• IP addresses are NOT logged in this forum so there's no point asking. Please note that this forum is full of homophobes, racists, lunatics, schizophrenics & absolute nut jobs with a smattering of geniuses, Chinese chauvinists, Moderate Muslims and last but not least a couple of "know-it-alls" constantly sprouting their dubious wisdom. If you believe that content generated by unsavory characters might cause you offense PLEASE LEAVE NOW! Sammyboy Admin and Staff are not responsible for your hurt feelings should you choose to read any of the content here.

    The OTHER forum is HERE so please stop asking.

FAPee Traitors Addicted to FTrash; Producitivity Down in the Drain!

makapaaa

Alfrescian (Inf)
Asset
Joined
Jul 24, 2008
Messages
33,627
Points
0
<TABLE border=0 cellSpacing=0 cellPadding=0 width="100%"><TBODY><TR class=msghead><TD><TABLE border=0 cellSpacing=0 cellPadding=0><TBODY><TR class=msghead vAlign=top><TD class=msgF width="1%" noWrap align=right>From: </TD><TD class=msgFname width="68%" noWrap>kojakbt89 <NOBR></NOBR> </TD><TD class=msgDate width="30%" noWrap align=right>2:58 am </TD></TR><TR class=msghead><TD class=msgT height=20 width="1%" noWrap align=right>To: </TD><TD class=msgTname width="68%" noWrap>ALL <NOBR></NOBR></TD><TD class=msgNum noWrap align=right> </TD></TR></TBODY></TABLE></TD></TR><TR><TD class=msgleft rowSpan=4 width="1%"> </TD><TD class=wintiny noWrap align=right>42127.1 </TD></TR><TR><TD height=8></TD></TR><TR><TD class=msgtxt>Productivity – The Key to Sustainable, Long-term Economic Growth

Posted on December 10, 2010 by votingrp
<!-- .entry-meta -->http://votingrp.files.wordpress.com/2010/12/productivityrecord.jpg http://votingrp.files.wordpress.com/2010/07/jeislan1.jpgBy Jeisilan Sivalingam
For the past 10 years, I have helped companies to streamline their operations; I reduce operating costs in companies by improving their efficiency and productivity. A leaner, more competitive company will be better equipped to attain higher profitability and growth. This is an ideal situation for all stakeholders – higher profits for companies, more cost effective products and services for consumers and most importantly, more jobs and income growth for employees. Making these goals a reality for all stakeholders is my job, and nothing gives me more pleasure!
Almost inexplicably, productivity has been given prominence in Singapore’s mainstream media only in recent times. However, productivity has always been an important factor in any organization. While governments, companies and efficiency specialists in other countries have continued working on improving productivity for the past 10 years, the cogs in the PAP machine have been moving very slowly indeed. The PAP seems to have woken up to the importance of productivity a decade too late, and are now belatedly realizing that they have caused Singapore to lose a lot of ground to her competitors.
http://votingrp.files.wordpress.com/2010/11/productivityrecord.jpg
Let me explain exactly how much ground we have lost. Singapore’s productivity growth averaged only 1% in the last decade. Our productivity in the manufacturing sector is only 55%–65% of the US and Japan’s productivity. In the retail sector, it is 75% that of Hong Kong’s productivity and a mere third of the productivity in the US. In construction, the situation is even more dire. Economists have singled out one key reason for this abysmal productivity growth: the abundance of cheap foreign labor. In sectors such as construction, companies in Singapore tend to employ a high proportion of low-wage workers, while other developed economies employ fewer workers who are more skilled, or utilize more automation in their processes.

