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KNNBPCB, LIM SIAH SUAY, ALWAYS COMING UP WITH HIS STUPID CHEEBYE MORONIC CLICHES....WTF IS 'BOTTLENECK BREAKERS"...KNN PAY HIM MILLION DOLLAR SALARY TO TALK FUCKING COCK EVERYDAY AND DREAM UP STUPID MORONIC CLICHES TO MAKE HIMSELF LOOK EVEN MORE MORONIC THAN BEFORE...CCB FIRST IT WAS CHEAPER BETTER FASTER, NOW BOTTLENECK BREAKERS...KNNBPCB LIM SIAH SUAY, GO BREAK YOUR OWN ARSEHOLE WITH A BOTTLE LAH......:oIo::oIo::oIo:
Apr 28, 2010
Be 'bottleneck breakers'
By Kor Kian Beng
AHEAD of May Day this Saturday, labour chief Lim Swee Say has laid down a new challenge for the labour movement: Be a 'nation of bottleneck breakers'.
Identifying and breaking bottlenecks will be key in Singapore's drive to achieve 2 to 3 per cent productivity growths yearly over the next decade, said Mr Lim in a yearly May Day message on Wednesday.
The secretary-general of the National Trades Union Congress (NTUC) and Minister in the Prime Minister's Office also urged firms to share gains from productivity improvement with workers. Said Mr Lim: 'Only then will productivity and innovation be sustainable and inclusive. Only then will we become 'a nation of bottleneck breakers'.'
He gave some examples of how bottlenecks - factors or stages in the work processes that impede or limit the productivity of workers and companies - can be identified and broken by workers and employers alike by working together.
To boost a production worker's performance, factories could spot and break bottlenecks in areas such as the quality and packaging of raw materials, and the layout and design of production flow, or quality management, said Mr Lim. As for companies, they could focus on potential bottlenecks in financial capital, market positioning, branding or capability to capture a bigger market share.
The Government is aiming for yearly productivity growth of 2 to 3 per cent for the next decade, set out by the Economic Strategies Committee that Mr Lim sat on. Defining productivity as the result of maximising 'useful' outputs and minimising 'wasteful' inputs, Mr Lim said achieving the targets won't be easy but it's possible because 'we have done it before and we must do it again'.
'This time round, our productivity revival must be embraced by all sectors of the economy, all enterprises and all workers,' said Mr Lim, pointing to the increasingly competitive global economy.
Apr 28, 2010
Be 'bottleneck breakers'
By Kor Kian Beng
AHEAD of May Day this Saturday, labour chief Lim Swee Say has laid down a new challenge for the labour movement: Be a 'nation of bottleneck breakers'.
Identifying and breaking bottlenecks will be key in Singapore's drive to achieve 2 to 3 per cent productivity growths yearly over the next decade, said Mr Lim in a yearly May Day message on Wednesday.
The secretary-general of the National Trades Union Congress (NTUC) and Minister in the Prime Minister's Office also urged firms to share gains from productivity improvement with workers. Said Mr Lim: 'Only then will productivity and innovation be sustainable and inclusive. Only then will we become 'a nation of bottleneck breakers'.'
He gave some examples of how bottlenecks - factors or stages in the work processes that impede or limit the productivity of workers and companies - can be identified and broken by workers and employers alike by working together.
To boost a production worker's performance, factories could spot and break bottlenecks in areas such as the quality and packaging of raw materials, and the layout and design of production flow, or quality management, said Mr Lim. As for companies, they could focus on potential bottlenecks in financial capital, market positioning, branding or capability to capture a bigger market share.
The Government is aiming for yearly productivity growth of 2 to 3 per cent for the next decade, set out by the Economic Strategies Committee that Mr Lim sat on. Defining productivity as the result of maximising 'useful' outputs and minimising 'wasteful' inputs, Mr Lim said achieving the targets won't be easy but it's possible because 'we have done it before and we must do it again'.
'This time round, our productivity revival must be embraced by all sectors of the economy, all enterprises and all workers,' said Mr Lim, pointing to the increasingly competitive global economy.