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'Extra sum' needed for public services by 2025: $13b

Extremist

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According to a report by Accenture, the amount is required due to costs associated with the country's ageing population. -myp

THE Singapore Government may have to spend an additional $13 billion to fund public services by 2025, a new report has found.

According to the report - titled Delivering Public Service For The Future: Navigating The Shifts - by global management-consulting, technology- services and outsourcing company Accenture, the amount is required due to costs associated with the country's ageing population.

Public-service expenditure is defined in the report as "total government spending at the national level, less debt-interest payments".

This includes spending on defence and public safety, education, health care and housing.

To bridge the projectedexpenditure gap, Accenture recommended that the Government "must shift away from piecemeal solutions towards fundamental changes", in terms of raising productivity.

The projected expenditure gap is calculated by comparing the demand-driven projection with the current trajectory for public-service-delivery expenditure. According to the report, improving the efficiency of the public sector by 1.4 per cent annually would close the gap.

Ms Teo Lay Lim, Accenture's managing director for Singapore and Asean, said: "In (the) face of the challenges posed by the ageing population and rising expectation for public services, improving public-sector productivity is imperative to drive and sustain Singapore's economic growth."

In compiling the report, the firm enlisted British-based research consultancy Oxford Economics to project total government spending on public services through 2025. This was done in 10 countries, including Australia, Italy and the United States.

United Nations figures cited in the report showed that Singapore's population aged 65 years and above is set to increase by 146 per cent between 2010 and 2025 - the largest increase of the 10 countries studied.

A poll across 5,000 respondents from those 10 countries showed that 70 per cent of Singaporeans are confident that the Government will be able to deliver public services that meet their needs over the next five years. This is almost double the global average of 37 per cent.

The poll also found that 56 per cent of Singapore respondents are satisfied with the public services they receive.

[email protected]
 
According to a report by Accenture, the amount is required due to costs associated with the country's ageing population. -myp

THE Singapore Government may have to spend an additional $13 billion to fund public services by 2025, a new report has found.

According to the report - titled Delivering Public Service For The Future: Navigating The Shifts - by global management-consulting, technology- services and outsourcing company Accenture, the amount is required due to costs associated with the country's ageing population.

Public-service expenditure is defined in the report as "total government spending at the national level, less debt-interest payments".

This includes spending on defence and public safety, education, health care and housing.

To bridge the projectedexpenditure gap, Accenture recommended that the Government "must shift away from piecemeal solutions towards fundamental changes", in terms of raising productivity.

The projected expenditure gap is calculated by comparing the demand-driven projection with the current trajectory for public-service-delivery expenditure. According to the report, improving the efficiency of the public sector by 1.4 per cent annually would close the gap.

Ms Teo Lay Lim, Accenture's managing director for Singapore and Asean, said: "In (the) face of the challenges posed by the ageing population and rising expectation for public services, improving public-sector productivity is imperative to drive and sustain Singapore's economic growth."

In compiling the report, the firm enlisted British-based research consultancy Oxford Economics to project total government spending on public services through 2025. This was done in 10 countries, including Australia, Italy and the United States.

United Nations figures cited in the report showed that Singapore's population aged 65 years and above is set to increase by 146 per cent between 2010 and 2025 - the largest increase of the 10 countries studied.

A poll across 5,000 respondents from those 10 countries showed that 70 per cent of Singaporeans are confident that the Government will be able to deliver public services that meet their needs over the next five years. This is almost double the global average of 37 per cent.

The poll also found that 56 per cent of Singapore respondents are satisfied with the public services they receive.

[email protected]


Thankz Bru

That's how I am going to move the money out before 2021
We already secretly bought an island for me and my cronies.
Need more time to launder the money through our GLC TH through leegalised investment.
I also need to take care of our loyal dogs, by giving then more public projects so they can have
a wonderful life in the country of their choice.
More lamp post projects at very competitive price, like 8k to 10k per post.

And 70% of my daft sinkie slaves are confident in my administration.
Haha... hahahahahaha... daft sinkies... uniquely Sinkapore
KNN... I thought I told them to massage the figure to 80%.
 
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Higher tax and CPF will be retained even longer? :(
 
hi there


1. wow! heng ah!
2. by then, me having kosong cpf to be sucked away.
3. :D
4. i really pity those sheep struggling to support such useless top-heavy elites!
 
I still say culling the non productive is the best way out of this mess.
 
I still say culling the non productive is the best way out of this mess.


hi there


1. sammy, you should lead & chair the following top-heavy entities.
2. gic, tmh, dbs, ntuc, st etc.
3. plentiful of useless but overly expensive sheep there!
 
Cut defense spending, trim the excessive public sector, stop gambling Singapore's reserves away, stop pissing away money on Brompton bikes, Geylang street lamps and worthless vanity projects such as the artificial river in Bishan Park, and you'll have more then enough money to cater to the needs of the ageing population.

You also won't have to raise taxes. This way, you'll retain your 'competitiveness', and your pro-business cronies will thank you for it. Win-win.
 
Higher tax and CPF will be retained even longer? :(

Tuan,

I will be very surprised if they don't raise the retirement age any further and as a result locked-up oUR hard-earned Cpf. As it is now, we cannot take our Cpf at 55. It has been extended to age 65 !!

Are they trying to gag us to death ??:mad:
 
Please investigate all your govt spending before writing cheques, especially hospital bills from free healthcare card.

I know a few elderly who are kept unnecessarily in hospital, healthy enough to chat, for months (yes months!), as they are on free healthcare.
If there are frequent checks before sending cheques, perhaps, it might cut down spending by a lot.
Why punish us innocent folks?
 
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