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Singapore appointed 2 idiots to lead the task force.

Lawrence reminds you to stay safe. :thumbsup:

Lawrence Wong updated his cover photo.​

1 d ·
As we approach the year-end, many Singaporeans are making plans to take a break. Be it travelling overseas or staying locally, remember to stay safe and practise personal and social responsibility. Take your bivalent vaccine when offered too!
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: MOF Photo by Fandy Razak)

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Lawrence wishes Kranji Primary School Happy 25th anniversary. :wink:

Lawrence Wong

54 m ·
Happy 25th anniversary, Kranji Primary School!
Kranji Primary School was built in the 1990s and has served the community of Limbang and Yew Tee for 25 years. Fast forward to today, and I am glad that the school has stayed true to its mission of nurturing minds, engaging hearts and building character!
My appreciation to the principals and teachers - past and present - as well as parents and the community for supporting our children’s growth and learning.
Wishing Kranji Primary School every success in the years ahead.
(Fun fact: do you know how Kranji Primary school got its name?
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from straitstimes.com:

WP’s alternatives to GST hike do not add up, GST hike among options needed to meet funding gap: DPM Wong​

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DPM Lawrence Wong said that alternatives raised to the GST hike by Workers’ Party MPs entailed spending more from past reserves and leaving less for the future. ST PHOTO: DESMOND WEE
Hariz Baharudin and Ng Wei Kai

PUBLISHED

7 NOV 2022, 10:27 PM SGT

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SINGAPORE - The suggestion that the goods and services tax (GST) increase should be postponed due to current inflationary pressures does not hold water, Deputy Prime Minister Lawrence Wong told Parliament on Monday.
The Government’s support measures delay the effect of the hike by at least five years for the majority of Singaporean households, he said.
That the support is targeted at lower- to middle-income households, rather than broad-based, will also minimise any additional inflationary pressures, he added.

“We have designed the overall package to ensure we neither stoke inflation inadvertently nor choke aggregate demand, and this is an appropriate macroeconomic stance to adopt at this juncture,” he said.
Rounding up the debate on the GST (Amendment) Bill, which saw 15 MPs speak, Mr Wong rebutted alternatives raised by Workers’ Party MPs Louis Chua and Jamus Lim (both Sengkang GRC) saying these entailed spending more from past reserves and leaving less for the future.
The Government has also explored other sources of revenue, and still needs to raise the GST, he said.


Why increase GST now?​

The Government had considered the GST hike carefully and decided that it was necessary to do so, given how Singapore’s economic challenges are not just near-term or cyclical in nature, Mr Wong said.


The ongoing war in Ukraine, disruptions to energy and food supplies, rising geopolitical tensions and more fragmented supply chains are realities Singapore has to deal with possibly for a more prolonged period, he added.
“International economic conditions have fundamentally changed,” he said.
While inflationary pressures here are expected to ease in the second half of next year, inflation rates are unlikely to go back to what they were over the past decade, he added.

It is for this reason that the Government has extended comprehensive support to Singaporeans, especially lower and middle income families.
Mr Wong had at the start of the debate announced a $1.4 billion boost to the support package for households to offset the GST hike’s impact, amid higher inflation. This means the Assurance Package, first announced in 2020, will now be worth $8 billion, up from $6.6 billion before.

Responding to a point Mr Chua made on how households’ annual expenditure will increase due to inflation, Mr Wong said that the support they get will increase.
Mr Chua had cited the example of a middle-income couple with two young children, and estimated that with inflation, their annual expenditure would go up by $2,500.
Mr Wong acknowledged the rise in spending, but pointed out that the support they get this year would be around $1,500.
This support will keep to the Government’s commitment to offset more than half of the inflation-driven increase in cost of living this year for middle-income households, he said, adding this does not take into account wage rises for individuals which many will likely enjoy.
Associate Professor Lim had also cited how Japan saw an increase in inflation after it increased its version of the GST three times in the past 25 years.
Mr Wong pointed out that Japan was in a deflationary environment, and had raised the GST and had its inflation double from a “chronically low” 1 per cent to 2 per cent - and temporarily.
“Let’s avoid raising these alarmist examples that may not be so relevant to our context,” he said, adding that Singapore must continue to learn the right lessons from others.


