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PAP wants sinkees to become hawkers

winnipegjets

Alfrescian (Inf)
Asset
Too many graduates
INSIGHT: DOWN SOUTH
By SEAH CHIANG NEE

Singapore leaders start to talk about the importance of having multiple skills rather than just obtaining a degree.

A NUMBER of political leaders have appealed to Singaporeans not to place too much faith on university degrees in an apparent effort to manage public expectations.

This is the clearest sign yet that the authorities are expecting a sustained period of relatively low economic growth and slower employment opportunities.

Singaporeans, especially parents, who have long regarded the university degree as a key to a good life will likely be shocked.

For decades, the government has been en*couraging youths to study hard or lose out in a competitive world. This apparently spells a change in education strategy.

It has also thrown more light on a baffling revelation made earlier by a senior Education Ministry official to American diplomats.

This revelation was that the global economy embraced by Singapore has made it much less conducive for over-educated societies.


Having a large number of graduates, once thought crucial for Singapore’s prosperity, is now considered not conducive to the changing manpower market, at least in Singapore.

However, none of the political leaders – the Prime Minister and three ministers – has mentioned another reason for the excess of graduates – the mass intake of foreigners.

Led by Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong and National Development Minister Khaw Boon Wan, the leaders are now advising Singaporeans to consider non-university routes to success.

Khaw said: “You own a degree, but so what? You can’t eat it. If that cannot give you a good life, a good job, it is meaningless.”

He added that Singapore could not have an entire nation of graduates.

“Can you have a whole country where 100% are graduates? I am not so sure. What you do not want is to create huge graduate unemployment,” he said.

Then it was the turn of Education Minister Heng Swee Keat, who said that a good qualification alone does not guarantee a career, let alone a job.

Thirdly, Acting Minister for Social and Fa*mily De*ve*l*opment Chan Chun Sing said it is not the degree or diploma that is most important for graduates, but the ability to learn a different set of skills.

“The soft skills in life have to be acquired and have to be continuously refreshed. If not, even with the best degree from the best universities in the world, we may find ourselves obsolete one day.”

They were taking the cue from Prime Minister Lee who had earlier told polytechnic students that getting a degree is not the only option. He encouraged them to work for a few years or start their own business.

“You will gain experience and understand yourself better and then be better able to decide what the next step will be,” he said at Ngee Ann Polytechnic’s 50th anniversary celebration.

All these political leaders have served to clarify a comment made by a senior education ministry official that the government does not encourage more Singaporeans to get higher education.

As revealed by Wikileaks last year, assistant director of planning Cheryl Chan told the United States diplomats that it would instead cap graduate enrolment rate at 20%.

The reason, she said, was: “The labour market does not require too many graduates.”

She also admitted that only 23% of Singaporean students who entered primary school would ever complete a four-year tertiary education, a figure far below that of the United States (50%) and Taiwan.

This gave confusing signals to a worried population, which probably ranks as one of the most enthusiastic in Asia about getting a degree for their children.

Many continue to make great personal sacrifices to help their children and are unlikely to abandon this just because of what the government says. The new emphasis is for multiple skills and drive.

So far, the government has not reduced the places in university but has instead increased them. The number of universities were raised to five with a total enrolment of about 13,250 students, with about a third being foreign students. Cutting down tertiary education is obviously not in the cards – but “discouragement” is now taking place.

The ruling party is dependent on the scholarship system to recruit its future leaders, and it is still bent on attracting bright foreign students to its shores.

In addition, nearly 18,000 Singaporeans are studying in foreign institutions, mostly in Australia, the United States and the United Kingdom. According to local media reports, the market is unable to absorb the large number of graduates coming onstream.

One report quoted a McKinsey & Co study as saying that almost half of the graduates are holding jobs that do not require a degree.

The over-supply is having a dampening effect on graduates’ salaries (again no mention of the foreign arrivals), it added.

In the past 10 years, undergraduate numbers have doubled.

The effort to get Singaporeans to abandon the paper chase for their children is almost like mission impossible. Many have begun to spend thousands of dollars a month on private tuition for their kids starting as young as seven years old.

What is the new drive aimed at? One possibility is that it is trying to reduce the number of below average students from joining the paper chase but still encouraging the bright ones to carry on.

Economically, Singapore has barely escaped another technical recession. A revised first quarter GDP shows a rise of 1.8%. Gone are the days of double-digit growth, probably never to return.

So what work can non-graduates do? One suggestion from Prime Minister Lee is: “Become hawkers.”

