Thurs, 5 Mar 2015
THE STRAITS TIMES
SINGAPORE
Budget incentives don't help firms manage daily woes.
SMEs badly hit by rising business costs and labour shortage, MPs warn.
Published on Mar 5, 2015 1:36 AM
By Chia Yan Min
BACKGROUND STORY
"REMOVE GST ON ESSENTIALS
GST is a regressive tax and the Government should identify essential goods and remove the GST on these essential goods.
To help cushion the impact on lower-income earners, we should exempt GST on certain necessities such as milk powder, diapers, medicine, health supplements, mobility aids and exercise equipment for the elderly. Apparently, the usage of diapers was rationed in some nursing homes to reduce costs.
This is very unhygienic for the wearer.
I would also like to point out that between (economies) like Sweden, which spends about 30 per cent of gross domestic product on social spending, and... Hong Kong, which spends about 3 per cent, there is a middle path. Finding the middle path is what Singapore has to get right.
- Non-Constituency MP Lina Chiam, on exempting essential goods from goods and services tax
COMPETENCY AND REALITY CHECK
While we may not be very rational beings, in the long run, we all have to face reality, whether in relationships, in the career we choose or the politicians we vote for. And a competency check is also a good reality check.
Singaporeans have had 56 years of experience with (the) People's Action Party's competency, starting in 1959 when Singapore achieved self-government.
Admittedly, competency is always a work in progress and we can always improve, even if we make mis-steps along the way, such as delay in improving our infrastructure and capacity of our public services, as our Prime Minister mentioned recently.
But by any international standards and in the large scheme of things, our PAP Government has always been competent.
- MP Sitoh Yi Pin, on picking a competent government
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