At just about this time last year (2006), we were inundated with dizzying and mind-numbing headlines after headlines (like the Straits Times headlines on the right) of billion dollar handouts & hundred-million dollar “5-year” upgrading plans, along with reports of how the economy is doing so well that recently, Minister of Manpower Ng Eng Hen told students at NUS that theopportunities are mindboggling“.

Yet, here we are – one year later – being told by the government that they need to raise the GST (Goods & Services Tax) in order to help the lower income earners. (It makes you wonder who those ‘mindboggling opportunities’ are for, doesn’t it?)

Before we go into the issue of the GST, there are a few questions which we should be asking ourselves with regards to current govt spending.

1. Are we spending in the right areas?

2. Are all of the spending necessary?

3. Where is the money for all those upgrading promises going to come from?

The answer to the 3rd question above perhaps can be found in what the Senior Minister himself said just days ago. “We’ll look at the sums later on”, he was quoted as saying, referring to the Workfare scheme.

Perhaps they did not know where all those money for the upgrading programmes was going to come from either?

The spending frenzy

Mega Upgrading Plans

Lets recap some of the mindboggling amounts that were declared, just before the 2006 May elections and in recent times, to get a sense of the ‘spending habits’ of the govt:

Chua Chu Kang $57m

Potong Pasir (offered) $80m

Bukit Panjang $93m

Hougang (offered) $100m

Aljunied $160m

Tampines $330m

Ang Mo Kio $500m

East Coast $500m

Jalan Besar $517m

Marine Parade $565m

Sembawang $570m

Jurong Town $661m

Pasir Ris/Punggol $950m

In other areas:

$1b Lift Upgrading programme

Progress Package $2.6b

“$1b help for low-wage earners”

$435m SMU new City Campus

$322m Republic Polytechnic new Woodlands Campus

$370m new ITE College East Campus

Temasek $6.2B purchase of 96.12% stake in Thai telecom giant Shin Corp

PSA unsuccessful bid of $10.7B for P & O British shipping giant

DBS’ $10.7b unsuccessful bid for majority stake in Korea Exchange Bank

NTUC HQ Building in New Downtown $400m 32-storey glass tower

$500,000 – People’s Association’s “Image Revamp”

$7m “Glory for the Nation” project

$208 million new Supreme Court Bldg

$250,000 image-survey to find out what people think of the Land Transport Authority

$40m per year to maintain the Esplanade

A reported $1billion for the Changi Prison Complex Redevelopment

Now, I am not against all of these programmes or plans but I am certainly against some of them. $400,000 to rename Marina Bay? $200,000 to relocate a tree?

 

Raising GST is the only ‘viable’ option?

Yet, we are being told that raising the GST is the only ‘viable’ option. (Read Hri Kumar’s entry in the P65 blog. He said as much.) But what is even more worrisome is SM Goh’s statement as reported by CNA here:

“And we find that it’s better for us to raise GST, not just for the programmes, but for anything we want to spend more on – education, for example.” (Link)

Read it again: “Not just for the programmes” (like workfare, I presume) but also for ‘ANYTHING’ that they want to spend on.

What does that mean? It simply means that GST is the new tool which will fund ‘anything’ that they want to embark on from now on.

Does that not worry you? Has the govt lost its way?


A viable alternative

Hri Kumar asks for ‘viable’ alternatives. Well, one of the obvious alternatives is to re-look govt spending. There are questions that need to be asked, such as:

1. Do we really need all those multi-billion dollar upgrading packages? Are our flats so run-down that we can’t do without them – or at least scale them down?

2. How much wastage is there in govt spending?

3. In light of SM Goh’s statement, is it true then that the govt had no idea how they were going to fund the programmes they announced – and thus, the GST is the easy way out?

To say that raising the GST is to ‘help the poorer Singaporeans” or to ‘tilt the advantage’ in their favour is just political propaganda dressing. The more substantive alternative, before we even consider raising the GST, is to take a look at current programmes – and the money being dished out for them.

Lavish, wasteful govt spending not new

Lavish, wasteful, unnecessary spending by the govt is not something new or surprising. Even Ex-MP of the PAP Tan Soo Khoon highlighted this a few years ago in his rather famous parliamentary speech – dubbed the “Seven Wonders Of Singapore” speech – where he criticized govt spending on unnecessary or lavish buildings which are competing to see “which can be better than the Four Seasons Hotel”.