Let us take a look at how other developed economies have improved productivity over the last decade. The productivity of Hong Kong’s service sector grew by 3.1% annually from 1999–2008. This was achieved by employing more knowledgeable and experienced workers, having business investments with more value and a shift towards higher value-added services, such as financial services. In Finland, phasing out inefficient factories and encouraging more competitive plants to invest in technology enabled the manufacturing sector’s productivity to grow by 5.8% from 2000–2008. Producing innovative products with higher quality, such as designer furniture, allowed Denmark to increase the productivity of its manufacturing sector by 2.7% annually from 2000–2008. Investing in high-value niche sectors, restructuring industries and carrying out more research and development has paid off handsomely in terms of increased productivity.
After 20 years of stagnant productivity growth, Australia’s government pushed for industry reforms to improve the construction sector’s productivity significantly in the past 10 years. Contractors were given incentives to embrace value-adding technology and reduce their reliance on large numbers of unskilled workers. As a result, Australian companies are now more willing to invest in training and upgrading their workers, resulting in higher salaries and a better standard of living for the Australian working class.
In comparison, let us assess the PAP’s response to this problem thus far – a problem of their own making. In January 2010, the Economic Strategy Committee’s recommendations included the suggestion that nothing short of “a national effort” was needed to boost productivity – simply to catch up with other developed economies. In February 2010, yet another hastily formed government council announced measures to improve productivity. One wonders what the Singapore Standards and Productivity Board (Spring Singapore) is there for; what has it been doing to improve productivity for the last decade? Upon closer scrutiny, one can see that the measures announced in February only affect 12 industries that comprise about 40% of Singapore’s economy (these industries are mostly SMCs) for two years, and even these measures are to be reviewed after this period. What happens thereafter? Surely, these short-term, limited measures are not enough! What is being done about the remaining 60% of the economy, in particular, industry behemoths such as government-linked companies (SMRT, PUB, SBS, SP, and so on) that pass on inefficiency and escalating costs to consumers, thus contributing to the ever-increasing cost of living? We should instill a new culture of prudence among civil servants, who are currently more interested in ensuring that their annual budgets are spent to the last dollar for fear of a budget reduction in the following year. Can we not transform Singapore’s massive government and the resulting plethora of agencies and bureaucracies into a leaner, more cost effective outfit, as the Obama administration and other countries have done?
Singapore’s productivity is a pressing issue that needs to be analyzed with honesty. New ideas and methods must be explored; being content with outdated, inefficient practices will no longer suffice if we want to stay competitive.
Unfortunately, the current administration seems content with merely paying lip service to improving productivity. Consider PM Lee’s 2010 National Day Rally Speech, for example. In voicing the decision to bring in 80,000 foreigners (originally 100,000), what message is being sent out? These 80,000 foreigners are not going to help Singapore’s productivity increase, unless they are the very best that the global workforce has to offer – of course, this is highly improbable. As long as this shortsighted labour policy is effect, companies in Singapore will continue to create demand for increasing numbers of foreigners to satisfy their appetite for cheap labor. The question is: when will it be enough? How much more cheap labor does the PAP want to bring into an already overcrowded country with strained infrastructure? In my opinion, this is nothing more than a badly planned decision to placate companies.

In 2009, when productivity in most healthy economies decreased, statistics indicate that Singapore’s productivity saw the sharpest decrease, in terms of both the standard per worker and per hour worked measures of productivity. In terms of real gross domestic product per hour worked, Singapore’s productivity fell by 5% from 2008–2009. With the world mired in a global recession at the time, productivity in advanced economies such as Japan, Germany, Sweden, France and the United Kingdom also decreased, according to a recent study by the United States Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS). As the BLS noted:
”Most countries in 2009 experienced a decline in real GDP per hour worked, with the largest declines in Singapore and Finland (down 3.5 per cent).” The decline in productivity in other countries ranged from 0.3% to 2.3%.
The Reform Party is committed to creating tangible, far-reaching change that can steer Singapore’s productivity in the right direction: upwards! If elected to Parliament, the Reform Party will push for full-range, mid to long-term measures, which should not be limited to 40% of the economy, but expanded to include GLCs and as many companies as possible. As a short-term measure, resources and expertise should be made available to help companies increase productivity, instead of relying on cheap labor. Another major step that can be taken is the introduction of a minimum wage, which will disincentivize companies from taking destructive short cuts to higher profitability, such as hiring cheap labor. In our long-term strategy, we can adopt and build upon the solutions that other developed economies have created to raise productivity. We need to focus on:
1) Phasing out inefficient factories in the manufacturing sector;
2) Encouraging more competitive plants to invest in better technology;
3) Moving towards higher value-added services and more profitable niche sectors;
4) Introducing more automation in processes (for example, in the construction industry);
5) Carrying out more research and development, and;
6) Restructuring bloated companies and state-protected industries
In short, we must move towards a true knowledge-based economy that is sustainable, instead of using the current model, which is clearly and dangerously unsustainable.
We believe that these measures will lead to more jobs and higher income growth for Singaporeans, thus improving their quality of life. Help us to build a new Singapore – a Singapore where every Singaporean truly matters!
More details about the Reform Party’s 19 major policy pledges can be found at [URL="http://votingrp.wordpress.com/about"]http://votingrp.wordpress.com/about/[/URL].

