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Lan cheow blain washed mentality! No wonder he deserves to be replaced by FTrash!
<TABLE cellSpacing=0 cellPadding=0 width="100%" border=0><TBODY><TR>More public education needed on effects of globalisation
</TR><!-- headline one : end --><!-- show image if available --></TBODY></TABLE>
<!-- START OF : div id="storytext"--><!-- more than 4 paragraphs -->I REFER to last Friday's article, 'Singapore-China FTA a real boon'.
While free trade agreements (FTAs) generally mean businessmen and professionals from Singapore and China will be able to travel more freely between both countries to facilitate trade and investment in goods and services, more public education needs to be done to address the effects of globalisation.
This is because the middle- and lower-income groups are the biggest losers from globalisation, such as people who have lost their jobs to foreign workers or their wages cut due to foreign competition. Yet many who benefit from globalisation and FTAs also have no clue they do so.
The public can easily demonise globalisation and gradually become an ill-informed group who try to change the rules and close it out.
This group include people who have been hammered by the system and want to eliminate globalisation.
I confess I belong to this group. When I graduated into unemployment with my life sciences degree, I was disgruntled with the system, especially foreign talent and students who come to Singapore to study and fight tooth and nail with Singaporeans for jobs. I resented their presence and wanted them to go home. The privileges of Singapore citizenship conferred no benefits to me as I was on equal standing with my foreign counterparts. It is always easy to blame foreign talent for the effects of globalisation.
What I came to realise later was that globalisation is actually a technology-driven phenomenon and not a trade-driven one. If Singapore had no trade relations with China, my job would still be taken away because there is always better technology to replace the human factor. Everyone needs to constantly upgrade and embrace life-long learning to ride the wave of globalisation.
If a country cannot help the many who are left behind by globalisation and unable to fend off the effects, it also cannot save the few who are rich. For any policy to succeed, the public need to understand why it is necessary and see the world the way politicians do. Edmund Lin
<TABLE cellSpacing=0 cellPadding=0 width="100%" border=0><TBODY><TR>More public education needed on effects of globalisation
</TR><!-- headline one : end --><!-- show image if available --></TBODY></TABLE>
<!-- START OF : div id="storytext"--><!-- more than 4 paragraphs -->I REFER to last Friday's article, 'Singapore-China FTA a real boon'.
While free trade agreements (FTAs) generally mean businessmen and professionals from Singapore and China will be able to travel more freely between both countries to facilitate trade and investment in goods and services, more public education needs to be done to address the effects of globalisation.
This is because the middle- and lower-income groups are the biggest losers from globalisation, such as people who have lost their jobs to foreign workers or their wages cut due to foreign competition. Yet many who benefit from globalisation and FTAs also have no clue they do so.
The public can easily demonise globalisation and gradually become an ill-informed group who try to change the rules and close it out.
This group include people who have been hammered by the system and want to eliminate globalisation.
I confess I belong to this group. When I graduated into unemployment with my life sciences degree, I was disgruntled with the system, especially foreign talent and students who come to Singapore to study and fight tooth and nail with Singaporeans for jobs. I resented their presence and wanted them to go home. The privileges of Singapore citizenship conferred no benefits to me as I was on equal standing with my foreign counterparts. It is always easy to blame foreign talent for the effects of globalisation.
What I came to realise later was that globalisation is actually a technology-driven phenomenon and not a trade-driven one. If Singapore had no trade relations with China, my job would still be taken away because there is always better technology to replace the human factor. Everyone needs to constantly upgrade and embrace life-long learning to ride the wave of globalisation.
If a country cannot help the many who are left behind by globalisation and unable to fend off the effects, it also cannot save the few who are rich. For any policy to succeed, the public need to understand why it is necessary and see the world the way politicians do. Edmund Lin