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Sinkie 61, with 4 kids, not enough to eat. Guess the race!

Cottonmouth

Alfrescian
Loyal

As COVID-19 rages, more in Singapore go hungry​

People dropping meals, buying cheapest products as pandemic leaves contract and low-paid struggling to make ends meet.

Danny_4_by-Ee-Ming.jpg

The coronavirus pandemic has left more people in Singapore, one of the world's wealthiest countries, struggling to feed themselves [Toh Ee Ming/Al Jazeera]
By Toh Ee Ming
Published On 10 Nov 2021
Singapore – After being let go from his part-time job as a waiter last year during the pandemic, Danny Goh hit rock bottom.
For eight months, he struggled to find work to support his wife and four young children. The family survived on instant noodles, bread dipped in coffee, and biscuits, getting by on the goodwill of relatives and church friends.

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While Goh has found a new commission-based job getting people to sign up for government skills upgrading and training courses, his income fluctuates between 800 Singapore dollars ($594) and 2,800 Singapore dollars ($2,078), which is barely enough for their large family.
He perpetually finds himself cash-strapped.
To save money, the family has started eating only two meals a day – simple dishes like chicken soup with rice or potatoes.
Goh often skips meals or eats once a day so that his children can have a bigger share.
Where their fridge used to be stuffed with fresh fruit, chicken, pork and beef, soft drinks and snacks, all of this is now a luxury, and eating out is out of the question.
“It’s a huge pay cut, and honestly it’s one of the hardest and most demoralising periods of my life. Times are really tough,” said the 61-year-old who rents a two-room public housing flat in the northern part of the island.
h_56987765.jpg
Singapore is renowned for its food, and the wealthy city-state’s residents are known for their love of it. Experts say those who are struggling are often too embarrassed to tell anyone [File: Wallace Woon/EPA]
In a food paradise and wealthy city-state like Singapore, food insecurity is a phenomenon that exists primarily behind closed doors. But as elsewhere in the world, COVID-19 has hit the disadvantaged the hardest, typically the lowest earners in precarious jobs, who have few safety nets and insufficient wage and labour protections.
Earlier this year, a six-month study by local charity Beyond Social Services found that the median household income of families who sought the group’s help had plunged from 1,600 Singapore dollars ($1,187) before the COVID-19 pandemic to just 500 Singapore dollars ($371).
More worryingly, a second study, which detailed the effect of the pandemic on people renting government-owned flats between July and December 2020, found food insecurity was increasingly prolonged.
Residents told Beyond that they sometimes coped with the lack of food by filling themselves up with liquids or starches, buying cheap and filling items, and making choices based on financial considerations rather than nutritional value.
For instance, some families would eat only one meal a day or give their children coffee creamer in hot water because they could not afford formula milk. The report warned the issue could escalate into a serious public health matter, with links to increased mental stress and the development of chronic health conditions.
In 2019, Singapore ranked as the world’s most food-secure nation in the Global Food Security Index.
However, one in 10 Singaporeans experienced food insecurity at least once over 12 months, reported a study by the Singapore Management University’s Lien Centre for Social Innovation. Out of this, two in five experienced food insecurity at least once a month and many of these households did not seek food support, citing embarrassment, being unaware of what was available and the belief that others needed it more than themselves.
“To a regular Singaporean, food is a national pastime,” said Beyond’s Deputy Executive Director Ranganayaki Thangavelu. “But we may not realise how poorly others are eating, how they have to make difficult choices for each meal, and how food is just a necessity to sustain them. When they are confronted by this inequality daily, it wears them down over time.”

