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http://sammyboy.com/showthread.php?t=49386
Guess by now you guys must have read the above thread and seen the video.
During the roundtable discussion, it was mentioned that 6000+ Singaporeans leave Singapore every year, however, in the time since the last elections, SG's population has boomed from 4 to topping 5 mil recently.
That's approximately 250,000 new migrants INTO SG vs 6000 leaving SG. A ratio of 42:1.
What makes me sick in the gut then is:
1) Does it take 42 heads to make up the loss of one Singaporean. Surely the reproductive potential cannot be 42 children per woman in SG....
2) 6000 migrants leaving every year. If we break that demographic further, how many "True Blue" Singaporeans are leaving vs those who become Singaporeans out of convenience and jump ship to their final migration destination?
3) Migrants as a cheaper source of labor: Why are we spoonfeeding SME businesses in Singapore when this could only lead to the unwillingness of SMEs to expand their horizons, venture into unknown waters and compete in the international arena? Do SMEs really need to rely on near slave-labor to be profitable in Singapore such that there is no motivation to move up the value chain?
Guess by now you guys must have read the above thread and seen the video.
During the roundtable discussion, it was mentioned that 6000+ Singaporeans leave Singapore every year, however, in the time since the last elections, SG's population has boomed from 4 to topping 5 mil recently.
That's approximately 250,000 new migrants INTO SG vs 6000 leaving SG. A ratio of 42:1.
What makes me sick in the gut then is:
1) Does it take 42 heads to make up the loss of one Singaporean. Surely the reproductive potential cannot be 42 children per woman in SG....
2) 6000 migrants leaving every year. If we break that demographic further, how many "True Blue" Singaporeans are leaving vs those who become Singaporeans out of convenience and jump ship to their final migration destination?
3) Migrants as a cheaper source of labor: Why are we spoonfeeding SME businesses in Singapore when this could only lead to the unwillingness of SMEs to expand their horizons, venture into unknown waters and compete in the international arena? Do SMEs really need to rely on near slave-labor to be profitable in Singapore such that there is no motivation to move up the value chain?