Economics
Which air miles credit card are you?
We take a look at the best air miles credit cards for three types of Singaporeans: credit card newbies, world travelers, and high flyers. Which are you, and what’s your air miles credit card?Credit card terms and conditions are valid as of 5 October 2016.
With all the air miles credit cards in Singapore, you’re basically spoilt for choice. But it’s not enough to compare the base miles you can accrue – there are other factors to consider as well.
Each air miles credit card has its own benefits, and one card might be better for you than another.
Try finding yours in our best air miles credit cards list below:
Top Air Miles Credit Cards in Singapore | |||
American Express Singapore Airlines KrisFlyer Card | ANZ Travel Visa Signature Card | Standard Chartered Visa Infinite Card | |
Best For | Credit Card Newbies | World Travelers | High Flyers |
Miles Earned Locally | 1.1 mile = S$1
2 miles = S$1 spent on singaporeair.com, silkair.com, KrisShop and at SilkAirSkyShop |
1.4 mile = S$1
2.8 mile = S$1 on air tickets at Qantas and JetStar |
1.4 mile = S$1 |
Miles Earned Overseas | 1.1 mile = S$1
2 miles = S$1 in June and December |
2.8 mile = S$1 retail spend in Australia and New Zealand
1.4 mile = S$1 in other parts of the world |
3 miles = S$1 |
Welcome Offers | 8,000 KrisFlyer miles
5,000 KrisFlyer miles on your first charge + 3,000 KrisFlyer miles when you spend S$700 in the first 6 months |
Up to 25,000 miles
10,000 Travel$ when you pay the card’s annual fee + S$10,800 Travel$ if you spend S$3,000 in the first month OR S$2,000 Travel$ when you spend S$500 on your first month |
35,000 miles or 25,000 miles and S$100 Uber credits |
Minimum Annual Income Required | Singaporeans/PRs: S$30,000 annual income
Foreigners: S$60,000 annual income |
Singaporeans/PRs: S$60,000 annual income
Foreigners: S$90,000 annual income |
For Priority or Private Banking customers:
Singaporeans/PR: S$30,000 Foreigners: S$60,000
For Non-Priority or Private Banking customers: S$150,000 |
1. Best Air Miles Credit Card for First Time Cardholders
Winner: American Express Singapore Airlines Krisflyer Credit Card
Here’s the scoop on the American Express Singapore Airlines Krisflyer Credit Card: it’s the most convenient way to earn KrisFlyer miles. Unlike other air miles cards, which charge a fee to convert miles earned into their partner airlines’ miles programmes, any Krisflyer miles earned on this card gets automatically credited to your Krisflyer account.
Earning miles is very easy. To start off, you earn 5,000 bonus KrisFlyer miles on your first charge, and 3,000 KrisFlyer miles if you spend S$700 on your first 6 months.
You also get a cool 1.1 KrisFlyer mile for every dollar spent in Singapore and overseas, and 2 KrisFlyer miles on purchases made on singaporeair.com, silkair.com, and KrisShop. If you spend overseas during June and December, you get 2 KrisFlyer miles for every S$1.
We did some quick calculations of how many KrisFlyer miles you can potentially earn in a year, assuming you spend S$800 on your card each month, and book a weekend holiday in Hong Kong in June:
Amount Charged to Card | KrisFlyer Miles Earned | |
Bonus miles | 8,000 KrisFlyer Miles | |
Local monthly spend | S$800 x 12 = S$9,600 | 10,560 KrisFlyer Miles |
Round trip ticket to Hong Kong purchased on SingaporeAir.com | S$620 | 1,240 KrisFlyer Miles |
Overseas spend in June | S$300 | 600 KrisFlyer Miles |
KrisFlyer Miles Earned in 1 Year | 20,400 KrisFlyer Miles |
20,400 KrisFlyer miles is more than enough for a one-way ticket to Bali from Singapore!
With the first year’s annual fees waived, and subsequent ones at S$173.50–one of the lowest in the market–this card is great to start with if you have never owned a credit card. And its S$30,000 minimum income requirement allows the majority of Singaporeans to be eligible for it.
