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[Sg] - Celebrity chiobu 987FM CDJ Germaine Tan's Lamborghini 'most expensive car in the Mediacorp carpark’, costs over S$1.1 mil without COE

@True Believer I found this picture of you. U seem to be enjoying yourself.
Papsmearer is blowing a trumpet in his elite unit in the SAF.
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When DJ Germaine Tan described her Lamborghini as an "inconspicuous" car, it sounded too much like humble bragging.
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Spending $1 million on a car in Singapore is very silly.

Even Valencia CF owner Peter Lim won't spend his money like that. (He spent it on a private jet instead.)

Spending $1 million on a car in Singapore to show how rich you are?

In tiny singapore where land is scarce, your lamborghini, your porsche, your ferrari, won't be able to go too far or too fast. Like that also shiok?

The messaging behind this is obviously reverse psychology to normalise the sky high prices of cars in singapore: even xmm can buy $1 million car, surely you ordinary-man-in-the-street can afford to pay $100K COE. $100K COE is normal and is no big deal.

Try speeding in your lamborghini, your porsche, your ferrari, in tiny landscarce singapore and this is how you will end up


*LMAO*

The garhment doesn't care of course. Selling luxury cars is good business. That's what's most important.



 
For a multi-millionaire, spending $1 million on a luxury car is like professionals splashing $300,000 on an executive sedan.
 
It all boils down to affordability since it's extremely difficult to put a price on convenience and comfort.
 
The purpose of this interview is for Vernon A and Justin to help Germaine brag about her Lamborghini Urus.
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In a professional setting like the workplace, using financial need as a primary metric for performance-based rewards is considered a breach of meritocracy. If a boss reduces a bonus because a subordinate already has enough money because he drives a more expensive car than his superior, the boss is moving away from performance equity and toward outcome leveling, which is highly controversial and demotivating for high performers.
 
Driving a more expensive car than the boss is discouraged owing to office politics; specifically to avoid appearing arrogant, causing envy or creating an awkward situation. It is considered poor professional optics, suggesting a subordinate makes more money than his boss, which can trigger insecurities in the senior leadership.
 
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