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Has This Been Covered Up By 154th? How come I never saw this?

londoncabby

Alfrescian
Loyal
Or has this been posted already?

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2009/03/04/AR2009030404221.html

A Global Retreat As Economies Dry Up
As World Trade Plummets, Bustling Ports Stand Idle And Foreign Workers Track Back Home


Thursday, March 5, 2009; Page A01

SINGAPORE This shimmering city-state was the house globalization built. When world trade boomed, Singapore's seaport at the crossroads of East and West became the Chicago O'Hare of freighters and supertankers. Singapore Airlines took off despite serving a country with no domestic air routes. Nearly everything manufactured here is made for export. One out of every three workers is a foreigner.

But as the world enters a period of deglobalization, Singapore is a window into the reversal of the forces that brought unprecedented global mobility to goods, services, investment and labor. With world trade plummeting for the first time since 1982, the long-bustling port has become a maritime parking lot in recent weeks, with rows of idled freighters from Asia, Europe, the United States, South America, Africa and the Middle East stretching for miles along the coast. "We're running out of space to park them," said Ron Widdows, chief executive of Singapore-based NOL, one of the world's largest container lines.

Thousands of foreign workers, including London School of Economics graduates with six-digit salaries and desperately poor Bangladeshi factory workers, are streaming home as the economy here suffers the worst of the recessions in Southeast Asia. Singapore is an epicenter of what analysts call a new flow of reverse migration away from hard-hit, globalized economies, including Dubai and Britain, that were once beacons for foreign labor. Economists from Credit Suisse predict an exodus of 200,000 foreigners -- or one in every 15 workers here -- by the end of 2010.
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Singapore's exports collapsed by a stunning 35 percent in January, mirroring much of the rest of Asia. The export boom here was tied to credit-fueled buying sprees in the United States that stopped abruptly and may take years to return, if ever. Manufacturers are grasping for a Plan B. But none of the options -- mining domestic markets, or trying to tap consumers in still-growing China and India -- offers a truly viable solution. Adding to fears of a years-long depression for exports is a rising tide of trade protectionism in countries including neighboring Indonesia.

The scene in this port city -- along with a glimpse inside two of its reeling neighbors in export-dependent Southeast Asia -- illustrates the ebbing of a golden age of trade, innovation, wealth accumulation and poverty reduction through globalization.

"The collapse of globalization . . . is absolutely possible," said Jeffrey Sachs, a noted American economist. "It happened in the 20th century in the wake of World War I and the Great Depression, and could happen again. Nationalism is rising and our political systems are inward looking, the more so in times of crisis."

A Transformation Stalls

The world remains as interconnected as ever through telecommunications, the arts, culture and the Internet. The Oscars this year saw foreigners capture most of the major awards. But experts say the once-steady advance of economic globalization that changed the lives of millions is facing an at least temporary pullback through financial retrenchment and resurgent economic nationalism. It threatens to set the clock back by years.

World trade has quadrupled since 1982. But some see that exponential growth as just another part of the biggest credit bubble in world history. That bubble is now bursting. In four months, port traffic has fallen by double digits not only in Norfolk, Long Beach, and Savannah, but in Pusan, Hong Kong and Bremerhaven. Air hubs from London to Singapore that saw traffic soar as the world became more linked through business, investment and trade are seeing a sharp reversal of fortune. In January, global airline passenger traffic fell 5.6 percent; air cargo nose-dived 23.2 percent.

As exports crash worldwide, factories from China to Eastern Europe are shuttering. The World Bank estimates the crisis will trap at least 53 million more people in poverty in the developing world this year. Last week alone, $1 billion fled emerging markets -- the largest weekly loss since October, according to Merrill Lynch. Some of the hardest hit are migrants and foreign contract workers. Malaysia is expelling 100,000 Indonesians as part of a new policy to put Malaysian workers first as the recession sparks job losses. In Britain, strikes broke out nationwide to protest the hiring of foreigners at one the country's largest refineries even as thousands of Eastern European immigrants headed home anyway because they could not find work.

Remittances -- the financial lifelines sent home by foreign workers -- are falling from Latin America to Central Asia. The drop has been so sharp in Kyrgyzstan, which relies on remittances for 27 percent of its gross domestic product, that the U.N. World Food Program was asked to rush in emergency food aid in November for the first time since 1992. "This is a new income hit to people who can afford it the least," said Josette Sheeran, the program's executive director.

Juggernauts like China still maintain huge cash reserves. But other nations are sinking. Investors are fleeing South Korea so fast that its short-term debt may surpass dwindling reserves by the end of this year. Multilateral lenders last week announced a $31 billion rescue package for teetering Eastern Europe. But analysts say its credit-starved banks and companies may need as much as eight times that to avoid a domino effect of corporate defaults. The European Union -- once a model of how to all but erase national borders -- faces a severe test of unity over how, or whether, to bail out member states on the verge of collapse.

Western governments, through bailouts and nationalizations, are exerting profound new influence over banks and multinationals that helped sow the seeds of globalization throughout the developing world. But the message being sent by the West now is that there's no place like home for job creation and investment. In France, President Nicolas Sarkozy offered a $5 billion lifeline to French automakers, then promptly called on them to use only French-made parts and relocate their factories in Eastern Europe back to France. In the United States, President Obama's 2010 budget would tighten taxation on U.S. companies with operations overseas, limiting incentives to do business abroad. In Britain, bailed out and nationalized banks are being told to offer loans to Britons first.

contd..
 