Barely ‘staying afloat’​

Before COVID-19, eating out used to be a regular affair for 35-year-old Joshua (not his real name), his homemaker wife and their 6-year-old daughter.
But all that changed when the former studio technician was abruptly let go due to massive cost-cutting measures during the pandemic last March. He took on a contract job as a security guard, clocking 12-hour night shifts four times a week, earning 1,400 Singapore dollars ($1,039) a month – half his previous salary.
Food-from-the-Heart-Photos_2.jpg
Volunteers from Food for the Heart deliver supplies to a family in Singapore [Courtesy of Food from the Heart]
These days, every time Joshua gets his pay, the couple sits down to figure out how to stretch their monthly food budget of 400 Singapore dollars ($297).
Usually, that means buying frozen chicken rather than fresh, looking out for value buys and discounts, buying in bulk and switching to cheaper brands.
The remaining money goes to paying rent for their flat, utilities, phone and internet bills and other day-to-day expenses, with little to no buffer of savings. For a treat, they take their daughter out for a fast food meal once a month.
Joshua says that so far, they have been able to get by, helped by rations of dried food, fruit and vegetables from a local charity.
Despite the uncertainty, he is sanguine about the situation, saying that he is lucky he is still young and able to find work.
“We manage to stay afloat. For now, this is enough for my family and me to manage,” he said. “The pandemic has taught us a lesson about resilience and fighting on.”
Charities that Al Jazeera spoke to say that new sectors of society have been seeking food aid because of the pandemic, including younger “gig” workers whose projects have dried up and even middle-income families living in bigger public housing flats or private homes. About 85 percent of Singaporeans live in government-subsidised apartment blocks.
“On the outside, the house looks cushy and polished, but then the kids tell us that their mother hasn’t eaten for two days,” said The Food Bank Singapore co-founder, Nichol Ng. “For the food to be impacted, it means they are scraping the very bottom of the pot.”
Each time the government’s multi-ministry task force handling COVID-19 announces new restrictions, the charity is flooded by requests from people writing in to ask for food.
Singapore recently announced that its COVID-19 restrictions would be extended until November 21, after registering thousands of new COVID-19 cases daily.
“This means we have a lot of people who are super vulnerable and who can’t feed themselves. To know they are literally a paycheque away from not eating, it’s really scary and worrying,” Ng said.

Offering a Lifeline​

Under its Feed the City initiative last year, The Food Bank Singapore distributed one million meals.
Driven by a belief in giving beneficiaries the “autonomy of choice and dignity”, it also rolled out more neighbourhood vending machines stocked with anything from frozen bento meals to drinks, snacks and rice. The group says the machines, which the residents access with special cards, reduce the risk of the food going bad when left outside someone’s house in the tropical heat.
The charity has also rolled out other innovations, including a bank card programme that allows beneficiaries to redeem meals from food establishments.
Food from the Heart, another charity, has also seen demand surge and is now delivering 10,000 ration packs a month compared with 5,000 before COVID-19 hit.
Vending-machine-at-CCK-813a_The-Food-Bank-Singapore.jpg
Vending machines have been installed at some apartment blocks to make it easier for residents to access food supplies [Courtesy of The Food Bank Singapore]
They have also enlarged the size of their food packs after families ran out of supplies during coronavirus-related lockdowns.
“With more conversations about food insecurity, there’s less stigma of people admitting they get food support, especially those more able-bodied who have lost a job,” said chief executive Sim Bee Hia.
“We expect the pandemic’s impact to be prolonged and we just have to react and be nimble to make sure we keep the food going to those who need it as long as they need it.”
Despite the proliferation of initiatives and the rising volume of food aid, the Beyond report notes that efforts remain patchy and ad hoc, with some getting too much assistance and others not knowing how to get the help they need.
Ng said: “There’s too many ground-up initiatives and corporations with big hearts but they assume it is these few places that need help. As a result, there’s duplicated food efforts in certain neighbourhoods, while others fall through the cracks.”
To solve this, her team plans to create an online database – or “feeding directory” – detailing the range of food aid initiatives by neighbourhood. It is also working on a food-banking app where beneficiaries can submit real-time food requests to donors, while donors share the type and quantity of food they have on hand.
The Ministry of Social and Family Development (MSF) says it “recognises” that there is food insecurity in Singapore and has introduced a series of measures to address the issue since the pandemic, including grants and income relief as well as grocery and food vouchers for the less well-off.
These measures come on top of the existing ComCare programme, which provides social assistance for low-income individuals and families.
“In terms of food insecurity, Singapore has fared relatively well internationally, with rates remaining consistently low, due to our economic and social policies and collective community efforts to support those in need,” an MSF spokesperson said in an email response to Al Jazeera.
The ministry noted that about 4.5 percent of the population in Singapore was estimated to face moderate to severe food insecurity, according to the 2021 report on the State of Food Security and Nutrition in the World published by the UN Food and Agriculture Organisation (FAO).
Danny_2_by-Ee-Ming.jpg
Danny Goh’s job as a waiter disappeared with the pandemic. He says his family has been surviving on the goodwill of family and friends [Toh Ee Ming/Al Jazeera]
This was lower than in other developed economies such as the United States (8 percent), New Zealand (14 percent), Australia (12.3 percent) and South Korea (5.1 percent), it added.
But as the pandemic rages on and businesses continue to bleed, Goh is fearful of the prolonged economic impact on families like his.
“I never imagined that the situation would become worse,” he said. “There seems to be no end in sight.”
 