He noted that while there are considerable uncertainties in the economic outlook, there is nothing uncertain about government expenditures, especially in healthcare.
Noting that MPs like Mr Liang Eng Hwa (Bukit Panjang), Mr Sharael Taha (Pasir Ris-Punggol GRC) and Ms Joan Pereira (Tanjong Pagar GRC) had made this point, Mr Wong said even as Singapore deals with healthcare spending, it has to resource many other spending needs.
These include planned investments on early childhood education, efforts to uplift lower wage workers as well as helping to ease concerns of SMEs, self-employed persons and those keen to purchase HDB flats.
“It’s a few billion here, a few billion there, they all add up. None of these needs has become less urgent because of the global economic situation. On the contrary, we must do more, especially in an uncertain and volatile environment,” said Mr Wong.
“That is why having considered this so carefully before the Budget, after the Budget, even in the last few months when the global economic environment had deteriorated, we felt that there was no possibility for us to delay the GST increase any further.”

Why not try alternatives to the GST hike?​

Mr Wong also addressed four alternatives to the GST hike that WP MPs had raised.
One, the suggestion that Singapore has enough fiscal surplus to delay the hike of 1 percentage point set for January 2023.
Mr Wong said: “I wish that were so.”
He noted Prof Lim had suggested the Government is shielded from inflation because when inflation goes up, so does its revenues as prices also increase.
“But he didn’t mention this: Government spending must also go up correspondingly,” said Mr Wong, citing public servants’ salaries and support schemes for residents.


He added that while the Government collected more revenue than expected in the last financial year and had a surplus of $1.9 billion, it had already used this surplus as well as the return from the first half of this year to fund two support packages.
In June and October 2022, the Government announced two $1.5 billion support packages targeting lower-and-middle income Singaporeans.
Mr Wong said: “The bottom line is that any surpluses are imaginary - they are not there and will not allow us to delay the GST.”
Two, there have been suggestions to use more of Singapore’s reserves, including increasing the proportion used from returns on investments and changing the definition of land sales revenues.
Mr Wong said WP’s position, which it said was not raiding but slowing down the rate of accumulating reserves, sounds attractive but will leave future generations with less resources.
Such a move would be irresponsible, he added. “Let’s not succumb to the temptation of taking this easy way out, making things worse for our children and grandchildren.”
Mr Wong noted that global uncertainties are also likely to slow the growth of Singapore’s investments anyway, making tapping on these to delay a GST hike even more untenable.

Three, Prof Lim had suggested exempting essential items from GST, a point that had been raised by Ms He Ting Ru (Sengkang GRC) at the Budget Debate in February.
Mr Wong said this does not work in practice.
Such tiered GSTs are cumbersome, he said, citing a recent BBC article about India’s system.
In August, an Indian firm making pizza toppings went to court claiming their mozzarella topping should be classified as cheese - which had a GST of 12 per cent.
The court disagreed, arguing that because the topping had other ingredients such as vegetable oil it should be taxed at 18 per cent in a class known as ‘edible preparations’.
Mr Wong said there is no end to these challenges, and such tiered systems are not effective.
“When you exempt a basket of goods or essential items in the end you benefit the well-to-do, because the well-to-do will spend more on everything, not just luxury items but basic necessities as well,” he said.
This was a conclusion also reached by studies from numerous governments and the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD), he added.
Mr Wong said Singapore’s GST system - with its series of offsets and rebates - is deliberately designed to be fair and effective, contrary to Prof Lim’s view that these were a patchwork of offsets.


Four, suggestions continue to be made that Singapore should explore other streams of revenue such as property, income, corporate and sin taxes.
Mr Wong said while these have been carefully considered, the sums do not add up.
Increasing corporate and income taxes could result in investors leaving Singapore, especially amid tight global competition for talent and investments, he said.
He added that GST revenue alone is in fact not enough to fund policies the Government wants to push through, from healthcare spending to improving conditions for low-wage workers.
“Really, that question is not GST or these other alternatives - we need GST, and these other alternatives,” he said.
Mr Wong added: “The WP is entitled to your own position. By all means, oppose the GST, adopt a different position, fine.”
“But at least be honest and responsible, acknowledge that your alternatives would either end up requiring the middle income to pay more or would use more of the past reserves.”
 
from straitstimes.com

Assurance Package to help households offset GST hike to get $1.4b boost, will now total $8b​

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The GST will increase by one percentage point from 7 per cent to 8 per cent on Jan 1, 2023. ST PHOTO: KUA CHEE SIONG
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Goh Yan Han
Political Correspondent

PUBLISHED

7 NOV 2022, 1:36 PM SGT

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SINGAPORE - There will be a $1.4 billion boost to the support package for households to offset the impact of the upcoming goods and services tax (GST) hike, given higher inflation, Deputy Prime Minister Lawrence Wong told Parliament on Monday.
This means that the Assurance Package will now be worth $8 billion, up from $6.6 billion before. The package was first announced in 2020, with a top-up of $640 million announced in Budget 2022.
More details on the enhancements to the package will be announced in Budget 2023, said Mr Wong.