</TD></TR></TBODY></TABLE>
 
<TABLE border=0 cellSpacing=0 cellPadding=0 width="100%"><TBODY><TR class=msghead><TD><TABLE border=0 cellSpacing=0 cellPadding=0><TBODY><TR class=msghead vAlign=top><TD class=msgF width="1%" noWrap align=right>From: </TD><TD class=msgFname width="68%" noWrap>kojakbt89 <NOBR></NOBR> </TD><TD class=msgDate width="30%" noWrap align=right>2:58 am </TD></TR><TR class=msghead><TD class=msgT height=20 width="1%" noWrap align=right>To: </TD><TD class=msgTname width="68%" noWrap>ALL <NOBR></NOBR></TD><TD class=msgNum noWrap align=right> </TD></TR></TBODY></TABLE></TD></TR><TR><TD class=msgleft rowSpan=4 width="1%"> </TD><TD class=wintiny noWrap align=right>42127.1 </TD></TR><TR><TD height=8></TD></TR><TR><TD class=msgtxt>Productivity – The Key to Sustainable, Long-term Economic Growth

Posted on December 10, 2010 by votingrp
<!-- .entry-meta -->http://votingrp.files.wordpress.com/2010/12/productivityrecord.jpg http://votingrp.files.wordpress.com/2010/07/jeislan1.jpgBy Jeisilan Sivalingam
For the past 10 years, I have helped companies to streamline their operations; I reduce operating costs in companies by improving their efficiency and productivity. A leaner, more competitive company will be better equipped to attain higher profitability and growth. This is an ideal situation for all stakeholders – higher profits for companies, more cost effective products and services for consumers and most importantly, more jobs and income growth for employees. Making these goals a reality for all stakeholders is my job, and nothing gives me more pleasure!
Almost inexplicably, productivity has been given prominence in Singapore’s mainstream media only in recent times. However, productivity has always been an important factor in any organization. While governments, companies and efficiency specialists in other countries have continued working on improving productivity for the past 10 years, the cogs in the PAP machine have been moving very slowly indeed. The PAP seems to have woken up to the importance of productivity a decade too late, and are now belatedly realizing that they have caused Singapore to lose a lot of ground to her competitors.
http://votingrp.files.wordpress.com/2010/11/productivityrecord.jpg
Let me explain exactly how much ground we have lost. Singapore’s productivity growth averaged only 1% in the last decade. Our productivity in the manufacturing sector is only 55%–65% of the US and Japan’s productivity. In the retail sector, it is 75% that of Hong Kong’s productivity and a mere third of the productivity in the US. In construction, the situation is even more dire. Economists have singled out one key reason for this abysmal productivity growth: the abundance of cheap foreign labor. In sectors such as construction, companies in Singapore tend to employ a high proportion of low-wage workers, while other developed economies employ fewer workers who are more skilled, or utilize more automation in their processes.

