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Serious Recession 2020 Starts Now!

Bad New Brown

Alfrescian
Loyal
With my passive calories dropping to 1300 due to aging and add my daily workout burn of 1200 calories (or more on certain days), I can't afford to eat a chicken chop.

My 3 meals plus snacks cannot add to more than 2500 calories, otherwise i grow fat. So sad. :( :biggrin:

Bro, you must take good care of health and well-being. Many China girls waiting for you :biggrin:
 

myfoot123

Alfrescian (Inf)
Asset
I like recession because this is a good time to see who are the real survivors in long term economic downturn :biggrin:
I hope those jobless, distressed sinkies start to wake up and do something useful for themselves by voting against the PAP for a better future. Singaporeans future cannot be determined soley by a bunch of useless, opportunists who overpaid themselves obscenely by wearing white. Recession is just a hype and only affect those overpaid people who is undeserved, like the abundant of directorships PAP MPs & cronies were given to sit in various unproductive companies (with many cheap foreigners labours) and can't improve the life of our people.
 

Bad New Brown

Alfrescian
Loyal
I hope those jobless, distressed sinkies start to wake up and do something useful for themselves by voting against the PAP for a better future. Singaporeans future cannot be determined soley by a bunch of useless, opportunists who overpaid themselves obscenely by wearing white. Recession is just a hype and only affect those overpaid people who is undeserved, like the abundant of directorships PAP MPs & cronies were given to sit in various unproductive companies (with many cheap foreigners labours) and can't improve the life of our people.

Bro myfoot123, for the last 10 years I had been reading postings almost the same as the above (yours) but I don't see any improvement yet :whistling:
 
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myfoot123

Alfrescian (Inf)
Asset
Bro myfoot123, for the last 10 years I had been reading postings almost the same as the above (yours) but I don't see any improvement yet :whistling:
My posting is not to gain support from sinkies but to shame them for being inadequate and stupid. I don't have much hope counting on sinkies in the next GE too and so, don't expect any improvement
 

Bad New Brown

Alfrescian
Loyal
My posting is not to gain support from sinkies but to shame them for being inadequate and stupid. I don't have much hope counting on sinkies in the next GE too and so, don't expect any improvement

They will not change at all (being inadequate and stupid). So we can only count on ourselves and that these people really deserved to jobless :rolleyes:
 