borom

Alfrescian (Inf)
Asset
Totally no pity for these peasants who voted for PAP despite suffering more and more after the useless son took over.
If not enough to eat because of poor government who favour foreigners, do something like join opposition party to fight for your rights and vote out the incompetent PAP.
 

sweetiepie

Alfrescian
Loyal
To save money, the family has started eating only two meals a day – simple dishes like chicken soup with rice or potatoes.
Goh often skips meals or eats once a day so that his children can have a bigger share
Imuho that is the leecomended typical meal for anyone KNN since last year my uncle already started to take 2 meals per day for health purpose even he has over a mil in his account :whistling::wink: the leesult is a weight leeduction to a normal bmi KNN what's wrong with eating soup lice and potato it is considered quite healthy meal KNN
 

millim6868

Alfrescian
Loyal
These clowns failed to run a country ,this is the result ,this happen n u know wat they going to do raise taxes to feed them, clowns are dumb n useless,this is not a solution but they will use this excuse to enrich themselves
 

zeddy

Alfrescian (Inf)
Asset
PAP will POFMA Al Jazeera. PAP will say there's no poverty in Singapore. All citizens are being taken good care of and no one has died from hunger yet under the PAP
 

Hypocrite-The

Alfrescian
Loyal
Seriously 61 years old without a high profile job and stable income still got guts to have 4 kiddos…. Stupidly really got no medicine to cure.
And have to add living in rental flat....2 room.. so the kids sleep in the kitchen? N this is the result of the end of the stop at 2...the irresponsible n trailer park Trash breed even more
 

Cottonmouth

Alfrescian
Loyal
Imuho that is the leecomended typical meal for anyone KNN since last year my uncle already started to take 2 meals per day for health purpose even he has over a mil in his account :whistling::wink: the leesult is a weight leeduction to a normal bmi KNN what's wrong with eating soup lice and potato it is considered quite healthy meal KNN

Your uncle is learned.
 

blackmondy

Alfrescian (Inf)
Asset
Articles such as this made me glad I took the 躺平 route decades ago. This world is so fucked that I simply cannot bring myself to have offsprings on earth suffering the shit we faced now.
 

countryman

Alfrescian
Loyal
Seriously 61 years old without a high profile job and stable income still got guts to have 4 kiddos…. Stupidly really got no medicine to cure.
Put up the young kids for adoption to rich families otherwise the kids will be having a life of poverty and most likely end up as school dropouts n will be a burden to society eventually..
 

countryman

Alfrescian
Loyal
And have to add living in rental flat....2 room.. so the kids sleep in the kitchen? N this is the result of the end of the stop at 2...the irresponsible n trailer park Trash breed even more
Must have followed JT's advised that u don't need a lot of space to consummate...:wink:
 

syed putra

Alfrescian
Loyal
Totally no pity for these peasants who voted for PAP despite suffering more and more after the useless son took over.
If not enough to eat because of poor government who favour foreigners, do something like join opposition party to fight for your rights and vote out the incompetent PAP.
Malays have been saying this 100 years ago but nobody listened.
 

syed putra

Alfrescian
Loyal
Put up the young kids for adoption to rich families otherwise the kids will be having a life of poverty and most likely end up as school dropouts n will be a burden to society eventually..
Normally chinese eill sell daughter to whorehouse.or wife part time in health centres.
PAP will ignore those in poverty until many more chinese ended up as one before they take remedial steps. But only to help those of a particular race.
 

Asterix

Alfrescian (Inf)
Asset
Imuho that is the leecomended typical meal for anyone KNN since last year my uncle already started to take 2 meals per day for health purpose even he has over a mil in his account :whistling::wink: the leesult is a weight leeduction to a normal bmi KNN what's wrong with eating soup lice and potato it is considered quite healthy meal KNN
Poverty is relative, during the Great Depression in th USA, the "poor" were well fed. Can live to 91 and beyond eating the "poor man's meal"...

 

cockie

Alfrescian
Loyal
Put up the young kids for adoption to rich families otherwise the kids will be having a life of poverty and most likely end up as school dropouts n will be a burden to society eventually..
Totally…. Both the parent are “stupid” so please don’t let the next generation suffer
 

Hypocrite-The

Alfrescian
Loyal

As COVID-19 rages, more in Singapore go hungry​

People dropping meals, buying cheapest products as pandemic leaves contract and low-paid struggling to make ends meet.

