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Ass Loon: FTrash Floodgate to be WIDE OPENED! Be Warned! *hee*hee*

makapaaa

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<TABLE border=0 cellSpacing=0 cellPadding=0 width=452><TBODY><TR><TD vAlign=top width=452 colSpan=2>Published July 15, 2010
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</TD></TR><TR><TD vAlign=top width=452 colSpan=2>Foreign worker inflow to top 100k this year
PM Lee says economy will overheat if more foreign workers not let in

By CHUANG PECK MING
IN HOUSTON, TEXAS, USA

WITH record economic growth likely for Singapore this year, Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong sees the inflow of at least another 100,000 foreign workers into the country.

<TABLE class=picBoxL cellSpacing=2 width=100 align=left><TBODY><TR><TD></TD></TR><TR class=caption><TD>In upbeat mood: PM Lee with Mr S Iswaran, Senior Minister of State for Trade and Industry, at Tuesday's media briefing in Houston. He says Singapore must make the most of its good fortunes now to restructure the economy, upgrade workers' skills and improve overall productivity </TD></TR></TBODY></TABLE>And this despite the government's efforts to manage the flow with finer calibrations of the foreign worker levy, he told Singapore reporters at the end of a working trip to the United States.
'Even with that, I imagine there will be more than 100,000 extra foreign workers this year,' Mr Lee said. 'I can't see it otherwise, but we have to accept it.'
He said it can't be helped because the labour market is already very tight - and without letting in more foreign workers, the economy will overheat.
While Singapore should be happy about its sterling economic performance this year, Mr Lee said it must also guard against the expectations that it can continue to repeat the performance effortlessly year after year.
<TABLE border=0 cellSpacing=0 cellPadding=5 align=left><TBODY><TR><TD bgColor=#ffffff>[FONT=Geneva, Helvetica, Verdana, Arial, sans-serif]<!-- REPLACE EVERYTHING IN CAPITALS WITH YOUR OWN VALUES --><TABLE class=quoteBox border=0 cellSpacing=0 cellPadding=0 width=144 align=left><TBODY><TR><TD vAlign=bottom>
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</TD></TR><TR><TD bgColor=#fffff1><TABLE border=0 cellSpacing=0 cellPadding=0 width=124 align=center><TBODY><TR><TD vAlign=top>'I don't see the labour market slackening this year. We are very tight and we need more workers. So it's right we have withdrawn the stimulus.'
</TD></TR><TR><TD vAlign=top>
- PM Lee​
</TD></TR><TR><TD vAlign=top>
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</TD></TR></TBODY></TABLE>
</TD></TR></TBODY></TABLE>Instead, he said Singapore must make the most of its good fortunes now to restructure the economy, upgrade workers' skills and improve overall productivity.
'Unless we make these structured changes, we will not be able to sustain growth,' Mr Lee said.
And he doesn't mean yearly growth of 9-10 per cent, but 3-5 per cent. '(If we achieve that), we will be doing well,' Mr Lee said.
He said the high economic growth attained so far this year partly reflected a rebound from last year's downturn. It's also partly due to new projects that have come on stream - in particular the two integrated resorts that have made a big difference in boosting tourism.
Mr Lee sees the sharp spike in pharmaceutical outputs, which have also made a big contribution to economic growth this year, to peter out in the coming months.
Government stimulus, especially the Jobs Credit Scheme, which has just expired, were not much help this year, because the economy is already in full employment, according to him.
'I don't see the labour market slackening this year,' Mr Lee said. 'We are very tight and we need more workers. So it's right we have withdrawn the stimulus.'
Singapore's economic growth beyond 'the immediate rebound' will depend more on the region - especially the growth in China and India - the global economy and how far and fast Singapore has moved in economic restructuring, he predicted.
Mr Lee said the government, which has taken steps to cool the heated property market recently, would continue to keep an eye on it. And it would introduce more measures if necessary.
When asked, Mr Lee also said he has not decided when to call for the next general election which is due in 2012. 'It's too early to say,' he said.
Mr Lee and his delegation are due back today.
<SCRIPT language=javascript> <!-- // Check for Mac. var strAgent; var blnMac; strAgent = navigator.userAgent; strAgent.indexOf('Mac') > 0 ? blnMac = true:blnMac = false; if (blnMac == true) { document.write('
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Singapore's economic growth beyond 'the immediate rebound' will depend more on the region - especially the growth in China and India - the global economy and how far and fast Singapore has moved in economic restructuring, he predicted.

=> If this is just a rebound, why the hurry for 100k EXTRA FTrash? Any more doubt that the Familee FTrash is desperate to add in new supporters before the cummin GE at the end of this year? And these SELL COUNTRY THIEVES time their 40% public transport fare hike to coincide with this influx to exact maximum $$$ mileage for Whore Jinx's Gambling Fund.
 
If economy so booming why are there so many stressed out and unhappy people

The picture is not complete

Something is very wrong
 
Yet another piece of evidence pointing to the political purpose of the 100k New Shityzens that Ass Loon son is importing!