Hypocrite-The

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Singapore slashes annual GDP forecast to 0-1% amid ‘strong headwinds’
A container vessel is docked at West Coast container port in Singapore on Jul 18, 2019. (Photo: AFP)Share this content
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SINGAPORE: With “strong headwinds” ranging from an escalating trade war to a downturn in the global electronics cycle likely to persist for the rest of 2019, Singapore has cut its expected growth for the year to between 0 and 1 per cent.
Annual gross domestic product (GDP) is expected to come in “at around the mid-point of the forecast range”, said the Ministry of Trade and Industry (MTI) on Tuesday (Aug 13). This is sharply lower than the previous estimated range of 1.5 to 2.5 per cent, which was announced in May when MTI slashed the upper end of the growth forecast.
The downgrade in growth estimates for the second consecutive quarter came as official data confirmed the economy as growing at its slowest pace in a decade during the second quarter.
GDP growth was at a tepid 0.1 per cent on a year-on-year basis during the April to June period, in line with the Government’s initial estimate and slowing from the previous quarter’s 1.1 per cent.
For the second quarter, manufacturing was the main drag, with output declines in the electronics, transport engineering and precision engineering clusters resulting in a year-on-year contraction of 3.1 per cent. This was a much steeper decline than the 0.3 per cent contraction seen in the first quarter.
The services producing industries logged growth of 1.1 per cent in the second quarter, compared with 1.2 per cent in the previous three months, as sectors like finance and insurance, and information and communications provided support.
The construction sector continued its recovery with growth of 2.9 per cent year-on-year, a slight increase from 2.8 per cent in the first quarter. Output remained supported by public sector construction works, said MTI.
On a quarter-on-quarter seasonally-adjusted annualised basis, the economy shrank by 3.3 per cent – a sliver away from the expected 3.4 per cent contraction, but a reversal from the previous quarter’s 3.8 per cent growth.
This will likely add on to already existing concerns about a looming technical recession, which is defined as two straight quarters of quarter-on-quarter contraction.
READ: As Singapore relooks 2019 projections, economists warn of possible technical recession
Amid plunging exports, the Government also slashed its full-year forecast for non-oil domestic exports (NODX) to between -9 to -8 per cent for 2019, down sharply from the previous range of -2 to 0 per cent.
Data from Enterprise Singapore also released on Tuesday morning showed NODX fell by 14.6 per cent in the second quarter, worsening from the 6.4 per cent decrease in the previous quarter.
INCREASING DOWNSIDE RISKS
MTI, in its press release, said there has been a further weakening in the global growth outlook over the last three months.
The growth prospects of key emerging markets and developing economies in particular, such as the ASEAN-5 and China, have worsened partly due to the escalation in the US-China trade conflict.
The trade spat has also exacerbated an ongoing downturn in the global electronics cycle, which has now entered a "sharper-than-expected downswing" and will pose a greater drag on economies with sizeable electronics and related sectors, MTI said.
At the same time, uncertainties and downside risks in the global economy have increased.
These include a further escalation in the US-China trade conflict after the US recently announced possible tariffs on an additional US$300 billion of imports from China, a steeper-than-expected slowdown of the Chinese economy, the heightened risk of a "no-deal” Brexit, as well as uncertainties in Hong Kong and an emerging trade dispute between Japan and South Korea.
Asked about impact from the months-long political instability in Hong Kong, MTI permanent secretary Gabriel Lim told reporters during a briefing: "There is some impact but I would not say it’s very large in terms of immediate impact."
Mr Lim added that the Government continues to look at developments in Hong Kong “very carefully”, and reiterated Home Affairs and Law Minister K Shanmugam’s comments over the weekend that instability in Hong Kong "is not good for Singapore or the region in the long term”.
READ: Will China allow a different system in Hong Kong? Wishful thinking, says Singapore's Shanmugam
ON LABOUR MARKET, MONETARY POLICY
Against this challenging external macroeconomic environment and the deepening downturn in the global electronics cycle, MTI said the Singapore economy “is likely to continue to face strong headwinds for the rest of the year”.
It singled out manufacturing’s electronics and precision engineering clusters as the ones that will remain weak, due to the sharp decline in global semiconductor demand.
The downturn in these clusters will also affect the wholesale trade segment, while the chemicals cluster is likely to soften given weakening import demand from China.
Slowing global trade volumes could also weigh on other trade-related services sectors, like transportation and storage, MTI said.
Asked if the Government could step in to support sectors that have been negatively impacted, Mr Lim said while authorities are on standby, it has to look at the situation carefully so as to “make the right diagnosis” of the issue at hand, while continuing to focus on the longer-term economic transformation.
Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong, while commenting on Singapore’s growth slowdown in his National Day message last week, had said the Government will do so “should it become necessary to stimulate the economy”.
 

Hypocrite-The

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MAS says ‘not considering’ off-cycle monetary policy review
A general view shows the Monetary Authority of Singapore (MAS) building in Singapore on April 14, 2016. (Photo: AFP/ROSLAN RAHMAN)Share this content
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SINGAPORE: The Monetary Authority of Singapore (MAS) said on Tuesday (Aug 13) that it is “not considering” holding an off-cycle policy meeting, even as growth in the Singapore economy slowed to a decade-low amid an escalating trade conflict.
The comments from its deputy managing director Edward Robinson were made during a press briefing held at the Ministry of Trade and Industry (MTI) for the release of Singapore’s second-quarter growth data.
Official data released on Tuesday morning showed the Singapore economy at near standstill with just 0.1 per cent year-on-year growth during the second quarter, prompting the Government to cut its annual growth projection to between 0 and 1 per cent.
This marks the second straight quarter in which the MTI has downgraded its growth forecasts, and it cautioned of “strong headwinds” for the rest of the year.
READ: Singapore slashes annual GDP forecast to 0-1% amid ‘strong headwinds’
Amid the rapid slowdown in growth, economists have raised their bets of an easing by the Singapore central bank, with some mooting the possibility of an inter-meeting move before the scheduled policy review in October.
Monetary easing will weaken the Singapore dollar and provide some help for plunging exports.
When asked if monetary policy remains appropriate, Mr Robinson said: “MAS’s monetary stance is unchanged … MAS is not considering an off-cycle policy meeting.”
He added: "We will be carefully monitoring developments and will take them into account in our assessment of the inflation and growth outlook for Singapore economy at our next scheduled monetary policy review in the middle of October."
 

