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CDC vouchers’ continuation will depend on needs of the time: Indranee Rajah [MEANING : After GE2025, YOU SINKIES BETTER WATCH OUT?]

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CDC vouchers’ continuation will depend on needs of the time: Indranee Rajah​

Some 1.3 million Singaporean households will each get $800 in CDC vouchers in financial year 2025.

Some 1.3 million Singaporean households will each get $800 in CDC vouchers in the 2025 financial year.PHOTO: ST FILE
Anjali Raguraman

Anjali Raguraman
UPDATED FEB 21, 2025, 05:42 PM

www.straitstimes.com
SINGAPORE - CDC vouchers have been a mainstay at each Budget since being introduced in June 2020, but this does not mean they will continue to be so in future years.

Asked at The Straits Times’ Feb 19 post-Budget roundtable whether Singaporeans can expect the vouchers to become a permanent part of the annual Budget, Minister in the Prime Minister’s Office Indranee Rajah said the scheme was started to provide targeted assistance.

She recounted how supply and logistics issues drove consumer prices up during the pandemic, while the outbreak of the Russia-Ukraine war in 2022 added to inflationary pressures by further disrupting supply and driving up the price of commodities, including oil.

While the Government tightened monetary policy five times in that period to preserve Singaporeans’ buying power, it saw a need to provide additional assistance.

That was how the CDC Vouchers Scheme was started – to address the “greatest pain point” of food and groceries, without fuelling inflation that a straight cash handout might have, said Ms Indranee.

“You have to look at the genesis of CDC vouchers, which was to provide targeted assistance, and our position has always been that if there’s a need, then we will assist,” she said.

“But if the economy improves and things get better, and the cost of living becomes more manageable, then obviously, there would be less of a need.”

Besides the minister, the other panellists on the post-Budget edition of The Usual Place podcast included Associate Professor Walter Theseira, a labour economist from the Singapore University of Social Sciences; and Mr Musa Fazal, chief policy officer at the Singapore Business Federation.

Earlier in the discussion, Prof Theseira noted that Singaporeans would appreciate the SG60 vouchers that were announced in Budget 2025, which would provide each citizen aged 21 to 59 with $600 in credits and those above 60 getting $200 more.

As with previous CDC vouchers, half the SG60 vouchers can be spent at heartland merchants and hawkers, and half at supermarkets.

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Prof Theseira suggested that future Budgets could see further calibration of the scheme, with a permanent voucher for the most vulnerable Singaporeans.

“As someone who may not need SG60 vouchers that much... perhaps there could be a permanent scheme like that,” he said.

Budget 2025 a Budget for today and the future: Panel Upskilling vital for workers, but relevance and company support are key, say panellists

Do CDC vouchers add to inflation?​

The panel was asked if CDC vouchers were a factor in the rising cost of living, given that some hawkers and suppliers have said they factored the vouchers into their pricing considerations.

ST senior business correspondent Claire Huang also asked if it would be a better approach if the Government tackled the root of the problem by addressing costs, which could be done by getting a major supermarket chain like FairPrice to set the tone on the price of essentials.

Some 1.3 million Singaporean households will each get $800 in CDC vouchers in the 2025 financial year.

Prof Theseira said the reality is that heartland merchants and hawkers have had a difficult time in recent years due to rising ingredient costs and other price pressures, whether or not consumers think inflation is real.

They would have been absorbing cost increases for months while trying to figure out when they could raise their prices, and the CDC vouchers may have been a convenient reason “that sound better to us, so that we don’t get unhappy with them”, he added.

“They have to give the consumer a justification for why the prices are going up, and you can’t blame them if they look for reasons that are going to sound maybe more palatable to us as consumers than ‘well, actually, my costs went up and I have to make a living’.”

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He added that subsidies to keep the prices of essentials low may not be the best use of taxpayer money, given that the richest Singaporeans spend more on everything, including basic items. This could mean a disproportionate amount of subsidy money going to people who do not need the help.