Let us take a look at how other developed economies have improved productivity over the last decade. The productivity of Hong Kong’s service sector grew by 3.1% annually from 1999–2008. This was achieved by employing more knowledgeable and experienced workers, having business investments with more value and a shift towards higher value-added services, such as financial services. In Finland, phasing out inefficient factories and encouraging more competitive plants to invest in technology enabled the manufacturing sector’s productivity to grow by 5.8% from 2000–2008. Producing innovative products with higher quality, such as designer furniture, allowed Denmark to increase the productivity of its manufacturing sector by 2.7% annually from 2000–2008. Investing in high-value niche sectors, restructuring industries and carrying out more research and development has paid off handsomely in terms of increased productivity.
After 20 years of stagnant productivity growth, Australia’s government pushed for industry reforms to improve the construction sector’s productivity significantly in the past 10 years. Contractors were given incentives to embrace value-adding technology and reduce their reliance on large numbers of unskilled workers. As a result, Australian companies are now more willing to invest in training and upgrading their workers, resulting in higher salaries and a better standard of living for the Australian working class.
In comparison, let us assess the PAP’s response to this problem thus far – a problem of their own making. In January 2010, the Economic Strategy Committee’s recommendations included the suggestion that nothing short of “a national effort” was needed to boost productivity – simply to catch up with other developed economies. In February 2010, yet another hastily formed government council announced measures to improve productivity. One wonders what the Singapore Standards and Productivity Board (Spring Singapore) is there for; what has it been doing to improve productivity for the last decade? Upon closer scrutiny, one can see that the measures announced in February only affect 12 industries that comprise about 40% of Singapore’s economy (these industries are mostly SMCs) for two years, and even these measures are to be reviewed after this period. What happens thereafter? Surely, these short-term, limited measures are not enough! What is being done about the remaining 60% of the economy, in particular, industry behemoths such as government-linked companies (SMRT, PUB, SBS, SP, and so on) that pass on inefficiency and escalating costs to consumers, thus contributing to the ever-increasing cost of living? We should instill a new culture of prudence among civil servants, who are currently more interested in ensuring that their annual budgets are spent to the last dollar for fear of a budget reduction in the following year. Can we not transform Singapore’s massive government and the resulting plethora of agencies and bureaucracies into a leaner, more cost effective outfit, as the Obama administration and other countries have done?
Singapore’s productivity is a pressing issue that needs to be analyzed with honesty. New ideas and methods must be explored; being content with outdated, inefficient practices will no longer suffice if we want to stay competitive.
Unfortunately, the current administration seems content with merely paying lip service to improving productivity. Consider PM Lee’s 2010 National Day Rally Speech, for example. In voicing the decision to bring in 80,000 foreigners (originally 100,000), what message is being sent out? These 80,000 foreigners are not going to help Singapore’s productivity increase, unless they are the very best that the global workforce has to offer – of course, this is highly improbable. As long as this shortsighted labour policy is effect, companies in Singapore will continue to create demand for increasing numbers of foreigners to satisfy their appetite for cheap labor. The question is: when will it be enough? How much more cheap labor does the PAP want to bring into an already overcrowded country with strained infrastructure? In my opinion, this is nothing more than a badly planned decision to placate companies.

In 2009, when productivity in most healthy economies decreased, statistics indicate that Singapore’s productivity saw the sharpest decrease, in terms of both the standard per worker and per hour worked measures of productivity. In terms of real gross domestic product per hour worked, Singapore’s productivity fell by 5% from 2008–2009. With the world mired in a global recession at the time, productivity in advanced economies such as Japan, Germany, Sweden, France and the United Kingdom also decreased, according to a recent study by the United States Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS). As the BLS noted:
”Most countries in 2009 experienced a decline in real GDP per hour worked, with the largest declines in Singapore and Finland (down 3.5 per cent).” The decline in productivity in other countries ranged from 0.3% to 2.3%.
The Reform Party is committed to creating tangible, far-reaching change that can steer Singapore’s productivity in the right direction: upwards! If elected to Parliament, the Reform Party will push for full-range, mid to long-term measures, which should not be limited to 40% of the economy, but expanded to include GLCs and as many companies as possible. As a short-term measure, resources and expertise should be made available to help companies increase productivity, instead of relying on cheap labor. Another major step that can be taken is the introduction of a minimum wage, which will disincentivize companies from taking destructive short cuts to higher profitability, such as hiring cheap labor. In our long-term strategy, we can adopt and build upon the solutions that other developed economies have created to raise productivity. We need to focus on:
1) Phasing out inefficient factories in the manufacturing sector;
2) Encouraging more competitive plants to invest in better technology;
3) Moving towards higher value-added services and more profitable niche sectors;
4) Introducing more automation in processes (for example, in the construction industry);
5) Carrying out more research and development, and;
6) Restructuring bloated companies and state-protected industries
In short, we must move towards a true knowledge-based economy that is sustainable, instead of using the current model, which is clearly and dangerously unsustainable.
We believe that these measures will lead to more jobs and higher income growth for Singaporeans, thus improving their quality of life. Help us to build a new Singapore – a Singapore where every Singaporean truly matters!
More details about the Reform Party’s 19 major policy pledges can be found at [URL="http://votingrp.wordpress.com/about"]http://votingrp.wordpress.com/about/[/URL].

