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pharoah88
    16-Jun-2011 09:28  
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By Channel NewsAsia, Updated: 15/06/2011

George Yeo not running for Elected Presidency



George Yeo not running for Elected Presidency

Mr George Yeo at a recent news conference (photo by Melissa Tan, channelnewsasia.com)



SINGAPORE: Former Foreign Affairs Minister George Yeo has decided he will not run for the Elected Presidency.

In a posting on his

Facebook page

on Wednesday night, Mr Yeo said " after considering all factors, I have come to the conclusion that, in this phase of my life, I can better contribute to the Singapore we all love in other ways. I have therefore decided not to run for the Presidency this August."

Within 30 minutes of his post at 9.51pm, it attracted more than 1,000 " likes" and more than 250 comments from netizens, most of whom supported him and wished him well.

Mr Yeo said over the past few weeks, many Singaporeans have urged him to run for the Presidency.

He said this is a major step which he could not rush into.

He thought long and hard over it, consulting not only colleagues, friends and family members, but also taking in the advice and views which many conveyed to him in person.

Mr Yeo said it is not a decision he took lightly.

He said many will be disappointed with the decision but asked for their understanding.

Mr Yeo said he will continue to work with them " to make Singapore a home rich in memories and full of hope for the future."

He also expressed his deep appreciation to all who believe in him and offered him their kind support.

Meanwhile, former Deputy Prime Minister Tony Tan, who is the executive director of Government Investment Corporation of Singapore, said he " will have more to say on the Elected Presidency when I return to Singapore next week" . Dr Tan is currently abroad.

In response to media queries following Mr Yeo’s decision, Dr Tan added: " I would like to reiterate that the next President’s tenure is likely to see great change nationally and internationally. That is why this election is important."

Former NTUC Income chief Tan Kin Lian said he respects Mr Yeo’s decision not to run for the upcoming presidential election and wishes him all the best for the future.

Mr Tan hopes Mr Yeo will be available to contest in a future election.

Mr Tan said he has high regard for Mr Yeo and believes he has the qualities to make a good President, if elected.

So far, Mr Tan and former PAP backbencher Tan Cheng Bock have announced their intention to stand in the Presidential Election, which is due by August 31.

— CNA/TODAY/ir/de
 
 
MasterNg9999
    16-Jun-2011 00:17  
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hahaha.... so did our median income .... like that how to have money to invest in local market

  all FTs have their own trading platform and will only invest minimal amount here...

  T_T ....... but heng got S-chip to at least get the Chinese national to invest although not alot

  Cheer
 
 
pharoah88
    15-Jun-2011 18:57  
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By Channel NewsAsia, Updated: 15/06/2011

S’pore unemployment rate falls to three—year low



S’pore unemployment rate falls to three—year low

Singapore's Central Business District (CBD)



SINGAPORE: Singapore’s overall unemployment rate fell to a three—year low of 1.9 per cent in March amid healthy economic growth and a tight labour market.

The unemployment rate was 2.2 per cent in December.

The Manpower Ministry (MOM) said fewer workers were laid off in the first three months of the year.

Employment creation was also fairly strong, though MOM said it has eased from the robust gains during the initial rebound from the 2009 recession.

Total employment rose by 28,300 in the first quarter, down from the seasonal high gains of 33,900 in the fourth quarter of 2010, driven by year—end hirings for the festive season.

The growth was also lower than the robust 36,500 in the first quarter of 2010, supported then by hirings arising from the Integrated Resorts and the strong job market rebound from the recession.

Most of the employment gains in the first quarter came from services (26,500).

All services industries expanded their workforce, led by community, social & personal services (9,000), professional services (4,400) and wholesale & retail trade (3,400).

Construction added 1,500 workers, recording an increase for the second consecutive quarter, supported by increase in public sector building activities.

Manufacturing registered small gains of 100.