Singapore plans to build 10 large hawker centres. It’s a chance to develop entrepreneurial skills in a business no Singaporean customer can avoid for long – if the products are good.
 

winnipegjets

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The PAP is clueless ...while other countries are encouraging more educated citizens, sinkapore wants locals to be hawkers while letting educated foreigners to lord over us.

The PAP serves foreigners while we pay the bills.
 

iAgent

Alfrescian
Loyal
Ok tomorrow I go interview, must bring my degree cert?:oIo:
 
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escher

Alfrescian (Inf)
Asset
The PAP is clueless ...while other countries are encouraging more educated citizens, sinkapore wants locals to be hawkers while letting educated foreigners to lord over us.

The PAP serves foreigners while we pay the bills.

Sinkies all already got head start in hawking.

For years sinkies already hawker assistants.
By that fucking self serve Sinkies wait at hawker for food and deliver food to table.

Difference when foreign trash comes along, sinkies as hawkers must serve them as well.


PTUI on PAP bastards
 

pyshock

Alfrescian
Loyal
Kee kiu can set example by getting his kid to sell fried carrot cake. Guaranteed patronage
from the MIW.
 

halsey02

Alfrescian (Inf)
Asset
No need, just bring your wok and spatula..........

No just, Environment Engineer Certificate aka road sweeper, F&B specialist aka Hawker's license, both from NEA plus a course on food & cleaning hygiene cert by HSA, will do, no need your poly diploma, university of_____ degree..
 

Crane

Alfrescian
Loyal
The PAP has no ideas and no clues of how to bring the economy to greater heights other than to increase the population. Singapore is going downhill from here on ......
 

scbccb

Alfrescian
Loyal
Interesting. Almost an entire maid-raised generation turned hawkers? What do you think?
bth_Smiley28-1.gif
 

scroobal

Alfrescian
Loyal
In the old days, the girls in the family were not encouraged to attend school and in some cases taken out of school because someone had to cook, clean the house etc. This mentality is no different to what Khaw is saying. Instead of increasing productivity and automating process, we are still stuck in labour intensive pursuits addicted to cheap foreign labour.

Every parent would like to see every kid in their family reach the full potential. No sane person unless uneducated grassroots sycophant is going to follow an agenda that is politically expedient for the elite who now need local to fix their pipes, install aircon and wash cars now that it is expensive to bring in foreign labour. Lets face it Chicken Rice cooked by a Filipino or Bangladeshi is not exactly fits the desired picture or is it?

Singapore is limited in many ways. If you really care about your family and that of your friends and relatives, make sure they treat the world rather than a Singapore as the place to play. Really admire parents who sell down their house to finance their kids future.
 

laksaboy

Alfrescian (Inf)
Asset
In the old days, the girls in the family were not encouraged to attend school and in some cases taken out of school because someone had to cook, clean the house etc.

Oooh, that's sexist. AWARE will crucify you for that you evil patriarch pig! :biggrin: :wink:
 

scbccb

Alfrescian
Loyal
But they always go other countries tell other people what to do. What do you think?
girl-smiley-shrug-gigi.gif


The PAP has no ideas and no clues of how to bring the economy to greater heights other than to increase the population. Singapore is going downhill from here on ......
 

jw5

Moderator
Moderator
Loyal
But they always go other countries tell other people what to do. What do you think?
girl-smiley-shrug-gigi.gif

Another thing is that they are always sooooooooo concerned what their counterparts in the "first world countries" think about them.
On the one hand, they like to act as all-knowing big shots in the little island to the locals, on the other, they tell their foreign counterparts what to do but at the same time, are deferent to them and always seem to be asking them this question "What do you think?"
 

zhihau

Super Moderator
SuperMod
Asset
Lets face it Chicken Rice cooked by a Filipino or Bangladeshi is not exactly fits the desired picture or is it?

just had an epiphany which struck me so deeply. think me know why Ang Mos think Singapore is a part of China. those Ang Mo tourists order their food and get served by PRC Chinese all the time and to the Ang Mos we Asians look alike... damn...
 

scbccb

Alfrescian
Loyal
Time to abandon ship. There's no in between anymore. Either you're rich or nothing. What do you think?
780920wevc3spomh.gif


Another thing is that they are always sooooooooo concerned what their counterparts in the "first world countries" think about them.
On the one hand, they like to act as all-knowing big shots in the little island to the locals, on the other, they tell their foreign counterparts what to do but at the same time, are deferent to them and always seem to be asking them this question "What do you think?"
 
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