Mr Wong, who is also Finance Minister, was speaking at the start of the debate on the GST (Amendment) Bill, which saw 15 MPs speak.
He said that with higher inflation, household expenditure and the additional GST expenses are expected to increase. The size of the support package would therefore need to be correspondingly increased to meet the Government’s committed level of offsets.
The GST will increase by one percentage point from 7 per cent to 8 per cent on Jan 1, 2023, and another percentage point to 9 per cent on Jan 1, 2024.


The Government had committed to ensuring that the package would offset the impact of the GST increase for the majority of Singaporean households for at least five years, and for lower-income households for about 10 years.


Mr Wong said: “The Government will help all Singaporeans adjust to the GST increase, especially the less well-off.”
He also reiterated the reasons for the GST rate increase. The tax hike is an important revenue move that will provide Singapore with additional resources to meet its growing healthcare expenditures and to take better care of the growing number of seniors, he said.
Mr Wong noted that the Government has been expanding support including in the areas of healthcare, social and ageing needs. It also wants to improve social mobility, invest in skills upgrading and green the economy and city.

“To achieve all this, we will need more government spending – on a structural and recurring basis.”
That is why, apart from increasing the GST, he had also announced increases in the personal income tax and property tax, among other measures, noted Mr Wong.
“This is how, as a responsible government, we plan ahead and meet our future needs in a sustainable way.”

Mr Wong said that for those who ask the Government to delay the GST rate increase, the Assurance Package “in effect does precisely that, for the majority of households”.
He also highlighted the GST Voucher (GSTV) scheme – “another important design feature of the GST system in Singapore”, which helps lower- to middle-income households defray a significant part of their GST expenses permanently. Apart from the voucher scheme, the Government also continues to absorb GST for publicly subsidised healthcare and education.
“After putting together the permanent GSTV and the GST absorption – what we have is an overall GST system that taxes consumption in a fair and effective manner,” said Mr Wong. “In effect, we have a multi-tiered GST system, one that is tiered by income levels, with lower-income households paying a much lower effective GST rate than higher-income households.”
He noted that on average, the bottom 10 per cent of households – which include many retiree households without income – do not pay any GST at all after the permanent offsets.
Even after the GST increase, the effective GST rate for households in the first three income deciles remains unchanged at below 3 per cent, which means the GST increase will not negatively impact them, he added.
The full impact of the GST will be borne largely by high-income households, as well as tourists and foreigners based here, said Mr Wong. This is also the group that contributes the biggest share to net GST revenues from households and individuals, he added.
He said: “We have designed our GST system carefully to achieve these outcomes. And as the inflationary outlook evolves, we will continue to monitor our scheme parameters to ensure that we uphold and maintain these objectives.”
“The GST is therefore a key part of our fair and progressive system of taxes and transfers – that takes care of the less well-off, and ensures that those who are better off contribute their fair share in revenues.”


Mr Wong also explained another proposed amendment in the Bill, which updates the GST treatment of travel-arranging services to be based on the “place of belonging rule” from Jan 1, 2023. Under the changes, if the customer belongs in Singapore, the travel arranging service, such as the facilitation of accommodation bookings, will be standard-rated.
Travel-arranging services would qualify for zero-rating, or zero per cent of GST, only if the services are supplied to a consumer outside of Singapore, and directly benefits people who either belong outside of Singapore or are GST-registered in Singapore.
Mr Wong said this amendment will also ensure consistent GST treatment for travel-arranging services, regardless of whether they are rendered by local or overseas providers.
Other amendments include changes in the transitional rules in the GST Act for greater clarity in rules application; refining the rules for taxing low-value goods and services to prevent double taxation, provide tax certainty and ease the compliance burden of businesses; as well as the introduction of criminal sanctions to counter Missing Trader Fraud schemes.

In a speech rounding up the debate, Mr Wong addressed concerns from MPs about why the GST increase was going ahead as planned, and why alternative measures would not be feasible.
He acknowledged the inflationary pressures and challenging economic environment but noted that the economy and labour markets are still holding steady here while the resident unemployment rate has recovered to pre-pandemic levels.
He added that inflation rates are unlikely to go back to what they were over the past decade, and that the Government had rolled out support packages to tackle inflation.
Mr Wong said alternative ideas had been considered carefully by the Government and debated rigorously in Parliament. Increasing other taxes such as the personal income tax, property tax or corporate tax would not be feasible as this could affect Singapore’s attractiveness to investors and businesses, among others.
As for suggestions to use more from the past reserves, or slow down the accumulation of reserves, this would mean leaving less for the next generation and is not the responsible thing to do, he added.
“We will not just go for politically expedient measures that may very well end up being unviable or unsustainable,” said Mr Wong. “Instead, we focus our efforts on designing effective policies to benefit all Singaporeans.”
The Bill was passed on Monday evening, with nine Workers’ Party MPs and two Progress Singapore Party Non-Constituency MPs recording their dissent.
 
