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Yet another bad news for SDP

RonRon

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In-SG-compFRANCISONG.jpg


GENEVA - SINGAPORE is the third most competitive economy, according to a survey released on Tuesday.

It went up two places from last year, mainly because of increased confidence in the country's public institutions, efficient markets for goods and labour, as well as high-quality financial markets.

The poll was conducted on 13,000 business leaders by the Geneva-based World Economic Forum.

Coming in first place is Switzerland, toppling last year's champ - the United States - which came in second this year.

The US lost its title as the most competitive economy in the world, mainly because of the financial crisis and accumulated fiscal deficits.

'Given that the financial crisis originated in large part in the United States, it is hardly surprising that there has been a weakening of the assessment of its financial market sophistication,' the survey said. 'The country's greatest weakness continues to be related to its macro economic stability.'

Switzerland has overtaken the US because its economic performance has been 'relatively stable,' the survey said. Swiss financial markets have 'weakened somewhat,' it said, citing difficulties for banks.

The major Swiss banks have been hard hit by the financial crisis.

The survey made no mention of Swiss banking secrecy, that has started to crumble under US pressure to hand over client names of American taxpayers suspected of setting up secret offshore accounts with Swiss bank UBS AG.

Sweden maintained its fourth rank, while Denmark slipped two ranks to fifth. They were followed by Finland, Germany, Japan, Canada and the Netherlands.

Pollsters asked business figures to rate 133 countries on good government; transport and telecommunications infrastructure; openness to innovation; intellectual property protection; and availability of talent. -- AP
 

TeeKee

Alfrescian
Loyal
there's a price to pay for competitiveness..

wages are low and employees welfare are curtailed...

the GINI index continues to widen...

good for business, but bad for the workers...

Switzerland and USA pays top wages to their worker bees....sgp bosses pays peanuts to our cleaning ladies...

Switzerland got this, we got what?

learn-french-in-chamonix-3.jpg
 

FuckSamLeong

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Great news indeed. Singaporeons can now afford 150k one roomer, 200k two roomer, 300k 3 roomer, 400k 4 roomer and 600k five roomers! Long live Lee Kuan Yew!
 

jw5

Moderator
Moderator
Loyal
It's not necessarily bad news.
The SDP or other opposition parties can ask the people:
"Singapore is the 3rd most competitive economy. But how is your life and has it got better over the years?"
 

Porfirio Rubirosa

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same when it comes to GDP growth which our ministars pay are pegged

WASHINGTON (AFP) – Joseph Stiglitz, the Nobel laureate economist tapped to head a new French study, said Tuesday he sees gross domestic product (GDP), the most often cited yardstick, as an imperfect indicator.

Stiglitz, named by French President Nicolas Sarkozy to head a panel to find a new method of economic calculation that will include quality-of-life factors, said the current yardsticks “only reward governments if they increase materialistic production.”

“If you improve the quality of life, but it doesn’t show up in more material consumption, it doesn’t show up in GDP, and you’ll be criticized,” the US economist told AFP in a phone interview.

Sarkozy earlier announced in Paris that Stiglitz and a fellow Nobel economics laureate, Amartya Sen of India, will participate in the project.

The 64-year-old winner of the Nobel economics prize in 2001 and currently a professor at Columbia University in New York, is to chair the panel.

Stiglitz, known for his outspokenness and criticism of globalization, said the French president had given him “a broad-ranging mandate trying to put together a commission study on the broad questions of how do you measure well-being.”

“Among the economics profession there has been a strong sense for a long while that gross domestic product is not a good measure. It doesn’t measure changes in well-being, it doesn’t measure comparisons of well-being across countries,” he said.

Thus, if political leaders “are trying to maximize GDP and GDP is not a good measure, you are maximizing the wrong thing and it can be counterproductive,” he said.

The former chief economist at the World Bank, who resigned in 1999 after accusing rich countries of not doing enough to help the poor, said he hoped the panel’s findings would go beyond the French framework.

“Hopefully this will have global consequence,” he said.

“It doesn’t necessarily mean that there will be a replacement of current measures, but maybe a construction of complementary measures,” he said.

He said there was some discussion about the possible participation of other countries in the project.

“Whether we will do it just under the auspices of the French government or whether there will be other partners is a question that is still open,” he said.

For him, measuring growth is a global issue made even more urgent by the problems caused by global warming.

“The standard measures of GDP do not measure the degradation of the environment, the depreciation of natural resources.”

And GDP growth can mask a sharp decline in individuals’ quality of life, he argued.

“It’s been particularly true in the US where GDP has been going up but actually most people not only feel worse off, their measure of income is actually going down,” he said.

Stiglitz said he had agreed to take on the project only after the French government assured him the new panel “will have complete liberty” to define the problem and to analyze it.

“I think that on all sides of the political spectrum there is a recognition of these deficiencies, and a recognition that it is important that we develop better metrics, no matter whether you are on the left or the right.”

Stiglitz said he had spoken with Sen, who would be a member of the panel and an adviser. Sen won the Nobel economics prize in 1998 for work on developing economies and on well-being in India.

Stiglitz said the timeframe for the project had not yet been determined, but he was aiming for a result in the “medium term,” or within the next 18-24 months.

It's not necessarily bad news.
The SDP or other opposition parties can ask the people:
"Singapore is the 3rd most competitive economy. But how is your life and has it got better over the years?"
 

halsey02

Alfrescian (Inf)
Asset
Great news indeed. Singaporeons can now afford 150k one roomer, 200k two roomer, 300k 3 roomer, 400k 4 roomer and 600k five roomers! Long live Lee Kuan Yew!

You forgot to add, The Pinnacles, you can't pay, you get PINES in you Ass!:p
 

Char_Azn

Alfrescian (Inf)
Asset
same when it comes to GDP growth which our ministars pay are pegged

U give our ministers too little credit. Our minister's pay are pegged to the top earners in SG, NOT GDP growth.

Pegging it to GDP growth would mean that if the GDP drops during a recession(like in the present case) their pay would go down. However pegging it to the top earners in SG, someone from the top tier will always earn more money(theortically speaking) hence their pay will always go up
 

Watchman

Alfrescian
Loyal
Switzerland got this, we got what?

LKYTC0318.jpg


We got this, high life

25+anni.jpg


Guaranteed marriages, in first year

poor2rs.jpg


Very cheap scavengers almost free recycling workers

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Even glamorizing occupation and producing products which nobody wants or watch
 
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