Monday, 9 March 2015
THE STRAITS TIMES
THE BIG STORY
Middle-income families feeling salary squeeze
Published on Feb 22, 2015 12:41 PM
BACKGROUND STORY
FAMILY WANTS BIGGER HELPING HAND FROM GOVERNMENT
Mr Ben Lim, 35, is a part-time taxi driver and insurance agent. Together with his wife, who works in an accounting firm, they make about $4,000 a month.
Some of that income goes towards paying off debts that Mr Lim incurred after his coffee shop venture - in which he had invested $50,000 - folded two years ago. The couple employ a full-time maid to take care of their two sons, aged four and six. They also help pay for a maid to look after his wife's parents.
While Mr Lim and his wife are better off than many low-income families, they could do with a bigger helping hand from the Government, he says. He hopes this year's Budget will, for instance, give subsidies for families like his that need help to care for both children and the elderly.
"If the Government can help middle-class families like us that have to foot the bill for two maids, that will be good," he says.
If there are any goodies in the SG50 Budget for all Singaporeans, he also hopes they will take the form of vouchers for daily expenses or a cash bonus.
Another way the Government can help families like his, he says, is to boost Edusave contributions and extend the scheme so that it can be used for more supplementary and enrichment programmes.
"At this stage in my life, I am most concerned about my family and my children, not myself," he says. "I would like the Government to do more for my children, whether it is through a study fund or Edusave."
Lim Yan Liang
Maid relief
"If the Government can help middle-class families like us that have to foot the bill for two maids, that will be good."
MR BEN LIM, a part-time taxi driver and insurance agent who employs two maids to care for his children and elderly parents-in-law
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