Lawrence introduces a new nature park. :thumbsup:

Lawrence Wong

22 h ·
Introducing our first new nature park since the start of the pandemic - Rifle Range Nature Park! The green space has been enhanced with more than 7km of trails and boardwalks, and even a viewing point perched atop the cliff of a granite quarry. Kudos to our NParks colleagues and partners, Friends of Bukit Timah Forest and WWF-Singapore!
We now have completed 8 nature parks lining our central nature reserve, and they serve as important green buffers to protect the rich biodiversity in our nature reserve.
And we are not done greening Singapore — we plan to build 5 more nature parks by 2030. We will continue to find ways to bring everyone closer to nature, so that every home in Singapore can be within a 10-minute walk of a park.
Let’s green our city together, and make it a beautiful city in nature!
Desmond Lee Sim Ann 沈颖 Shawn Huang Wei Zhong 黄伟中
(
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: MCI Photos by Terence Tan)


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Lawrence joins his colleagues in giving a thumbs-up. :thumbsup:

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Lawrence joins his colleagues and kids in giving thumbs-up. :thumbsup:

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Lawrence listens to presentation by students. :thumbsup:

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Lawrence introduces the first community centre in a mall. :wink:

Lawrence Wong

2 d ·
The first community centre in a mall - Nee Soon Central CC was opened yesterday! It is also the first CC to have a ServiceSG center offering over 200 Government services. So if you have any questions or transactions related to CPF, HDB or Income Tax, you can head there to settle them. I hope residents will enjoy the convenience of having these amenites and government services all in one location.
Thanks MOS Assoc Prof Muhammad Faishal Ibrahim, volunteers, donors, and everyone involved in making the CC what it is today. At the end of the day, what really makes a place special is not infrastructure, but its people. Keep up the good work at building these relationships and fostering this sense of community.

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Lawrence was glad to meet Katherine. :wink:

Lawrence Wong

2 d ·
Glad to meet United States Trade Representative (USTR) Katherine Tai this morning, during her visit to Singapore to attend the Bloomberg New Economy Forum.
We discussed a wide range of key economic issues, including priorities for bilateral and regional trade cooperation. In particular, Singapore will work with the US to strengthen regional cooperation through the Indo-Pacific Economic Framework for Prosperity (IPEF) and the Asia Pacific Economic Cooperation (APEC) which the US will chair in 2023.
I look forward to advancing the partnership between Singapore and the US, to build on our robust economic ties and advance cooperation in mutual areas of interest.
(MCI Photo by Ngau Kai Yan)

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Lawrence had productive meetings. :wink:

Lawrence Wong

2 d ·
Two productive days of meetings and dialogues at the 17th Asia-Pacific Conference of German Business (APK).
I caught up with German Vice Chancellor and Federal Minister for Economic Affairs and Climate Action Robert Habeck yesterday, and met German Chancellor Olaf Scholz today on the sidelines of APK. We discussed the global headwinds we are facing currently, and the need for closer cooperation on issues of shared concerns.
In particular we look forward to strengthening our cooperation in areas such as sustainability, innovation, green technologies, as well as skills development and education.
Singapore and Germany share a close and trusted bilateral relationship, with many German companies using Singapore as a launchpad into the region. In these uncertain times, like-minded countries like Germany and Singapore must stand together for free trade and investments, and ensure a stable multilateral global order.
(
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: MCI Photos by [1] Liu Ying, [2-4] Terence Tan)

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https://www.facebook.com/photo/?fbi...4lvrIU3wkhgnTTu2F5SEM4KrbVdd0jGi&__tn__=*bH-R
 
Lawrence attended the G20 Summit. :cool:

Lawrence Wong

2 d ·
Together with PM Lee Hsien Loong, Minister Vivian Balakrishnan and I attended the G20 Summit. Our first session yesterday was on food and energy security.
As a small island state that imports most of our food and energy needs, we instinctively understand the importance of maintaining access to these sources.
We need to strengthen the rules-based multilateral trading system; and accelerate our climate change ambitions, including by scaling up sustainable finance.
In that regard, we had a good discussion with WTO Director-General Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala. Also had the chance to meet PM of Spain Pedro Sánchez Pérez-Castejón and PM of the Netherlands Mark Rutte.
Dinner was a splendid showcase of Indonesian culture and food at Garuda Wisma Kencana Cultural Park.
G20 Indonesia #G20Indonesia #RecoverTogetherRecoverStronger
(
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: MCI Photos by Fyrol)











 
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