stfoodprices
“If all else fails, serious consideration should be given to allowing foreigners to become hawkers, provided they have completed the training programme,” said Ms Elizabeth Bennet, writing for the Straits Times.
Ms Bennet, who describes herself as “just an ang moh” (Caucasian), was referring to how hawker centres in Singapore “were endangered”. This, she said, was because of several factors, including first-generation hawkers dying or retiring because of age, and their children not willing to take over, the low profit margins of running a hawker stall, and better job opportunities for the young in other industries and sectors.
One way to help hawkers “make decent profits” and “have a higher quality of life”, Ms Bennet says, is for the public to accept “moderate price increases”.
She then suggested that the Government could offer “subsidised food cards” for the low-income citizens, if such increases in food prices made food too expensive for them.
Read the full article on Public Opinion here: “Accept higher food prices & let foreigners be hawkers, says “ang moh”.

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

Risk-free nest eggs

The CPF savings are wholly invested in Special Singapore Government Securities, which…

“No need to be so hurried in life and also no need to earn so much money.”

Gilbert Goh asks, “What do we really want in life?”

Discrimination of overweight staff in Singapore hospitals

– By Ravi Philemon – “If you are fat, how do you…

At the Ringside of the global village

Ho Rui An reviews Mem Morrison’s Ringside performance which was held at the National Museum this week in conjunction with the Work-Life: Making of Community forum