</TD></TR></TBODY></TABLE>

when the ignorant govt allows the blatant import of cheap low productivity labour into SG, the businesses have no incentive to invest in technology nor see a need to improve productivity. This is a vicious circle that confine the Singaporean worker in the low wage trap
 
Yes,indeed,the low productivity is a very critical problem for Spore.

I always wonder why such brillaint PAP's economists like Tharma fr LSE has totally ignore this crticial problem that we face for so many years.

Is it possible that he sincerely believe that PAP has found a new magical formula for economic growth?

May be he is waiting to get his Nobel prize on economics?
 
Yes,indeed,the low productivity is a very critical problem for Spore.

I always wonder why such brillaint PAP's economists like Tharma fr LSE has totally ignore this crticial problem that we face for so many years.

Is it possible that he sincerely believe that PAP has found a new magical formula for economic growth?

May be he is waiting to get his Nobel prize on economics?

Few reasons why SG is into cheap foreign labour and low productivity:

1. LKY's presence

2. Policy makers are running dogs and afraid to counter LKY although they know he is wrong

3. Ignorance, conceitedness, deafness
 
Few reasons why SG is into cheap foreign labour and low productivity:

1. LKY's presence

2. Policy makers are running dogs and afraid to counter LKY although they know he is wrong

3. Ignorance, conceitedness, deafness
Frankly how did brilliant LKY come to accept "this grow by more labours,by pumping more capital,forget about productitvity thing "totally amazed me.

It is totally against LKY's proven trait of "check with Ang Moh first" mentality.


I can only speculate thta he was overwhelmed by his dear son.
 
Frankly how did brilliant LKY come to accept "this grow by more labours,by pumping more capital,forget about productitvity thing "totally amazed me.

Unlike you, nothing amazes me because of:

1. Absolute power dulls his mind
2. Senility
3. Surrounded himself with obedient dogs who dare not tell him what he doesnt want to hear
4. Arrogance
 
Few reasons why SG is into cheap foreign labour and low productivity:

1. LKY's presence

2. Policy makers are running dogs and afraid to counter LKY although they know he is wrong

3. Ignorance, conceitedness, deafness

What nonsense

Low productivity comes from 1 source : THE SINKIE PEASANTS

Those sinkie peasants are useless, have no skills and contribute in a very low class manner

They have not contributed to the economy by writing patents, doing research, bringing in the investments and do valuable things

These sinkie peasants are always the first to talk about low productivity

How funny it is, since they are the reason why Singapore has low productivity.

Fuck you SINKIE PEASANTS :oIo::oIo::oIo:
 

What nonsense

Low productivity comes from 1 source : THE SINKIE PEASANTS

Those sinkie peasants are useless, have no skills and contribute in a very low class manner

They have not contributed to the economy by writing patents, doing research, bringing in the investments and do valuable things

These sinkie peasants are always the first to talk about low productivity

How funny it is, since they are the reason why Singapore has low productivity.

Fuck you SINKIE PEASANTS :oIo::oIo::oIo:

hahahaha..obviously you dont know singaporeans
 
Unlike you, nothing amazes me because of:

1. Absolute power dulls his mind
2. Senility
3. Surrounded himself with obedient dogs who dare not tell him what he doesnt want to hear
4. Arrogance
I agree that you outline some of the reasons.

But still this is not logical.

I can only say that would be very sad for a benign dictator likes LKY.
 
I agree that you outline some of the reasons.

But still this is not logical.

I can only say that would be very sad for a benign dictator likes LKY.

LKY ahs overstayed his usefulness...He shd have left it to the younger leaders to run the show.