<TABLE border=0 cellSpacing=0 cellPadding=0 width=452><TBODY><TR vAlign=top><TD>Singapore
</TD></TR><TR><TD vAlign=top width=452 colSpan=2>Published July 15, 2010
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</TD></TR><TR><TD vAlign=top width=452 colSpan=2>Hiring in Asia may slow in H2: report

HIRING in Asia may slow in the second half of this year as markets stabilise and companies take stock of recruitment activity vis-a-vis profitability and growth plans, Robert Walters Singapore says in its half-yearly financial services sector market update.

'We believe there will be a slight technical breather in the second half of the year for the front office teams within financial services, as companies take stock of revenue versus budget position,' said Neil Dyball of Robert Walters' financial services division. 'However, we still believe there will be opportunistic hiring of fee earners should they be considered 'rain makers' and therefore able to bring new revenue streams on board.'
Traditionally, hiring in Singapore slows down in the fourth quarter based on impending bonuses, which reduce the willingness to job hop, he noted. 'However, we expect this year to be an exception for mid- to senior-level appointments as companies once again look offshore for talent.'
Robert Walters' report also says Hong Kong is closing on Singapore when it comes to being a wealth management hub. It says banks there are recruiting priority bankers again after relative inactivity for most of 2008 and 2009. But this could be a good thing for Singapore's wealth management sector, said Robert Walters financial services division consultant Avinash Chugani. 'With Hong Kong catching up, Singapore is sure to thrive on this opportunity to lure away the better and more experienced talent from Hong Kong when the new generation of bankers arrive.'
</TD></TR></TBODY></TABLE>
 
the floodgate has opened.
itz amazing by the govt action.

the unstable world economy has force the companies to tighten their pockets.
so when employing ppl their salay budget will become smaller.
Also, standard of living in sg increase rapidly and the ppl have a hard time
catching up.

yet the govt allow more FT to flood in for the companies to employ them?
wat sg ppl gonna do? suck thumb?
dunno why is there anyting wrong asking slighty more to sustain the high cost?

:oIo::oIo:
 
If economy so booming why are there so many stressed out and unhappy people

The picture is not complete

Something is very wrong

I don't think there is really anything wrong, as far as Pinkie is concerned.

He, as well as all the ministers/porlumpas, are concerned, they are ONLY being measured by % increase in GDP. NOTHING ELSE, not even the fate of the citizens.

As long as the increase in GDP exceeds certain %, MIW ALL gets their humongous bonus, if I not wrong, bonus as high as more than a year's salary, without really the need to 'work' unless you consider saying BS excuses and reasons as work.

So, if you are on the line for huge bonus purely on basis of GDP by way of KPI, will you really care about anything else, including the people (which 66.6% voted for them last election, who may well be made up of civil serpents who will be next in line for a windfall, still very well be voting for same MIW), the floods in Orchard Road, the ever increasing costs of living............blah, blah blah?

Doing everything you can to drive up the GDP is the ONLY thing you be thinking about, and bringing in cheap labour is probably the fasterest (grammar according to a resident clown) way to do it before being kicked out of the money-spinning system.

Elect them to serve you ? Ya, only during the days leading to the election day. Opppss, cooling off day, that is. There after, please bend back over again into your normal position for the next 5 years.
 
Wired Invasion

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High-speed 'Science and Education Internet' for India by Aug

PTI, Jul 25, 2010, 06.14pm IST





<!-- google_ad_section_start -->MUMBAI: India will be connected to a very high-speed 'Science and Education Internet' through an international networking by next month, a senior official of the network said.

"The new very high speed linkage will be completed next month which will allow National Knowledge network-connected institutions' high-speed access to global science projects such as International Thermonuclear Experimental Research (ITER), Large Hadron Collider and several small and big projects," director and principal investigator of Global Ring Network for Advanced Applications Development (GLORIAD), Greg Cole said.

The connectivity will permit scientists and educational institutions to have access to shared scientific equipment such as telescopes, electron microscopes and particle accelerators.

It will also bring to local computers important and enormous scientific data repositories spanning everything from human genomics to social science datasets, to astronomy archives to earth landsat imagery and many more.

City-based Tata Institute of fundamental Research (TIFR) is hosting all GLORIAD network equipment in India.

"It is through the partnership with the National Knowledge Network (NKN), TIFR, Tata Communications and the US National Science Foundation, the NKN will be connected to GLORIAD- a special global science and education network ringing the northern hemisphere of the earth through optical fibre and connecting millions of scientists and students for advanced global scientific collaboration-in ways unimagined only a few years ago," Cole said.

He was speaking at the Observer Research Foundation here last night.

"The connectivity with India's NKN is very exciting as it is already linking various science and education institutions across India at Gigabit per second speeds, creating an advanced network for those dedicated to science," he said.

Cole said GLORIAD first connected with Russia in 1997-98 and later with China, Republic of Korea and five Nordic countries in Europe (Denmark, Finland, Iceland, Norway and Sweden) in 2004.

Along with India, GLORIAD will also connect Egypt and Singapore, he said, adding "we are also having discussions to connect to Saudi Arabia."

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