Ah Guan

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Loyal
That's what happens when sinkapore trys to be the biomed hub, logistics hub, IT hub, electronics hub, gaming hub, prostitution hub, FT hub, gambling hub etc...

We are spread so thin and specialise in nothing that when spending stops, we get screwed totally.
 

myfoot123

Alfrescian (Inf)
Asset
The only pillar Singapore has is nationalism from Singaporean. Unfortunately, looking at the pace and the treatment Singaporeans are receiving from PAP, we are certainly on the road to death by killing nationalism and depriving Singaporean the jobs to foreigners who will remit all monies earned here to their countries. PAP policies have not worked well and Singapore is now in facing huge problems and billion dollars loss by untalented Ho Jinx. We need alternate parties in Singapore to make things right for a fraction of PAP salaries.
 

funglung

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Loyal
The only pillar Singapore has is nationalism from Singaporean. Unfortunately, looking at the pace and the treatment Singaporeans are receiving from PAP, we are certainly on the road to death by killing nationalism and depriving Singaporean the jobs to foreigners who will remit all monies earned here to their countries. PAP policies have not worked well and Singapore is now in facing huge problems and billion dollars loss by untalented Ho Jinx. We need alternate parties in Singapore to make things right for a fraction of PAP salaries.

Sinkies got no balls
You all dare not stand with those that tried to speak for you.
You all dare not give money to them so that they can work for you.
You all dare not support them publicly so that they can speak for you.

You all turn your backs on those that spoke out bravely against LKY
LKY hit out at those who tried to speak for you with his kangaroo courts
You turn your backs and not support them with money and courage.

You let them be beaten and bankrupted because you all have no balls


Why complain now?

Your 400-500++ billions sucked and bled into LKY Temasick and GIC

And even more billions are currently sucked and bled so that LKY can use those money to bastardised and pay his kangaroo courts and running dogs to bleed even more billions from you in future

You got what you all deserved
for your lack of balls


FIND YOUR BALLS TO PUT AN END TO LKY

or open your legs to be further screwed by him
 

cowbehcowbu

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Loyal
Bros..our economic designer..[Mr Thaman now??] had planned for top notch industries...valid IF and ONLY IF us and Euro have a bubbling economies forever..now the bubble burst...we are in deep shit...
LOOK AT THE tAIWANESE IN prc..THEY MAKE EVERYTHINGS THAT SELL TO THE WORLD....from mooncakes...bicycle..fakef viskies...to all those computers you used everyday..........so THE TAIWANESE ARE SMARTER...SO THEY CALLED SINKAPOOO peee-sai.......AGREE...? no ...?
 

zuoom

Alfrescian
Loyal
good short 3 page article that briefly touch on how the economy is stalling (as the money flow slows), the impending job losses at those (factory countries), and how/what steps those countries will take, etc.
 

miosux

Alfrescian
Loyal
That's what happens when sinkapore trys to be the biomed hub, logistics hub, IT hub, electronics hub, gaming hub, prostitution hub, FT hub, gambling hub etc...

We are spread so thin and specialise in nothing that when spending stops, we get screwed totally.

so as opposed to trying, we should have done nothing and get totally screwed even earlier? :confused:
 

Ah Guan

Alfrescian
Loyal
C'mon... Everybody knows there is no recession proof country except maybe the African nations and North Korea

Sinkapore should have strengthened the areas of core competency in the recent up cycle instead of casting the net out and try to grow too much too soon.

For example, General Electric under Jack Welch has successfully weathered through various storms with their carefully picked long/short cycle businesses. They make from light bulbs to turbines .. sell aeroplane engines and grant consumer loans.

The reason why GE got fucked up so badly this time round is that Jeff Immelt guy over outsourced and over-globalised (conned by ah nehs), and jeapordised their own operations. It also doesn't help that he over-relied on the high risk/high growth GE Capital for shareholder returns since he took over.

But GE is a listed business accountable to profit seeking shareholders.... Cutting costs and going for growth is their objective.

So who are the profit seeking shareholders for sinkapore Inc.? Why did we take so on many high risk capital projects?
 

Ah Guan

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so as opposed to trying, we should have done nothing and get totally screwed even earlier? :confused:


btw.. I don't see how we could have "get totally screwed earlier" when we were already the first Asian country to fall into recession
 

2lanu

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Loyal
So who are the profit seeking shareholders for sinkapore Inc.? Why did we take so on many high risk capital projects?

GIC and Temasick ganna snooked lah. I rem that when the economy boom, ppl shouting and scream what the hell these 2 parked so much $$$ for.

And then the "window" of opportunity open and voila! They hit the trap and got sink...:biggrin:
 

snrcitizen

Alfrescian
Loyal
GIC and Temasick ganna snooked lah. I rem that when the economy boom, ppl shouting and scream what the hell these 2 parked so much $$$ for.

And then the "window" of opportunity open and voila! They hit the trap and got sink...:biggrin:

Right from the bell, both took on strategies that broke practically every golden rule on equity trading. The outcome of course is a given.

The "long term investment" excuse can be expected to be heard only from losers, after the fact.
 
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