabilise economies.

For example, a city outside Nagoya called Gifu has seen shops along the main street closed for good.

In Hokkaido, in a small town called Yubari, half of the population is above 65 years old.

Mr Lee said Yubari's small working population means a measly tax base.

Four years ago, the city government went bust after owing a debt of US$315 million. The city was later forced to embark on an 18-year austerity drive.

Mr Lee said: "It retrenched half of its civil servants. Public service in the City was badly affected. The public library was gone. Six primary schools merged into one. The General Hospital closed down two thirds of its facilities to save utilities. It also halved its number of ambulances and asked its elderly patients to walk to the hospital by themselves."

The effect of two decades of economic stagnation in Japan, said Mr Lee has led to what is described as "the Waniguchi (crocodile's mouth) effect" - Soaring public expenditure coupled with a drop in tax revenue.

Mr Lee said the huge silver tsunami is destabilising Japan.

He said the country did not manage to raise its working population because it could not build a consensus to allow immigration to boost the workforce.

Similarly in Taiwan, Mr Lee pointed to an article which described the economy as "a small tax revenue country but large welfare state."

Mr Lee said Singapore is not operating in silos.

The world, he said, will continue to move forward, regardless of Singapore's demographic and internal problems.

It is against this larger picture, he said, that Singapore has to define its path forward.

Mr Lee said: "It makes sense for the nation to maintain a sustainable and stable Singaporean population while we are still young, and while external conditions are favourable."

Mr Lee noted there are lessons to be learnt from the experiences of other countries.

The number of elderly citizens in Singapore aged 65 and above will increase considerably from around 340,000 in 2011 to 900,000 by 2030.

Mr Lee cited China's rapidly ageing population to highlight issues which Singapore may face in the future.

He said: "China is beginning to see the "4-2-1" phenomenon: one child having to look after two parents and four grandparents. This inverted pyramid means a heavy burden for the children. When both parents and grandparents are retired, there is also the "aged caring for the aged" phenomenon and this is becoming common in our communities."

Echoing the sentiment, former Cabinet Minister Mah Bow Tan said Singapore cannot afford to lose its edge and become less competitive.

He urged Singaporeans to keep their hearts and minds open.

Mr Mah said: "We have spent a lot of our time looking inwards, talking about our discomforts, our space. We have not asked ourselves how we are going to compete with outside world. How we are going to earn a living to live the good life. It is almost taken from granted that the good life will continue even if growth slows. We expect new infrastructure to be rolled out, even as growth slows. We want more subsidies for health care and housing and let's have less foreign workers and a slower pace of life. Where will the revenue from all this come from?"

Mr Mah, who is MP for Tampines GRC, said government revenue comes mostly from income taxes, consumption taxes and asset taxes, all of which are dependent on economic growth.

He added Singapore needs a bigger population with better educated and trained citizens as well as talented non-residents to supplement the home-grown talent.

- CNA/fa
 

makapaaa

Alfrescian (Inf)
Asset
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gifu,_Gifu

Lifestyle
Gifu City Tower 43


The central area of the city serves as a satellite of nearby Nagoya, which has larges offices of many international companies, including Toyota.[SUP][29][/SUP] The ease of commute between the two cities, as well as the plentiful apartment construction underway, has contributed to this distinction. Just west of Gifu Station is Gifu City Tower 43, a 43-story high-rise building developed by Takenaka Corporation that opened on October 13, 2007 as the tallest building in Gifu Prefecture.[SUP][21][/SUP][SUP][30][/SUP] The upper 30 floors are divided into two- and three-bedroom apartments, including those for senior citizens.[SUP][30][/SUP] The lower floors will be used as offices or shops for targeted services such as medical care. Additionally, public space exists at the top of the building, allowing residents another 360-degree view of Gifu, complementing that offered from Gifu Castle.[SUP][21][/SUP]
The city of Gifu is currently promoting the Slow Life City Initiative,[SUP][31][/SUP] which is similar to, but more comprehensive than, the slow food initiative. It is designed to encourage residents to lead a slower lifestyles and provide an alternative to the fast-paced life of the modern world. Major elements of this campaign include more dependence on locally grown food; traditional culture and arts; and activities to increase citizens’ participation in their community.[SUP][31][/SUP] In addition to slow food, Gifu also hopes to include slow industry (traditional crafts), slow education (studying quality of life), and slow tourism (represented by cormorant fishing).[SUP][21]

THIS IS QUALITY LIVING, WHICH THE FAP TRAITORS CAN ONLY ENJOY THEMSELVES WHILE DRIVING SPURS INTO SGs' HIDE TO MAKE THEM TOIL HARDER AND RUN FASTER![/SUP]
 

makapaaa

Alfrescian (Inf)
Asset
Did not Teo Sir Fcuk just tell Ponggolians that they go build their own childcare centres as reprisal for giving the FAP Traitors the Ponggolian Slap?

Education
Gifu University Hospital


Gifu has 48 nursery schools and 43 kindergartens available for children. Students then matriculate into one of the city's 49 elementary schools and 27 junior high schools. After graduating from junior high school, students have the option of attending one of Gifu's 18 high schools.[SUP][51][/SUP]
The city has five technical institutions and five colleges and universities. The largest of these is Gifu University, the city's national university, which includes a hospital.[SUP][52][/SUP] The other four-year institutions are Gifu Shotoku Gakuen University, a private university located in the area of the former town of Yanaizu,[SUP][53][/SUP] and Gifu Women's University, a private women's university founded in 1968.[SUP][54][/SUP] Gifu City Women's College was founded in 1946 as traditional college, but later became a city-supported, public junior college.[SUP][55][/SUP] Gifu Pharmaceutical University, founded in 1932 as the Gifu City Pharmaceutical College, remains a public university offering graduate-level courses.[SUP][15][/SUP]
 
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