— CNA/cc




What  are  Professional Services ? ? ? ?
 

 
pharoah88
    15-Jun-2011 18:50  
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By Channel NewsAsia, Updated: 15/06/2011

Thomson Medical Centre charged with breaching license condition

Thomson Medical Centre charged with breaching license condition



Thomson Medical Centre charged with breaching license condition


SINGAPORE: Thomson Medical Centre has been charged with breaching a condition of its Health Ministry license.

The license requires the facility to fully comply with the requirements and regulations of the Private Hospitals and Medical Clinics Act.

These include the directives on assisted reproduction or AR services.

It’s believed the medical centre had failed to comply with a clause which requires the AR Director to ensure suitable practices are used in carrying out assisted reproduction activities.

It had allegedly engaged in non—prescribed practices on January 23 last year.

Based on a court document, Thomson Medical Centre is believed to have processed, at the same time, two semen specimens inside one laminar hood — a working space where procedures are performed in a laboratory.

The centre is said to have failed to discard, after each step of processing, instruments known as disposable pipettes, which are used to hold liquids.

Instead, the centre had allegedly labelled the disposable pipettes and kept them in a rack for use in subsequent processing steps of the specimen from the same patient.

Thomson Medical Centre’s Senior Operations Manager, Helen Tan was present in court Wednesday.

The facility is represented by Senior Counsel Lok Vi Ming and the case will be mentioned again on June 21.

If convicted, the medical centre can be fined up to S$20,000.

The facility made the headlines last year after its unit, Thomson Fertility Centre, wrongly used another man’s sperm to impregnate one of its patients.

The couple, a Singaporean Chinese woman and her Caucasian permanent—resident spouse, have decided to keep the child even though the husband’s sperm was not the one used in the botched in—vitro fertilisation (IVF) procedure.

— CNA/cc
 
 
pharoah88
    15-Jun-2011 18:01  
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Party Pix: Women’s Fashion Week
 
 
pharoah88
    15-Jun-2011 11:39  
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To promote greater accountability ...

Committee recommends slew of changes to corporate governance code

Millet Enriquez

emelita@mediacorp.com.sg

 

SINGAPORE

Also, if the roles of chairman and CEO are filled by the same person, or if they are immediate family members or if the chairman and CEO are both part of the management team, then at least half — up from the current one-third — of the directors should be independent.

To promote greater accountability to shareholders, companies should also put all resolutions to vote by poll and announce detailed results showing the number of votes cast for or against each resolution and the respective percentages.

The Corporate Governance Council, which was set up by the Monetary Authority of Singapore (MAS), is chaired by Singapore Press Holdings CEO Alan Chan.

Among its seven members are SingTel CEO Chua Sock Koong, OCBC CEO David Conner and Securities Investors Association (Singapore) president David Gerald.

First issued in 2001, the code was last revised in 2005.

Compliance with the code is not mandatory but listed companies are required under the Singapore Exchange (SGX) listing rules to disclose their corporate governance practices and give explanations for deviations from the code in their annual reports.




One  CEO  said: " No Governance is BEST Governance !"
— After 18 months of review, the high-powered committee tasked to revise the corporate governance code has suggested a slew of recommendations, which include tightening the criteria for independent directors and requiring firms to disclose the remuneration paid to key management personnel.
 

 
pharoah88
    15-Jun-2011 11:30  
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By Channel NewsAsia, Updated: 14/06/2011

After her 20—year affair, now hubby wants divorce



After her 20—year affair, now hubby wants divorce


SINGAPORE: She was a teacher in his secondary school and he was a 16—year—old student when the alleged affair began.

Two decades later, after teacher and student married separately and had their own families, the husband of the woman is now filing for divorce.

In a Family Court on Tuesday, the man accused his wife of " unreasonable behaviour" and of engaging in an " improper association" that has allegedly continued since 1988.

His court papers stated that his wife, now in her 50s and teaching in an all—girls school, has been carrying on an " inappropriate romantic and intimate relationship" with her former student, now 38.

The divorcing couple cannot be named, as it could lead to the identification of their two adolescent children.