And from the lists above, we must wonder if the same careless, care-free mindset has set in again within the government.

The real “Wonder”, in my opinion, is that although the govt is lamenting that they do not have enough money to fund the programmes they want to embark on (despite being able to promise billions of dollars worth of upgrading during general elections time), they are also contemplating raising the salaries of civil servants, and hence ministers’ salaries as well!

 

Increasing ministers’ salaries and GST?

In fact, going by what some ministers have said (or hinted), increase in ministers’ salaries is a done deal. Once declared, there’s no way the govt will make a u-turn, that much we can be sure.

What the ministers and the govt as a whole should be looking at is whether we have our priorities right. Whether waste is rampant in govt spending, whether the programmes or plans are necessary – and how we can curtail or shelve some of these plans in order to re-direct the funds to more necessary areas.

Raising the GST on the pretext of helping the poor just does not cut it, if we do not also look at present govt spending.

For if you do not even bat an eyelid while dishing out $500,000 just to ‘revamp’ the People’s Association ‘image’, how can you look singaporeans in the eyes and ask for more money?

For how do you justify – morally – an increase in ministers’ salary & promising billions of dollars in upgrading programmes, and at the same time tell the people that you do not have enough money to help the poor?

Has the government got its priorities right?

 

Subscribe
Notify of
0 Comments
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments
You May Also Like

High Altitude Sexism?

Ghui / In our modern day and age, it is accepted that…

Straits Times does hack job on forum letter?

From the blog Visaisahero: Letter sent by by my good friend Samuel C.…

一恶痞被逮后情况好转 超市盼警方增巡逻次数

连年遭恶痞骚扰的超市指出,感谢各方帮助,也希望警方增加更多定期巡逻次数。 以往曾遭恶痞骚扰,甚至导致员工担心人身安全而不敢上班的Angel Supermart超市,自周末其中一名54岁男子被逮捕后,情况已经好转。 超市周末(9月26日)在脸书帖文指出,感谢警方关注此事并将其中一名嫌犯逮捕。 然而,超市强调,他们并没有恶意要重伤任何人。“他有问题,我们希望他能够获得所需的帮助。但是请远离我们,我们只希望在没有安全威胁和恐惧的情况下,经营好我们的生意。” 帖文中提及“恶痞不只一人”,而这里又是个繁忙社区,因此促请警方能够更关注这个地方,并进行定期巡逻。 超市也强调他们在此事件上,并没有针对外国人或新加坡人。“事实上,就我们在所有组屋区的分行,所遇到的大多数困难情况都是来自本地人,外国人的事件通常在经过解释后都能够解决。” 超市在周日(9月27日)再次发出帖文,感谢警方亲临现场,和超市的团队交流,并且向超市承诺,会进行更多定期巡逻次数。“我们当然无限欢迎。”

内政部援引内安法逮捕三名印尼女佣

新加坡内政部今日发文告称,本月有三名印尼籍女佣,被指有意参与伊斯兰国组织(ISIS)圣战和资助恐怖主义,遭当局援引内安法令拘留,目前调查仍在进行中。 根据文告,三名女佣分别是33岁的阿宁迪亚(Anindia Afiyantari)、36岁的列诺(Retno Hernayani)和31岁的图米妮(Turmini),在本地已工作约6至13年。 在2018年,他们接触到有关伊国组织的资讯而被激化,并参与亲ISIS的社交媒体群组或频道,接触炸弹袭击、斩首等暴力内容和视频。他们也受到诸如Aman Abdurrahman和Usman Haidar bin Seff等极端印尼传教士的影响。 阿宁迪亚和列诺曾在休假时碰面,也发展他们国外的亲军事联系,甚至拥有“志同道合”的“线上男友”。她们两位也有意到叙利亚参加圣战,例如列诺认为穆斯林应到巴勒斯坦、克省米尔等冲突地区,和“穆斯林敌人”作战。 此外,他们也涉及资助和恐怖活动有关联的海外机构。另一方面,尚有另一名印尼女佣也被逮捕接受调查,虽然她并未被激化,不过被指知情不报,完成调查后她被遣返印尼。 文告中内政部声称,新加坡仍面对持续的恐怖主义威胁。尽管在去年伊国组织已丢失大量领土,不过三名女佣仍被激化,显示伊国组织影响力仍在。…