The best way to ensure that prices are as low as possible is to ensure that large supermarket chains are competing with one another vigorously for business and are driven to make their supply chains more efficient, said Prof Theseira.

Ms Indranee noted that use of CDC vouchers was extended to supermarkets in 2023 due to public feedback. The number of supermarkets, heartland merchants and hawkers that accept the vouchers has also increased with time, giving consumers greater choice in where they can be spent.

“Basically, you want to give people choice,” she said.

S’pore has to secure long-term economic growth while dealing with labour force issues: PanelBudget 2025 offers welcome relief but we need to address long-term insecurities

Raising incomes, helping small businesses​

While CDC vouchers help in the short term, and Singaporeans expect the Government to intervene when inflation outruns wage growth, the key to tackling cost-of-living concerns is ensuring that people have good jobs, said Prof Theseira.

Ms Indranee agreed, saying: “The key strategy actually is not more CDC vouchers... it is how can we raise incomes.”

That was why a large chunk of the money in Budget 2025 was channelled towards boosting the economy to grow opportunities and jobs, while another went towards initiatives to help people upskill and pivot to new opportunities.

With real value-add and productivity growth, Singaporeans can command higher incomes, “which would hopefully in time make less of a need to have CDC vouchers”, she said.

SBF’s Mr Musa said CDC vouchers have a role to play in the transformation journey of heartland enterprises, a group that has lagged in productivity growth and needs additional support.

While these businesses want to become more productive, they are facing rising costs, which include paying their workers a decent wage.

“So we do need to find some way to support some of these enterprises to be able to tide through this difficult period of making a transformation, and I think the CDC vouchers do help,” he said.

  • Anjali Raguraman is a correspondent at The Straits Times. She covers politics, as well as consumer stories spanning tourism, retail and F&B.
 
They have been using these digital vouchers to train the sheeple to these digital transformation. Do you think it will end?
 
There are many things that ordinary people cannot control & if you want a change you can vote for the oppositions :smile:

For the supermarket vouchers .. the best thing is buy rice & keep aplenty next is household consumables :sneaky:
 
Hike is not due totally on economy ,maybe temasick lost till pants drop now need monies,lol
 
CDC vouchers’ continuation will depend on needs of the time???

Fuck, we need them all the time. We can't live without them, we're hooked on them. :biggrin:
 

DBS CEO sees job cuts of 4,000 temp staff as AI replaces roles​

Bloomberg
Mon, 24 February 2025 at 5:24 PM SGT2-min read

DBS plans to cut around 4,000 of its contract and temporary staff workforce over the next three years. (Photo: Bloomberg)

DBS plans to cut around 4,000 of its contract and temporary staff workforce over the next three years. (Photo: Bloomberg)
By Chanyaporn Chanjaroen

(Bloomberg) – DBS Group plans to cut around 4,000 of its contract and temporary staff workforce over the next three years as artificial intelligence increasingly takes on roles carried out by human beings.

Southeast Asia’s largest lender has approximately 8,000 to 9,000 of such staff, according to Chief Executive Officer Piyush Gupta, replying to a query from Bloomberg News. He confirmed a Press Trust of India news agency report which said the bank will trim its workforce following further adoption of AI across its business.

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Permanent staff will not be affected, the outgoing CEO said. DBS, based in Singapore, has around 41,000 staff and Tan Su Shan, currently deputy CEO, will succeed Gupta on March 28.

Global banks will cut as many as 200,000 jobs in the next three to five years as artificial intelligence encroaches on tasks currently carried out by human workers, said a Bloomberg Intelligence report last month. Chief information and technology officers surveyed for BI indicated that on average they expect a net 3% of their workforce to be cut, according to the report.

Still, many firms have stressed that the shift will result in roles being changed by technology, rather than replaced altogether. Teresa Heitsenrether, who oversees JPMorgan Chase’s AI efforts, said in November that the bank’s adoption of generative AI was so far augmenting jobs.
 