But the claims and counterclaims of the couple were laid bare as the hearing began on Tuesday for a divorce that was filed in August 2009.

According to the court documents, the husband had met his wife when the latter was his private tutor.

The husband, a businessman in his 40s, said he found credit card statements in 1997, seven years into their marriage, showing shopping and dining expenses. He added that his wife later admitted to meeting her former student.

But she allegedly did not cease contact with her former student as promised, even after a year, which was when her husband hit her. She filed a police report.

The couple tried to save their marriage but in 2008, the husband discovered emails between his wife and her former student, which allegedly showed " much flirting and sexual innuendo being tossed back and forth between the two" .

This, after the couple had not been having sex for 10 odd years due to the husband’s impotence, caused by chronic health problems, according to court papers.

In her defence, the wife denied the claims, including the alleged affair. She said she had actively cared for her family and that her husband had constantly placed a tight rein on her.

Represented by lawyer Koh Tien Hua of Harry Elias Partnership, she counterclaimed that she was often scolded and beaten due to her husband’s violent temper and accused him of having an affair, instead, with their former maid.

In subsequent papers filed with the court, she said she had a " purely platonic" relationship with her former student.

The husband, who is represented by lawyer Kevin Lim of Wee Swee Teoh & Co, is denying her claims and is rebutting that his probes were justified due to the ongoing alleged relationship between her and her former student. The man also denied any abuse and said his relationship with their former maid was " entirely platonic" .

The court hearing started after about two hours of closed—door hearings, as the couple could not come to a financial agreement.

The husband later told the court of an email correspondence of an alleged " unofficial school trip" that his wife and her former student made — when the latter was still schooling — where both slept in the same hotel room and " watched each other sleep" .

During cross—examination, the husband also said the alleged ongoing affair had resulted in his wife treating the family poorly.

The court has adjourned the matter to a later date, when witnesses including the wife’s former student and the couple’s children are expected to take the stand. —

TODAY
 
 
pharoah88
    15-Jun-2011 11:23  
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pharoah88
    14-Jun-2011 18:20  
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National Education Day 2011

Indonesia has been commemorating 2 May as its National Education Day since 1908, and every time I would always think about the quality of education in our country.

Around 30 years ago, higher education fees were not so expensive. First class state universities/institutes like University of Indonesia (U.I) and Bandung Institute of Technology (ITB) only charged entrance fees of not more that a few millions of Rupiah, compared today which can be as high as 75-100 Million Rupiah or even more. 

I am not sure whether the quality of education at that time was a lot much lower than it is today, but I know for sure that at that time we were able to sent lecturers, medical doctors and engineers to Malaysia and Middle East countries.

Whereas today we only sent lesser skilled labors to work as house maids, constructions and plantations workers abroad.

So, is the quality of our education today higher that before ?
 
 
pharoah88
    14-Jun-2011 18:16  
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http://www.tivarati.com/news/105748

Singapore Education Day 2011



Bangkok–22 Feb–vivaldipr

Singapore Education will be organising a Singapore Education Day — seminar and exhibition, on 26 February 2011, 1.00pm to 5.00pm, at The Westin Grande Sukhumvit, Ballroom A and B.

At the event, you would gain useful information on Studying and Living in Singapore and the ASEAN Scholarships, and meet representatives from leading institutions to find out about the programmes and courses they offer.

The institutions participating in the event are: ACS (International), AEC College Singapore, BCA Academy, East Asia Institute of Management, James Cook University, PSB Academy, S P Jain Center of Management, and Singapore Institute of Management.

For more information and registration for the event (free-of-charge), please contact Singapore Tourism Board, Tel. 0-2630-4774-6
 

 
pharoah88
    14-Jun-2011 17:50  
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Updated: 14/06/2011

Divorce papers filed against teacher who had alleged affair with student



 

 

At the heart of a divorce case which the Family Court heard today was an alleged affair involving Goh Ken-Yi - grandson of former deputy Prime Minister Goh Keng Swee - and his then school teacher

The school teacher and her husband cannot be named as it could lead to the identification the divorcing couple’s children. 