A number of perks also come with the Krisflyer Credit Card, including a S$100 cash rebate at Grab, 500 bonus miles on your first charge at GrabPay, and up to 50% off restaurants in Singapore through the American Express Selects dining programme. Not bad for your first air miles card at all.
2. Best Air Miles Credit Card for World Travelers
Winner: ANZ Travel Visa Signature Card
Frequent fliers shouldn’t do without the ANZ Travel Visa Signature Card in their wallets. For one thing, you earn an amazing 1.4 miles for every S$1 you spend in Singapore.
Cardmembers also get 2.8 miles for every S$1 spent flight tickets on Jetstar and Qantas, as well as 2.8 miles for every S$1 spent when you holiday at Australia and New Zealand. These are the highest base miles you can earn on a non-Visa Infinite card!
New cardmembers can earn up to 25,000 bonus miles if they spend wisely in the first month – one of the highest welcome miles being offered in Singapore today.
Here’s how you can earn the full amount. First, opt to pay the first year annual fee to get 10,000 air miles. Then charge at least S$3,000 to your card during the first month to get a bonus 10,800 miles.
Then based on the base miles of 1.4 mile per S$1 spent locally, you get 4,2000 more miles, adding up to a total of 25,000 welcome miles.
Don’t want to spend that much in a single month? Charging as little as S$500 in the first month gets you 2,000 bonus miles on top of the 10,000 miles from paying the annual fee. Then you get 700 miles on your S$500 spend (1.4 miles x S$500 = 700 miles).
In total, you’ll still be picking up 12,700 miles.
If you charge at least $3,000 the first month | If you charge at least $500 in the first month | |
Miles earned for paying your 1st year annual fee | 10,000 miles | 10,000 miles |
Bonus miles earned in the first month | 10,800 miles | 2,000 miles |
Miles earned based on spend
(1.4 miles per $1) |
4,200 miles | 700 miles |
Total Bonus Miles | 25,000 miles | 12,700 miles |
So whether you’re wandering through cobblestone streets of European cities or admiring the scenery in Australia and New Zealand, the ANZ Travel Visa Card can get seasoned world travelers there.
3. Best Air Miles Credit Card for High Flyers
Winner: Standard Chartered Visa Infinite Card
For high flyers, this card wins all other air miles credit cards in the market hands down. With base miles of 1.4 miles per dollar spent locally and 3 miles per dollar spent overseas, the Standard Chartered Visa Infinite Card accumulates points faster than most.
With a minimum income requirement of S$150,000, for non-priority/private banking customers and S$30,000 for Singaporean priority/private banking customers, this card is mostly applicable for frequent business travellers.
If you’re to use your own credit card to charge company expenses overseas, the Standard Chartered Visa Infinite Card helps you rack up miles. Say you charge S$2,000 per month on flights, accommodations, and dining on business trips abroad – you’ll get 72,000 miles at the end of a calendar year!
You’ll also receive 35,000 miles or 25,000 miles and S$100 Uber credits when you apply for the Standard Chartered Visa Infinite Credit Card.
Our detailed review has more details about the amazing privileges in store for you.
Singsaver.com.sg, Singapore’s go-to personal finance comparison platform, guides consumers on the best money habits with its credit card comparison tool and allows real-time personal loans product comparison.
Economics
Thailand’s household debt reaches record high amid slow economic growth
Thailand’s household debt has surged to a record 606,378 baht per household, driven by slow economic growth and high living costs. A UTCC survey found 71.6% of households struggle to meet repayments. The government is working on measures to alleviate the burden.
Thailand’s household debt has soared to a record high, with many citizens struggling to manage loan repayments due to weak economic growth, declining incomes, and rising living costs, according to a recent survey.
The study, conducted by the University of the Thai Chamber of Commerce (UTCC) in early September, revealed an average household debt of 606,378 baht (S$23,600), marking an 8.4% increase from the previous year. This is the highest level of household debt recorded since the survey began in 2009.
The survey highlighted that 69.9% of this debt is attributed to formal lending, a decrease from 80.2% last year, while informal lending has risen to 30%. This shift is largely due to many individuals reaching their borrowing limits from formal financial institutions, forcing them to seek credit from informal sources such as loan sharks.