HSBC plans new round of investment bank job cuts next week​

The latest phase of cuts will start in Asia, but will ultimately affect employees globally

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Published Fri, Feb 14, 2025 · 05:57 PM
HSBC



  • Georges Elhedery (pictured) will take over on Sep 2 from current CEO Noel Quinn.



  • Georges Elhedery is reducing costs with a restructuring that has so far included combining the commercial banking division with its global banking and markets unit and pulling out of some underwriting and advisory businesses in Europe and the Americas. PHOTO: HSBC
  • Georges Elhedery is reducing costs with a restructuring that has so far included combining the commercial banking division with its global banking and markets unit and pulling out of some underwriting and advisory businesses in Europe and the Americas. PHOTO: HSBC
  • Georges Elhedery is reducing costs with a restructuring that has so far included combining the commercial banking division with its global banking and markets unit and pulling out of some underwriting and advisory businesses in Europe and the Americas. PHOTO: HSBC
  • Georges Elhedery is reducing costs with a restructuring that has so far included combining the commercial banking division with its global banking and markets unit and pulling out of some underwriting and advisory businesses in Europe and the Americas. PHOTO: HSBC
  • Georges Elhedery is reducing costs with a restructuring that has so far included combining the commercial banking division with its global banking and markets unit and pulling out of some underwriting and advisory businesses in Europe and the Americas. PHOTO: HSBC

HSBC Holdings is kicking off a fresh round of job cuts at its investment bank as new chief executive officer Georges Elhedery continues his overhaul of Europe’s biggest lender, according to people familiar with the matter.

The latest phase of cuts will start in Asia, but will ultimately affect employees globally, said the people, who asked not to be identified discussing private matters. It’s not clear how many people will be affected by the moves.

Some cuts are already underway in the firm’s markets division but wider layoffs across the investment bank will begin as early as Monday, the people said. The dismissals will be staggered over several weeks and months, one of the people said. Staff will be let go based on performance as well as to remove duplication of jobs or to simplify operations, the person said.
 
tio lah. KNN, I very vulnerable. When the Govt fails to empower me, I will be exploited by Oppositions leh. :biggrin:

I hope the Govt can empower me to go further than Thailand and Taiwan.
u petition for Scoot to accept cdc voucher leh
 
To retard sinkees.For once,do yourself a favour.Vote out the pap in the coming GE 2025.:biggrin:
 
They have been using these digital vouchers to train the sheeple to these digital transformation. Do you think it will end?

The way she talks like the money belongs to her and to give CDC vouchers at her mercy.

The continuation of CDC vouchers depending on the coming election results?
If more opposition parties get into parliament, then more and higher amount of CDC vouchers? We got more because of Sengkang GRC?
So if they win all constituencies, then no more continuation of CDC vouchers?
 
The way she talks like the money belongs to her and to give CDC vouchers at her mercy.

The continuation of CDC vouchers depending on the coming election results?
If more opposition parties get into parliament, then more and higher amount of CDC vouchers? We got more because of Sengkang GRC?
So if they win all constituencies, then no more continuation of CDC vouchers?
That is why must vote Opposition
 
The way she talks like the money belongs to her and to give CDC vouchers at her mercy.

The continuation of CDC vouchers depending on the coming election results?
If more opposition parties get into parliament, then more and higher amount of CDC vouchers? We got more because of Sengkang GRC?
So if they win all constituencies, then no more continuation of CDC vouchers?
Such digital vouchers are very common with many countries. You think this is a PAP’s initiative? Lol

The ultimate goal is to push CBDC and digital currency can comes with an expiry date. They are training the sheeple with these transformation so that when a day comes for them to use CBDC, the sheeple will not have a shock because they are already too used to these kind of arrangements
 
The title itself already a fear-mongering campaign.
Only the silly sheeple can’t smell anything
 
We all paid direct taxes like income tax & property tax .. :rolleyes:

We also paid indirect taxes like GST :cautious:

We had made significant contributions to this country & these vouchers came from our contributions :smile:
 
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