The wife, 52, was then a teacher in Anglo-Chinese School (Independent). 

In court papers filed, her husband claimed that the relationship started in 1988 - before the couple’s marriage, when Mr Goh was her student. 

Mr Goh, 38, is now working as a banker and married with children. 

The husband also claimed the relationship between his wife and Mr Goh had continued even after his and Mr Goh’s marriage. 

The court heard today that the husband, 44, has filed for divorce in December 2009 on grounds of " unreasonable behaviour" and had engaged in " improper association" with Mr Goh. 

During cross-examination, the husband said that the alleged relationship between his wife and Mr Goh was the main reason for filing for divorce as it has also resulted in his wife treating the family poorly. 

The couple has two sons, age 20 and 17, and the wife is now teaching in an all girls’ school. 

The case has been adjourned. 

-By Ng Jing Yng 
 
 
niuyear
    14-Jun-2011 15:11  
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Size of  Letter Box in singapore -

Is the size right and fix those big junky magainze?

Or,  set new rules -

All big magazine are not permitted or big chunky magazine must be hand delivered?
 
 
niuyear
    14-Jun-2011 13:42  
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Singaporeans  are    generally :

1) shy people but nice  :)    (when they want to give up seat to someone,  they will hesitate becos they pai sei if being rejected.)

2)  want face

3) kia sue (cant blame, cos, highly competitive)

4) look cold, but warm inside.  hahaha!

Laulan      ( Date: 14-Jun-2011 13:34) Posted:

Well said!! Unfortunately, we are still in the traditional behaviour (belief) of being scared to offend people by telling them off, if we perceived their conduct to be inappropriate however nice we might try to be,   owing to the lack of training to communicate effectively without being offensive.

Our society must begin to learn to be cordial, courteous and helpful first.   Once we are a people known to have these qualities, everything becomes easy.   People will be better behaved and all their deeds will automatically be seen as appropriate. There would be less scratching of the groin infront of public or spitting indiscriminately or coughing and sneezing right in front of somebody's face or food. 

The Japanese people are very well mannered though they speak seemingly rough (forceful), but the world respect them for their gesture of humility and upkeeping of honour of the individual.
It is very difficult for Singaporeans already rooted in what they are today, to learn to become different from being docile.   I remembered in my younger days, Singaporeans were very helpful, caring and concerned for their friends, family members and neighbours.   Nowadays they have the who cares attitude. So they don't really know how to speak up for themselves, let alone speak for others.   This is the greatest regret one may have living as Singaporean, to see the majority of fellow friends in such a dire situation. Thought we have many campaigns, such as anti-littering, kindness, courtesy and respecting elders, much of these could be said to be successful. Our society and the government must try to do something to correct this defect, the inability to speak up one's mind.   I think people should be given more training on freedom of speech and freedom to rightfully criticize others without being scared of repurcussions. Then Singaporeans as a whole will be able to speak up for society and against social ills or the systems they live in.


niuyear      ( Date: 14-Jun-2011 13:08) Posted:



" " ......Let us remember the fruits of tomorrow are borne from the seeds of today......"

 

For  today's   American citizens -

They dont have fruits to eat, but ,    are left with only seeds  for them to plant .


 
 
Laulan
    14-Jun-2011 13:34  
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Well said!! Unfortunately, we are still in the traditional behaviour (belief) of being scared to offend people by telling them off, if we perceived their conduct to be inappropriate however nice we might try to be,   owing to the lack of training to communicate effectively without being offensive.

Our society must begin to learn to be cordial, courteous and helpful first.   Once we are a people known to have these qualities, everything becomes easy.   People will be better behaved and all their deeds will automatically be seen as appropriate. There would be less scratching of the groin infront of public or spitting indiscriminately or coughing and sneezing right in front of somebody's face or food. 