Danny_4_by-Ee-Ming.jpg

The coronavirus pandemic has left more people in Singapore, one of the world's wealthiest countries, struggling to feed themselves [Toh Ee Ming/Al Jazeera]
By Toh Ee Ming
Published On 10 Nov 2021
Singapore – After being let go from his part-time job as a waiter last year during the pandemic, Danny Goh hit rock bottom.
For eight months, he struggled to find work to support his wife and four young children. The family survived on instant noodles, bread dipped in coffee, and biscuits, getting by on the goodwill of relatives and church friends.

KEEP READING​

Singapore urged to halt execution of mentally-impaired man

Singapore says embrace crypto or risk being ‘left behind’

Singapore to investigate ‘unusual’ surge in COVID-19 cases

‘Hard choices’ for Singapore media after controversial law passed

While Goh has found a new commission-based job getting people to sign up for government skills upgrading and training courses, his income fluctuates between 800 Singapore dollars ($594) and 2,800 Singapore dollars ($2,078), which is barely enough for their large family.
He perpetually finds himself cash-strapped.
To save money, the family has started eating only two meals a day – simple dishes like chicken soup with rice or potatoes.
Goh often skips meals or eats once a day so that his children can have a bigger share.
Where their fridge used to be stuffed with fresh fruit, chicken, pork and beef, soft drinks and snacks, all of this is now a luxury, and eating out is out of the question.
“It’s a huge pay cut, and honestly it’s one of the hardest and most demoralising periods of my life. Times are really tough,” said the 61-year-old who rents a two-room public housing flat in the northern part of the island.
h_56987765.jpg
Singapore is renowned for its food, and the wealthy city-state’s residents are known for their love of it. Experts say those who are struggling are often too embarrassed to tell anyone [File: Wallace Woon/EPA]
In a food paradise and wealthy city-state like Singapore, food insecurity is a phenomenon that exists primarily behind closed doors. But as elsewhere in the world, COVID-19 has hit the disadvantaged the hardest, typically the lowest earners in precarious jobs, who have few safety nets and insufficient wage and labour protections.
Earlier this year, a six-month study by local charity Beyond Social Services found that the median household income of families who sought the group’s help had plunged from 1,600 Singapore dollars ($1,187) before the COVID-19 pandemic to just 500 Singapore dollars ($371).
More worryingly, a second study, which detailed the effect of the pandemic on people renting government-owned flats between July and December 2020, found food insecurity was increasingly prolonged.
Residents told Beyond that they sometimes coped with the lack of food by filling themselves up with liquids or starches, buying cheap and filling items, and making choices based on financial considerations rather than nutritional value.
For instance, some families would eat only one meal a day or give their children coffee creamer in hot water because they could not afford formula milk. The report warned the issue could escalate into a serious public health matter, with links to increased mental stress and the development of chronic health conditions.
In 2019, Singapore ranked as the world’s most food-secure nation in the Global Food Security Index.
However, one in 10 Singaporeans experienced food insecurity at least once over 12 months, reported a study by the Singapore Management University’s Lien Centre for Social Innovation. Out of this, two in five experienced food insecurity at least once a month and many of these households did not seek food support, citing embarrassment, being unaware of what was available and the belief that others needed it more than themselves.
“To a regular Singaporean, food is a national pastime,” said Beyond’s Deputy Executive Director Ranganayaki Thangavelu. “But we may not realise how poorly others are eating, how they have to make difficult choices for each meal, and how food is just a necessity to sustain them. When they are confronted by this inequality daily, it wears them down over time.”

