Yeah, last time got teach some English. But no more - I not comfortable with MOE style of education.
What is it that you don't like MOE style of Education, such as?
Apparently they top world standards beating angmoh countries.
I can't speak for other fields, but not in my field. Top publications are still often by whites, or if by Asians (most frequently Japanese, then (anglo-)Indian, then Korean, then Chinese) who are based in universities in the west. But I'm in social science which is perhaps quite language-biased. The case might be very different in the hard sciences.
Nonetheless - I think the Singapore approach to research is wrong on a few counts.
1. Setting quotas for researchers on annual number of publications in journals of different tiers (overly narrow KPI)
2. Hiring lousy PhD people on SGD3+k/month and naively thinking all PhD holders are equivalent (speaking just for NUS)
3. Focusing too much money on top researchers (describing A-Star), instead of spreading the money around on fewer, not-so-famous researchers - research is like gambling, the more you try (and fail), the more likely you will serendipitously stumble on success - what Nassim Taleb calls positive Black Swans
Anyway - if you believe Acemoglu et al about cuddly and cutthroat capitalism, then there's no point being cutthroat and innovative. Technology costs a lot to develop but everyone can benefit from its productivity gains. Better to just focus on our comparative advantages (super-strong work ethic? I don't know... I'm just crapping actually - I do think a strong technology or R&D culture is worth developing here... even if just because it allows us to be competitive in high-tech manufacturing).
I think English's writing system is called "phonetic". Symbols stand for sounds which linguists call "phonemes" or "phonemic segments". Russian is like this, Malay is like this (they didn't all invent this - writing was invented only two or three times by humans - the rest of the cultures just imitated and borrowed).
Malay language is known as one of the most beautiful languages in the world. Many words use 2 syllabus and easy to remember. Pity they don't have their own style of writtings, borrowed Latin for their writings.
Korean and Japanese hiragana/katakana script are "syllabic" - symbols stand for entire syllables (which can contain multiple phonemic segments, e.g. [san] contains consonant and [n] and vowel [a])
Jap language also make nice sound and tone, easy to follow and remember.
Mandarin and Japanese kanji is "ideographic", because - well symbols stand for entire syllables, but each syllable could correspond to several different ideographs. This kind of writing system is arguably the hardest to learn.
Re: what you mean by Japanese words being "built up from their radicals", I think you're referring to their very transparent morphological system (e.g. for verb marking, past tense is always -ta, negation is always -nai, progressive is -always iru, etc), unlike English with irregular morphology all over the place, e.g. am/are/is/was/were/be, go/went/gone, swim/swam/swum, cows/sheep/oxen/stimuli/larvae, etc.