The Japanese people are very well mannered though they speak seemingly rough (forceful), but the world respect them for their gesture of humility and upkeeping of honour of the individual.
It is very difficult for Singaporeans already rooted in what they are today, to learn to become different from being docile.   I remembered in my younger days, Singaporeans were very helpful, caring and concerned for their friends, family members and neighbours.   Nowadays they have the who cares attitude. So they don't really know how to speak up for themselves, let alone speak for others.   This is the greatest regret one may have living as Singaporean, to see the majority of fellow friends in such a dire situation. Thought we have many campaigns, such as anti-littering, kindness, courtesy and respecting elders, much of these could be said to be successful. Our society and the government must try to do something to correct this defect, the inability to speak up one's mind.   I think people should be given more training on freedom of speech and freedom to rightfully criticize others without being scared of repurcussions. Then Singaporeans as a whole will be able to speak up for society and against social ills or the systems they live in.


niuyear      ( Date: 14-Jun-2011 13:08) Posted:



" " ......Let us remember the fruits of tomorrow are borne from the seeds of today......"

 

For  today's   American citizens -

They dont have fruits to eat, but ,    are left with only seeds  for them to plant .

pharoah88      ( Date: 14-Jun-2011 11:27) Posted:

Don’t wait for others to speak up

Letter from Laremy Lee

I refer to the letter, “Pole-axed by passengers’ insensitivity on trains” (June 13).

As a society, we need to be honest with ourselves about two aspects of human behaviour: People do not know they are behaving inappropriately until they are told otherwise.

Unfortunately, we have been dependent on everyone except ourselves to do the work of telling people off.

This in itself is inappropriate behaviour and we direly need to undergo a paradigm shift as a society.

Instead of standing by and waiting for someone else to chastise wrong-doers, we need to be bolder .

We need to firmly and politely inform these people what they are doing wrong, and what they can do to correct their behaviour.

Let us remember the fruits of tomorrow are borne from the seeds of today.

If we value graciousness and civic awareness in our society, then we must be a part of the process of inculcating these values in our fellow Singaporeans.



 
 
niuyear
    14-Jun-2011 13:08  
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" " ......Let us remember the fruits of tomorrow are borne from the seeds of today......"

 

For  today's   American citizens -

They dont have fruits to eat, but ,    are left with only seeds  for them to plant .

pharoah88      ( Date: 14-Jun-2011 11:27) Posted:

Don’t wait for others to speak up

Letter from Laremy Lee

I refer to the letter, “Pole-axed by passengers’ insensitivity on trains” (June 13).

As a society, we need to be honest with ourselves about two aspects of human behaviour: People do not know they are behaving inappropriately until they are told otherwise.

Unfortunately, we have been dependent on everyone except ourselves to do the work of telling people off.

This in itself is inappropriate behaviour and we direly need to undergo a paradigm shift as a society.

Instead of standing by and waiting for someone else to chastise wrong-doers, we need to be bolder .

We need to firmly and politely inform these people what they are doing wrong, and what they can do to correct their behaviour.

Let us remember the fruits of tomorrow are borne from the seeds of today.

If we value graciousness and civic awareness in our society, then we must be a part of the process of inculcating these values in our fellow Singaporeans.


 

 
pharoah88
    14-Jun-2011 11:27  
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Don’t wait for others to speak up

Letter from Laremy Lee

I refer to the letter, “Pole-axed by passengers’ insensitivity on trains” (June 13).

As a society, we need to be honest with ourselves about two aspects of human behaviour: People do not know they are behaving inappropriately until they are told otherwise.

Unfortunately, we have been dependent on everyone except ourselves to do the work of telling people off.

This in itself is inappropriate behaviour and we direly need to undergo a paradigm shift as a society.

Instead of standing by and waiting for someone else to chastise wrong-doers, we need to be bolder .

We need to firmly and politely inform these people what they are doing wrong, and what they can do to correct their behaviour.

Let us remember the fruits of tomorrow are borne from the seeds of today.

If we value graciousness and civic awareness in our society, then we must be a part of the process of inculcating these values in our fellow Singaporeans.