Hypocrite-The

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Singapore's exports fall 14.6% in Q2
Container cranes are pictured at the port of Singapore. (File photo: Reuters/Feline Lim)
13 Aug 2019 08:01AM
(Updated: 13 Aug 2019 08:20AM)
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SINGAPORE: Singapore's non-oil domestic exports (NODX) fell by 14.6 per cent in the second quarter of this year, as both shipments of electronic and non-electronic exports declined.
According to the latest figures by the trade agency Enterprise Singapore on Tuesday (Aug 13), this follows the 6.4 per cent decrease in the previous quarter.
READ: No quick turnaround in Singapore's exports, more downside risks in 2019 growth: Economists
Domestic exports for electronic products fell by 26.9 per cent on a year-on-year basis following the 17.2 per cent drop in the previous quarter. Exports for Integrated Circuits (ICs), disk media products and PCs contributed the most to the decrease in electronic NODX.
For non-electronic products, domestic exports fell by 10.5 per cent in the second quarter following a 2.6 per cent decrease in the previous quarter. The largest contributors to the drop in non-electronic NODX were civil engineering equipment parts (-80.9 per cent), non-monetary gold (-32 per cent) and petrochemicals (-15 per cent).
NODX to top markets, except the US, declined in the second quarter of this year, said Enterprise Singapore. The biggest contributors to the NODX decline were China, the European Union and Japan.
"NODX performed weaker-than-expected in Q2 2019 amid the global electronics downcycle, as well as generally sluggish global final demand and trade conditions," said Enterprise Singapore.
It added that global economic and trade growth is expected to further moderate in the year from the expansion in the last two years.
Enterprise Singapore cited the cut on global economic growth forecasts for 2019 by the International Monetary Fund to 3.2 per cent from the previous 3.3 per cent estimate, amid weaker-than-expected industrial production, sluggish trade and weak prospects in part reflecting trade tensions.
Meanwhile, the growth outlook for key trade partners such as China, ASEAN-5, Japan and other advanced economies were adjusted downwards.
The 2019 growth projection for total trade is revised downwards to -3 per cent to -2 per cent for total trade, while NODX is adjusted to -9 per cent to -8 per cent.
Source: CNA/ad
 

tanwahtiu

Alfrescian
Loyal
Save electricity bills and water... send MILF to hand wash clothes in langkang or Seletar reservoir...

Real women do this...

 