With his strong personality and with his hand-picked weak successors, the pap govt is misleading...I attribute the major fault to LKY, not LHL as lhl is there beacuse of LKY's fault. if lky had stepped down earlier, a stronger PM wld be be running SG now instead of the weakling lhl
 
hahahaha..obviously you dont know singaporeans

You are another Sinkie Peasant here

Sinkie peasants always make a comment without substantiating it

Because peasants have no reasoning ability

:oIo:
 
LKY ahs overstayed his usefulness...He shd have left it to the younger leaders to run the show.

With his strong personality and with his hand-picked weak successors, the pap govt is misleading...I attribute the major fault to LKY, not LHL as lhl is there beacuse of LKY's fault. if lky had stepped down earlier, a stronger PM wld be be running SG now instead of the weakling lhl
Let me tell u what I think,my humble opinion.

Of the cabinet,three ministers are fully capable of arriving at such ridiculous decision on foreign workers

(1)Of course our PM,
granted LHL is a world class mathematician trained by Cambrige U.
But most discerning Sporeans would have concluded by now that this brilliant PM knows not heads fr tails,not entirely his fault but because of his priviliged upbring.

That is why every Sporean knows "mee siam no hum",but PM LHL turned it to an embarrassing "mee siam mai hum".

(2)DPM Wong,Mr Wong has rather low IQ(in comparision to his other PAP scholar background ministers.)

I believe that DPM Wong has been what he is due mainly to KKK,as speculated in the forums

(3)BG yeo,this famed PAP faithful catholic strategist is indeed very high IQ,and made good speeches,but I remember three things
(a)According to MM LKY,BG Yeo made his name,fame by writing about how a small boat can maneuver easily in the rough sea,this is true but not that great wisdom as played up by PAP.

(b)When BG Yeo was in charge of economy,he boldly predicted that e-commerce would be the life line of the commerce world,and urge Spore firms to quickly embark into e-commerce least they kena left behind.

(c) One of the famous theory that was greatly promoted by BG Yeo was the
"Emergence of small states,or city states"that ultimately the power to rule the would be vested in small,city states,such as Spore.

Alas,just last week,in another speech,he was giving another pointer that power would be more and more concentarted in bigger states,like USA,EU,China,etc plus big organisations,such as World Bank,IMF,etc

So it is highly likely that BG Yeo jumped into this dis·as·trous conclusion.

The other two pro-PAP jokers who have little economic knowledge but with great influence and have deep desire to comment on economic models are Kishore Mahbubani who dismissed Nobel Prize economic winner Paul Krugman as one who did not know economics and mild manner Tommy Koh,who now suddenly realised that "Spore needs min wage".

The PAP economist who does have some good knowleade is self confessed Dr Goh KS"s blue eyed boy Mr Ngiam T D,who declared repeatedly:

Every one of foreigner who come to work in Spore MUST have better qualifications than our own citizens!
 
Last edited:
Let me tell u what I think,my humble opinion.

.
The PAP economist who does have some good knowleade is self confessed Dr Goh KS"s blue eyed boy Mr Ngiam T D,who declared repeatedly:

Every one of foreigner who come to work in Spore MUST have better qualifications than our own citizens!

I agree with Mr Ngiam. Any foreigner allowed to work in SG must level SG up and not just because he is cheaper. If SG keeps importing cheaper foreigners, SG will go to the dogs
 
Sinkie peasants always make a comment without substantiating it
Because peasants have no reasoning ability
:oIo:

Like you do you anti-sinkie cocksucking tranny! :oIo: :oIo: :oIo:
 

What nonsense

Low productivity comes from 1 source : THE SINKIE PEASANTS

Those sinkie peasants are useless, have no skills and contribute in a very low class manner

They have not contributed to the economy by writing patents, doing research, bringing in the investments and do valuable things
..........


We all know that hundreds of thousands of Sporeans have voted with their feet through the years & left Spore. These are the most productive citizens, since I doubt that the 1st world would accept just any peasant.

You can blame LKY & the PAP for driving them out of Spore :rolleyes:
 
We all know that hundreds of thousands of Sporeans have voted with their feet through the years & left Spore. These are the most productive citizens, since I doubt that the 1st world would accept just any peasant.

You can blame LKY & the PAP for driving them out of Spore :rolleyes:

I agree fully
 
Well done Singapore even with cheap labour and laws protecting
it and still not enough to climb up .
 
Back
Top