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[h=2]The rich get richer[/h]
September 13th, 2013 |
Author: Contributions
The report by Wealth-X and UBS said that 50 Ultra-High Net
Worth (UHNW) people in Singapore made it to the ranks of the super rich after
property prices kept rising, rising, and rising last year. The Wealth-X mission
statement: Provide our members with intelligence that allows them to acquire new
relationships, expand existing ones, and eliminate compliance hurdles.
UHNW individuals are defined by Wealth-X as having total assets of at least
US$30 million (S$38 million). On average the 1,355 UHNW Singapore residents have
US$180 million in total assets. Together they have a combined wealth of US$160
billion. Singapore has a ratio of billionaires per capita 3 times higher than
that of the United States, with one billionaire for every 200,000 residents.
Of course, not all their money is made from property asset enhancement. The
government has made sure the rich get richer, through measures such as:
Throughout the course of history, the flow of migration has always been
directed towards destinations where there is perceived freedom and prosperity.
Nobel prize-winning economist and champion of laissez-faire economics Milton
Friedman referred to this as “people voting with their feet”. It works both
ways. Singapore is very welcoming and inviting to the über rich, it is also
getting very hostile to those struggling to make ends meet. The tragedy is that
the poor are too tied down by debt servicing to make the relocation with their
feet.
A Mr Tan, 71, who has a postgraduate in mathematics, actually pleaded with
his doctor to end his life and his wife’s two years ago. Even he could not do
the math, caring for his dementia afflicted wife, a son with
obsessive-compulsive disorder and a daughter with schizophrenia, all on the
pathetic financial assistance and food rations from the community development
council. There’s no report on the ultra destitute individuals in
Singapore.
Tattler
*
The writer blogs at http://singaporedesk.blogspot.com.




Worth (UHNW) people in Singapore made it to the ranks of the super rich after
property prices kept rising, rising, and rising last year. The Wealth-X mission
statement: Provide our members with intelligence that allows them to acquire new
relationships, expand existing ones, and eliminate compliance hurdles.
UHNW individuals are defined by Wealth-X as having total assets of at least
US$30 million (S$38 million). On average the 1,355 UHNW Singapore residents have
US$180 million in total assets. Together they have a combined wealth of US$160
billion. Singapore has a ratio of billionaires per capita 3 times higher than
that of the United States, with one billionaire for every 200,000 residents.
Of course, not all their money is made from property asset enhancement. The
government has made sure the rich get richer, through measures such as:
- Gains derived from the sale of a property in Singapore is not taxable as it
is deemed as capital gain; - There is no estate duty payable for deaths on and after 15 Feb 2008;
- Generally, dividends paid on or after 1 Jan 2008 by a Singapore company are
not taxable. Foreign dividends received in Singapore on or after 1 Jan 2004 by
resident individuals are also not taxable; - Goods & Services Tax or GST on Investment Precious Metals was removed by
the Singapore government on 1 October 2012.
Throughout the course of history, the flow of migration has always been
directed towards destinations where there is perceived freedom and prosperity.
Nobel prize-winning economist and champion of laissez-faire economics Milton
Friedman referred to this as “people voting with their feet”. It works both
ways. Singapore is very welcoming and inviting to the über rich, it is also
getting very hostile to those struggling to make ends meet. The tragedy is that
the poor are too tied down by debt servicing to make the relocation with their
feet.
A Mr Tan, 71, who has a postgraduate in mathematics, actually pleaded with
his doctor to end his life and his wife’s two years ago. Even he could not do
the math, caring for his dementia afflicted wife, a son with
obsessive-compulsive disorder and a daughter with schizophrenia, all on the
pathetic financial assistance and food rations from the community development
council. There’s no report on the ultra destitute individuals in
Singapore.
Tattler
*
The writer blogs at http://singaporedesk.blogspot.com.