Barely ‘staying afloat’​

Before COVID-19, eating out used to be a regular affair for 35-year-old Joshua (not his real name), his homemaker wife and their 6-year-old daughter.
But all that changed when the former studio technician was abruptly let go due to massive cost-cutting measures during the pandemic last March. He took on a contract job as a security guard, clocking 12-hour night shifts four times a week, earning 1,400 Singapore dollars ($1,039) a month – half his previous salary.
Food-from-the-Heart-Photos_2.jpg
Volunteers from Food for the Heart deliver supplies to a family in Singapore [Courtesy of Food from the Heart]
These days, every time Joshua gets his pay, the couple sits down to figure out how to stretch their monthly food budget of 400 Singapore dollars ($297).
Usually, that means buying frozen chicken rather than fresh, looking out for value buys and discounts, buying in bulk and switching to cheaper brands.
The remaining money goes to paying rent for their flat, utilities, phone and internet bills and other day-to-day expenses, with little to no buffer of savings. For a treat, they take their daughter out for a fast food meal once a month.
Joshua says that so far, they have been able to get by, helped by rations of dried food, fruit and vegetables from a local charity.
Despite the uncertainty, he is sanguine about the situation, saying that he is lucky he is still young and able to find work.
“We manage to stay afloat. For now, this is enough for my family and me to manage,” he said. “The pandemic has taught us a lesson about resilience and fighting on.”
Charities that Al Jazeera spoke to say that new sectors of society have been seeking food aid because of the pandemic, including younger “gig” workers whose projects have dried up and even middle-income families living in bigger public housing flats or private homes. About 85 percent of Singaporeans live in government-subsidised apartment blocks.
“On the outside, the house looks cushy and polished, but then the kids tell us that their mother hasn’t eaten for two days,” said The Food Bank Singapore co-founder, Nichol Ng. “For the food to be impacted, it means they are scraping the very bottom of the pot.”
Each time the government’s multi-ministry task force handling COVID-19 announces new restrictions, the charity is flooded by requests from people writing in to ask for food.
Singapore recently announced that its COVID-19 restrictions would be extended until November 21, after registering thousands of new COVID-19 cases daily.
“This means we have a lot of people who are super vulnerable and who can’t feed themselves. To know they are literally a paycheque away from not eating, it’s really scary and worrying,” Ng said.

Offering a Lifeline​

Under its Feed the City initiative last year, The Food Bank Singapore distributed one million meals.
Driven by a belief in giving beneficiaries the “autonomy of choice and dignity”, it also rolled out more neighbourhood vending machines stocked with anything from frozen bento meals to drinks, snacks and rice. The group says the machines, which the residents access with special cards, reduce the risk of the food going bad when left outside someone’s house in the tropical heat.
The charity has also rolled out other innovations, including a bank card programme that allows beneficiaries to redeem meals from food establishments.
Food from the Heart, another charity, has also seen demand surge and is now delivering 10,000 ration packs a month compared with 5,000 before COVID-19 hit.
Vending-machine-at-CCK-813a_The-Food-Bank-Singapore.jpg
Vending machines have been installed at some apartment blocks to make it easier for residents to access food supplies [Courtesy of The Food Bank Singapore]
They have also enlarged the size of their food packs after families ran out of supplies during coronavirus-related lockdowns.
“With more conversations about food insecurity, there’s less stigma of people admitting they get food support, especially those more able-bodied who have lost a job,” said chief executive Sim Bee Hia.
“We expect the pandemic’s impact to be prolonged and we just have to react and be nimble to make sure we keep the food going to those who need it as long as they need it.”
Despite the proliferation of initiatives and the rising volume of food aid, the Beyond report notes that efforts remain patchy and ad hoc, with some getting too much assistance and others not knowing how to get the help they need.
Ng said: “There’s too many ground-up initiatives and corporations with big hearts but they assume it is these few places that need help. As a result, there’s duplicated food efforts in certain neighbourhoods, while others fall through the cracks.”
To solve this, her team plans to create an online database – or “feeding directory” – detailing the range of food aid initiatives by neighbourhood. It is also working on a food-banking app where beneficiaries can submit real-time food requests to donors, while donors share the type and quantity of food they have on hand.
The Ministry of Social and Family Development (MSF) says it “recognises” that there is food insecurity in Singapore and has introduced a series of measures to address the issue since the pandemic, including grants and income relief as well as grocery and food vouchers for the less well-off.
These measures come on top of the existing ComCare programme, which provides social assistance for low-income individuals and families.
“In terms of food insecurity, Singapore has fared relatively well internationally, with rates remaining consistently low, due to our economic and social policies and collective community efforts to support those in need,” an MSF spokesperson said in an email response to Al Jazeera.
The ministry noted that about 4.5 percent of the population in Singapore was estimated to face moderate to severe food insecurity, according to the 2021 report on the State of Food Security and Nutrition in the World published by the UN Food and Agriculture Organisation (FAO).
Danny_2_by-Ee-Ming.jpg
Danny Goh’s job as a waiter disappeared with the pandemic. He says his family has been surviving on the goodwill of family and friends [Toh Ee Ming/Al Jazeera]
This was lower than in other developed economies such as the United States (8 percent), New Zealand (14 percent), Australia (12.3 percent) and South Korea (5.1 percent), it added.
But as the pandemic rages on and businesses continue to bleed, Goh is fearful of the prolonged economic impact on families like his.
“I never imagined that the situation would become worse,” he said. “There seems to be no end in sight.”
This increase is due to pandemic control...talk about saving lives n destroying people's livelihood..all that does a flu
 
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