Lucky for the rest of the world when Sporns are dying to get out of the nose snot!
<TABLE cellSpacing=0 cellPadding=0 width="100%" border=0><TBODY><TR><TD>http://www.straitstimes.com/Breaking%2BNews/Singapore/Story/STIStory_277236.html
Sep 10, 2008
</TD></TR><TR><TD><!-- headline one : start --></TD></TR><TR><TD>MM: We're not easily copied <!--10 min-->
</TD></TR><TR><TD><!-- headline one : end --></TD></TR><TR><TD><!-- Author --></TD></TR><TR><TD class="padlrt8 georgia11 darkgrey bold" colSpan=2>By Sue-Ann Chia
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Mentor Lee Kuan Yew (left) said that it is not easy to copy another country's policy, because each country has a different starting point. -- ST PHOTO: STEPHANIE YEOW
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SINGAPORE's economic model combining a good social safety net with low tax rates is not easily copied as each country has a different starting point, said Minister Mentor Lee Kuan Yew on Wednesday.
But one advice he can give is: You cannot take back what is given.
'You start off with the premise that once given, if you take it back, there's a tremendous penalty in the votes that you'll get. So once given, it cannot be taken back,' he said at the Forbes CEO global conference.
This was Singapore's position from the day it became independent, he said, after having watched the British implement some of their policies here in the 1950s which he described as 'the way to ruin'.
So when the People's Action Party took charge, it stopped 'free prescriptions for medicine...started putting charges on them which we kept on making more and more realistic'.
<TABLE cellSpacing=0 cellPadding=0 width="100%" border=0><TBODY><TR><TD>http://www.straitstimes.com/Breaking%2BNews/Singapore/Story/STIStory_277236.html
Sep 10, 2008
</TD></TR><TR><TD><!-- headline one : start --></TD></TR><TR><TD>MM: We're not easily copied <!--10 min-->
</TD></TR><TR><TD><!-- headline one : end --></TD></TR><TR><TD><!-- Author --></TD></TR><TR><TD class="padlrt8 georgia11 darkgrey bold" colSpan=2>By Sue-Ann Chia
</TD></TR><TR><TD><!-- show image if available --></TD></TR><TR vAlign=bottom><TD width=330>
</TD><TD width=10>
Mentor Lee Kuan Yew (left) said that it is not easy to copy another country's policy, because each country has a different starting point. -- ST PHOTO: STEPHANIE YEOW
</TD></TR></TBODY></TABLE>
<!-- START OF : div id="storytext"-->
SINGAPORE's economic model combining a good social safety net with low tax rates is not easily copied as each country has a different starting point, said Minister Mentor Lee Kuan Yew on Wednesday.
But one advice he can give is: You cannot take back what is given.
'You start off with the premise that once given, if you take it back, there's a tremendous penalty in the votes that you'll get. So once given, it cannot be taken back,' he said at the Forbes CEO global conference.
This was Singapore's position from the day it became independent, he said, after having watched the British implement some of their policies here in the 1950s which he described as 'the way to ruin'.
So when the People's Action Party took charge, it stopped 'free prescriptions for medicine...started putting charges on them which we kept on making more and more realistic'.