 
 
pharoah88
    14-Jun-2011 11:23  
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Your employees, your brand ambassadors

Conventional wisdom holds that companies should see to their shareholders’ needs first, their customers’ second and their employees’ last of all. I have always done the opposite and so has the rest of our team.

 
 
pharoah88
    14-Jun-2011 11:18  
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Easier money not the magic solution

What US policymakers must beware: Unnaturally low interest rates have consequences other than inflation

Raghura m Rajan

Like the World War I generals who reacted to every slaughter of their men by sending even more over the top of their trenches in a vain attempt to overwhelm the enemy, ‘free money’ types react with ‘More!’ if their policy does not seem to be working.


Economic growth in the United States seems to be slowing again. This might reflect temporary factors, like the Japanese tsunami, which disrupted supply chains and caused some factories to suspend operations.

PUSHING PEOPLE TO SPEND

A second view is that households are scared and saving too much — they need to be pushed into consuming by lowering the returns to savings.

It is hard to imagine, though, that with the US household savings rate at about 5 per cent and with households severely indebted, they are saving too much. While it might be nice to get them to spend a little more now and save more later, it is hard to engineer this easily.

After all, the housing bubble was caused, in part, by pushing credit on households so that they would spend the US out of the recession that followed the dotcom bust.

A third channel through which easy money might work is by pushing up the value of assets like stocks, bonds and houses, making people feel wealthier — and thus more likely to spend.

For this channel to be sustainable, though, the wealth gains must be permanent.

Otherwise, what goes up will come down, leaving households even more frightened of financial markets.

Clearly, someone is paying a price for ultra-low interest rates: The patient and uncomplaining saver.

Interestingly, if traditional spenders such as firms and young households are unwilling or unable to take advantage of low interest rates, low rates could even hurt overall spending, because savers like retirees receive lower financial incomes and curtail spending.

This is not a heretical concern.

As with any tax and subsidy, the net effect depends on whether those taxed cut back spending less than those subsidised.

Economists have sensibly advocated that China raise the interest rates that it pays on bank deposits so that Chinese households earn more and consume more.

Some Japanese now wonder whether their ultra-low interest-rate policy could be contractionary.

Equally worrisome are the distortions that easy money creates.

Evidence from the recent crisis suggests that ultra-low rates prompted a wide range of portfolio adjustments, whereby Asian and Middle East central banks and funds ended up holding the safest low-interest securities, while the US and European financial sectors went on a risk-taking binge.

History never repeats itself exactly and those singed by fire learn not to play with matches, but we should be aware that unnaturally low interest rates have consequences other than inflation.

Finally, what about inflation itself?

While wage inflation in the US is contained, global monetary policy is probably excessively loose — one reason that oil prices have taken off. The Fed blames (rightly) foreign central banks that are keeping interest rates too low to prevent their currencies from appreciating against the dollar, but the Fed cannot set policy assuming others respond with a theoretical ideal.

High oil prices now curtailing growth in the US are partly an unintended consequence of current policy.

There are many things that the US needs to do to create sustainable growth, including improving the quality of its work force and infrastructure. Easier money is not one of them.

PROJECT SYNDICATE

Raghuram Rajan is Professor of Finance at the Booth School of Business, University of Chicago, and author of Fault Lines: How Hidden Fractures Still Threaten the World Economy.

Also, high oil prices have taken a toll on disposable income, impeding growth in consumption demand. This has led to a build-up of inventory — and thus to cuts in production.

Recoveries are rarely without blips, especially when they are as weak as this one. But regardless of whether the factors behind the latest slowdown are fleeting or enduring, there will be calls on the US Federal Reserve to do something.

Some Americans view Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke as a modern-day wizard, able to revive the economy through a swish of his monetary wand — first ultralow interest rates, then quantitative easing and perhaps, eventually, money-printing.

If inflation is low, they want the Fed to use every spell it knows to revive the economy.

Like the World War I generals who reacted to every slaughter of their men by sending even more over the top of their trenches in a vain attempt to overwhelm the enemy, “free money” types react with “More!” if their policy does not seem tobe working.