Hypocrite-The

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After another cut in Singapore’s GDP forecast, what could happen next? Experts weigh in
Singapore ranked 149 in an Oxfam index of 157 countries based on efforts to tackle the gap between the rich and poor. (File photo: Reuters)Share this content
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SINGAPORE: After policymakers slashed growth projections for the second time this year, Singapore is now anticipating its slowest full-year growth in a decade.
The Ministry of Trade and Industry (MTI) on Tuesday (Aug 13) said the economy will likely grow at between 0 and 1 per cent for 2019, with gross domestic product (GDP) falling in the middle of that range.
This downgrade comes just three months after the forecast range was narrowed to 1.5 to 2.5 per cent in May.
According to Bloomberg data, the last time Singapore’s full-year growth went below 1 per cent was in 2009.
Economists said the sharp downgrade on Tuesday is hardly a surprise, given the weaker-than-expected growth in the first half of the year and an increasingly challenging external environment.
READ: Singapore's exports fall 14.6% in Q2
Top on the risk-list is the protracted trade spat between United States and China, with tensions heating up yet again last month after the former announced tariffs on another US$300 billion of Chinese imports.
“The escalation in US-China trade tensions means Singapore’s exports are likely to remain weak for some time,” said ANZ’s head of Asia research Khoon Goh.
Private investment is set to contract further as firms put off capital expenditures, while households will curb spending, added Mr Goh who now expects 0.4 per cent growth for the Singapore economy in 2019.
Other downside risks include a slowing China economy and Brexit, though new uncertainties have emerged such as the trade dispute between Japan and South Korea and political unrest in Hong Kong, noted economists.
“We see (second-half) growth remaining soft at 0.3 per cent year-on-year, which is only half the pace of (first half’s) growth amid the macro headwinds,” said OCBC’s head of treasury and strategy Selena Ling.
TECHNICAL RECESSION COMING?
Economists diverged, however, on whether a technical recession is around the corner.
A technical recession is defined as two straight quarters of quarter-on-quarter contraction. Tuesday’s second-quarter data showed the economy shrank by 3.3 per cent on a seasonally adjusted and annualised quarter-on-quarter basis.
Among the earliest to sound the risks of a technical recession, Maybank Kim Eng economists Chua Hak Bin and Lee Ju Ye are expecting another quarter-on-quarter contraction in the third quarter.
Referring to MTI’s latest downgrade as a “pessimistic but realistic forecast which factors in a recession outcome”, they wrote: “We are penciling in a technical recession in third quarter given the escalating US-China trade war, compounded by the Japan-Korea trade spat and Hong Kong crisis.”
READ: As Singapore relooks 2019 projections, economists warn of possible technical recession
Economists from DBS, UOB and Standard Chartered think otherwise.
Explaining why the economy could avert a technical recession, DBS senior economist Irvin Seah said: “Beside the expectation of a technical payback, importers could potentially front-load their orders ahead of the next round of tariffs. This could see some marginal bounce back in export sales.”
However, Mr Seah noted that the debate on whether Singapore will dip into a technical recession is “entirely meaningless”.
Even with a positive sequential growth in the third quarter, it will not be enough to offset the sharp drop in the previous quarter, judging from the fragile economic conditions, he added.
MAS EASING IN OCTOBER?
During the GDP press briefing on Tuesday, Mr Edward Robinson, the deputy managing director of the Monetary Authority of Singapore (MAS), dispelledrecent market speculation that the central bank could make a move outside of its usual policy cycle.
READ: MAS says "not considering" off-cycle monetary policy review
But the stage is set for MAS to loosen policy at its next scheduled meeting in October, market watchers said.
Mr Edward Lee, chief economist for ASEAN and South Asia at Standard Chartered Bank, cited how core inflation has come in lower than expected in recent months, though it is still expected to stay within the central bank’s forecast range of 1 per cent to 2 per cent.
Echoing that, Barclays economist Brian Tan wrote in a note: “We think the economic outlook will likely be darker by October than the MAS had envisioned in April, which should also portend weaker inflation pressures. Labour market conditions appear to have softened further in the second quarter.”
He added: “With first-half GDP growth likely falling well short of the authorities’ expectations, the economic outlook darkening and the output gap set to slide into negative territory, we continue to expect the MAS to reduce the slope of its official SGD NEER (Singapore dollar's nominal effective exchange rate) policy band by 50 basis points to an estimated 0.5 per cent in October.”
Instead of setting interest rates, the MAS operates a managed float regime for the Sing dollar, allowing the exchange rate to fluctuate within an unspecified policy band. It changes the slope, width and centre of that band when it wants to adjust the pace of appreciation or depreciation of the local currency.
To be sure, economists are not ruling out the possibility of more aggressive easing if data for the consecutive months turn out to be worse than expected.
“Should the growth and inflation outlook weaken by more than expected in the lead-up to the October meeting, then a shift to neutral will be increasingly likely,” said ANZ’s Mr Goh, who also has a 50-basis-point easing as his “central case”.
 

Ang4MohTrump

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Loyal
NOT A RECOVERABLE RECESSION THIS TIME.

IT IS A GLOBAL FATALITY FOR SO CALLED ECONOMY DUE TO LIMITATION OF GLOBAL RESOURCES.

THERE IS NO RECOVERY FROM THIS. Unlike all other times & examples.

MUST DIE!
 

Bad New Brown

Alfrescian
Loyal
NOT A RECOVERABLE RECESSION THIS TIME.

IT IS A GLOBAL FATALITY FOR SO CALLED ECONOMY DUE TO LIMITATION OF GLOBAL RESOURCES.

THERE IS NO RECOVERY FROM THIS. Unlike all other times & examples.

MUST DIE!

If one has a cash savings of his/her 10 years salary then the likely chance is he/she won't die :laugh:
 
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