The study also noted that a significant number of households are facing difficulties meeting their financial obligations, with monthly debt payments averaging 18,787 baht, up from 16,742 baht the previous year. The delinquency rate stands at 71.6%.
The growing household debt is placing pressure on Thailand’s economy, the second largest in Southeast Asia, which is already grappling with high borrowing costs and sluggish exports amid a slow recovery in China, its main trading partner.
Both the government and the Bank of Thailand have raised concerns over the country’s total household debt, which reached 16.4 trillion baht, or 90.8% of gross domestic product (GDP), at the end of March 2024—one of the highest levels in Asia. The central bank has introduced measures aimed at reducing this ratio to 89% by next year.
For comparison, International Monetary Fund (IMF) data from 2022 shows household debt as a percentage of GDP at 67% in Malaysia and 48.6% in Singapore.
The UTCC survey, which polled 1,300 respondents from 1-7 September, found that the majority had experienced challenges repaying debt over the past year and expected to continue facing difficulties in the coming year.
UTCC President Thanavath Phonvichai expressed concern over the long-standing debt problem, stating that household debt is primarily incurred for daily expenses, housing, vehicles, and business operations, and does not necessarily undermine the overall economy. He added that the situation would improve once the domestic economy returns to strong growth.
In response to the debt crisis, the Federation of Thai Industries has reduced its 2024 target for domestic vehicle sales by 200,000 units to 550,000, citing high household debt and stricter lending conditions as key factors reducing demand.
Finance Minister Pichai Chunhavajira emphasized the urgency of addressing household debt and urged the Bank of Thailand to provide more support to retail borrowers. He also mentioned plans to engage with banks to explore further assistance measures for debtors.
Thailand’s newly appointed Prime Minister, Paetongtarn Shinawatra, has pledged to stimulate the economy immediately.
On Monday, the government announced plans to distribute 145 billion baht to state welfare cardholders starting next week.
This is part of a broader “digital wallet” program aimed at providing financial relief to up to 50 million people, although it now appears much of the support will be disbursed in cash.
AFP
Top rice supplier India bans some exports
India, the world’s largest rice exporter, bans non-basmati white rice exports to ensure domestic availability and tackle rising prices amid global food crises, potentially impacting rice-dependent nations.
MUMBAI, INDIA — The world’s biggest rice exporter India has banned some overseas sales of the grain “with immediate effect”, the government said, in a move that could drive international prices even higher.
Rice is a major world food staple and prices on international markets have soared to decade highs as the world grappled with the Covid pandemic, the war in Ukraine and the impact of the El Nino weather phenomenon on production levels.
India would ban exports of non-basmati white rice — which accounts for around a quarter of its total — the consumer affairs and food ministry said.
The move would “ensure adequate availability” and “allay the rise in prices in the domestic market”, it said in a statement late Thursday.
India accounts for more than 40 percent of all global rice shipments, so the decision could “risk exacerbating food insecurity in countries highly dependent on rice imports”, data analytics firm Gro Intelligence said in a note.
Countries expected to be hit by the ban include African nations, Turkey, Syria, and Pakistan — all of them already struggling with high food-price inflation — the firm added.
Global demand saw Indian exports of non-basmati white rice jump 35 percent year-on-year in the second quarter, the ministry said.
The increase came even after the government banned broken rice shipments and imposed a 20 percent export tax on white rice in September.
India exported 10.3 million tonnes of non-basmati white rice last year and Rabobank senior analyst Oscar Tjakra said alternative suppliers did not have spare capacity to fill the gap.
“Typically the major exporters are Thailand, Vietnam, and to some extent Pakistan and the US,” he told AFP. “They won’t have enough supply of rice to replace these.”
Moscow’s cancellation of the Black Sea grain deal that protected Ukrainian exports has already led to wheat prices creeping up, he pointed out.
“Obviously this will add to inflation around the world because rice can be used as a substitute for wheat.”
Rice prices in India rose 14-15 per cent in the year to March and the government “clearly viewed these as red lines from a domestic food security and inflation point of view”, rating agency Crisil’s research director Pushan Sharma said in a note.
India had already curbed exports of wheat and sugar last year to rein in prices.
— AFP
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