More than any other policy action, monetary policy suffers from the sense that there is a free lunch to be had.

Yet the interest rate is a price for the savings that are transferred to spenders. To the extent that the Fed manages to push this price down (and some economists will dispute its ability to push any meaningful interest rate down), it taxes the producers of savings and subsidises the spenders of savings.

Clearly, no government considers pushing down the price of any real good an effective way to stimulate the economy — any gain to consumers is a loss to producers and the loss typically will outweigh the gain if the market price is a fair one.

So why are savings different?

One view is that corporate investment is held back by labour-market rigidities (wages are stubbornly too high). Moreover, significant societal benefits — for example, more cohesive families and communities — come from investment that creates jobs, so a lower interest rate will give corporations the necessary subsidy to invest.

There is, however, scant evidence that the real problem holding back investment is excessively high wages (many corporations reduced overtime and benefit contributions and even cut wages during the recession).

Moreover, with interest rates for large corporations at their lowest level in decades (negative in real terms for the largest, so that savers are in fact paying corporations to borrow their money), the cost of capital is probably not the main reason why they are not investing more in the US.

A huge subsidy would certainly induce them to reconsider, but should we not ask whether there are more effective ways to fix the problems holding them back?

 
 
pharoah88
    14-Jun-2011 10:55  
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Uncertainty, the silent jobs killer

Thomas L Friedman

Thanks to a credit bubble over the last decade, we created a lot of jobs for people – in construction and retail – who did not have globally competitive skills or post-high school degrees.

Those workers will need retooling.

 




 

you want to understand why the unemployment rate in the United States has been stubbornly lodged at around 9 per cent, a good place to start is with the eye-popping mortgage statistics released last week by the economic analysis firm CoreLogic: 38 per cent of homeowners with second mortgages are underwater.

Indeed, this mortgage mess just feeds the three other big problems undermining United States job growth today:

Weak aggregate demand,

structural impediments and

an epidemic of uncertainty about what he future holds for everything from health care to the rate of taxation to Social Security and Medicare spending to the availability of credit to the general direction of the economy — the sum of which has people holding back and thus undermining the government’s stimulus.

We need to be working on all three at once and urgently.

How?

Others have focused on the aggregate demand problem, so I would like to address some of the structural impediments and uncertainty.

They borrowed against the value of their homes and they now owe more than their houses are worth. The total number of underwater homeowners in America, with first and second mortgages, is a stunning 22.7 per cent. In Nevada alone, 63 per cent of all mortgaged properties are worth less than the owners paid in Arizona 50 per cent, Florida 46 per cent, Michigan 36 per cent and California 31 per cent.

When people are so underwater,

they find it hard to move to take new jobs,

they find it hard to borrow or raise cash for education or start-ups and banks become even more cautious about lending.

Until we as a country figure out how to divvy up these losses on housing, and let these markets clear and move on, they will be a serious drag on employment.

 
 
pharoah88
    14-Jun-2011 10:44  
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Pedestrian fined S$1,500 for causing cyclist’s death

SINGAPORE

Xu Yuanyuan, 19, had failed to keep a proper lookout to her right when stepping onto the road.

The traffic signal was against her. This caused cleaner Lock Wai Chee, 42, who was cycling, to crash into her.

He was thrown off the bicycle and suffered head injuries. Mr Lock died about five hours later.

Xu, a Chinese national, could have been jailed for up to six months and fined up to S$2,500.

Lawyers told MediaCorp that cases of this kind are uncommon.

“It is not often that pedestrians are charged for anything beyond jay walking.

Most likely it is because the repercussion of the pedestrian’s act in this case is so serious,” said Mr Premchand Soman from East Asia Law Corporation.

The lawyer added that the act had led to tragic consequences and the evidence against Xu must have been very clear.



Ong Dai Lin
— A pedestrian was fined S$1,500 yesterday for causing the death of a cyclist along Henderson Road last December.Alvina Soh and

 
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