Random Discourse – Singapore’s Low Fertility Rate


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I saw these comments on Twitter. I do not know what to make of them. As far as I am concerned, she basically just aped the government gahmen line without giving a much serious thought of the issue. Such pro-gahmen comments in general shows a lack of deeper understanding of the matter and lack of empathy towards the plight of fellow Singaporeans. I even detect a faint trace of selfishness there.

Let me explain the reason for my strong reaction… and just like my favourite character Lai Wuji [賴戊己] used to say in the Taiwanese drama series ‘Love’ [愛], “You listen to me carefully.” (你給我聽清楚了。)

First of all, the Aussie comment that was mentioned. I was told several years ago that if you are a plumber, it is not difficult for you to migrate to Australia because you are the kind of skilled labour that it lacked. However, while the Singapore gahmen tells us that we need more foreign fallen talents, I for one am ignorant of what in specific are the skilled labour that our education system has failed to provide either in part or completely. Even though the rational middle voters and most understanding Singaporeans know for a fact that investors will pass us by if we can’t provide enough workers to fill the jobs (as the gahmen claims), there are often murmurs on the ground that certain foreigners are taken in because they accept a lower pay. Yet, in spite of all these, our lapdog main stream media took matters even further by suggesting that we Singaporeans would probably all starve if we don’t hire foreign workers! (see screen shot attached below).


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It wasn’t long before some of us believe that certain companies deliberately discriminate against locals by hiring foreigners, and not even a younger and better educated Singaporean who are generally offered a lower starting pay. If wages for Singaporeans are too high and making us uncompetitive, to what are we making that comparison? Now, this is not arguing that we Singaporeans ‘deserved’ a job, but one of the roles of the gahmen is to create jobs and what is the purpose of creating jobs for foreigners when it is the job of the gahmen of their native countries to do so? What evidence is there that hiring foreign workers lower cost of operation or even our cost of living when prices go up all the same? Perhaps we should all just fool ourselves saying that the cost isn’t going up faster than it already is.

This perception is made worse if we know of a friend who remained unemployed for long periods while a foreigner took the job he is capable of doing. Very little is done to help the Singaporean. Instead he is admonished for being demanding or being complacent and lazy. Thus, this self defeating foreign worker policy continued to run its course while wages continue to be depressed for local workers allowing the cost of living out paced it. It is no surprise that the cries for minimum wages are getting acceptance in some quarters, even when I don’t believe a minimum wage is necessary across every sector or for all jobs.

That brings me to address the next point – declining birth rate. It maybe true that we require immigrants to keep up with our population decline. However, the real issue behind our population decline – i.e. the high cost of living – has never been addressed. While wages are depressed and the pricing of our so-called ‘affordable public housing’ pegged to that of private property, how the Tali-PAP gahmen continue to call it affordable is unimaginable. For e.g. A 3-room in Tanglin Halt costs $9,000 in 1971 (the year I was born) and a worker who earns $500 a month could pay it off in 10 years. The cost to wages ratio is 18:1. Today, a brand new HDB cost $300,000. Assuming that a graduates starting pay in $2,500, the cost to wages ratio is *gasp* a staggering 120:1!! (Even if they get $4000, it is 75:1 and many of them have study loans to pay off.) For many of us, to pay off my housing loan in 10 years is almost next to impossible. We can however console ourselves that the cost of a home in Beijing or Shanghai is no better, and is perhaps worse when we consider the wages there.

The gahmen may argue that quality of the flats is now better, but in most cases they are also smaller. It now requires a couple to both work for almost the entirety of their useful life to just pay for the roof over their heads. I don’t even want to talk about how the gahmen hoodwinked us into believing that their discount is a subsidy. Is it a surprise that couples don’t intend to have kids because it probably costs at least another quarter of a million dollars to raise a child from infancy to university graduate? Or that kids end up wielding parangs and chopping up people because their parents are never around to mentor and discipline them?

Let’s not forget, even though the gahmen insists that there the skyrocketing property prices aren’t caused by foreigners, we had to question **who** is offering obscene amount of Cash Over Value [COV] to obtain local properties. It almost sound contradicting that Singaporeans accused foreigners of depressing wages while we also accused them of pushing our property sky-high. But remember that it only require one high-flying foreigner to complete a deal to bring up the prices, even though he isn’t a part of the horde of FTTFs [Foreign True Talent False] which are pushing wages down. Some might say we should be smart and walk away from sellers demanding high COV, but where to? Into the blue sea around us? When there is scant evidence that foreigners are doing us any good, it is a no brainer why Singaporeans reject foreign immigrants! After all, the general perception is that they played a big part in screwing up our lives!

Even if property prices and depressed wages are not the most compelling reason for Singaporeans not to have babies, don’t forget that commercial property prices will also go up in tandem with that of residential ones. Certainly there won’t be one price for land sold for residential properties and another for commercial ones, right? As a result, rentals increase for shops and hawkers, and that translates into higher costs for daily necessities and food. It is not uncommon that a simple meal can cost $6.50 or even $10 at certain food courts while the poor hawker at the hawker center would lose business when he raised prices by a mere 50cents, or when he cut the portion of his servings. It is no wonder why I noticed an increasing number of empty stalls in hawker centers of ageing estates, and the traditional provision shop is almost extinct replaced by mini-mart chain stores? No wonder even McDonald’s restaurants are packed during lunch! After all, McDonald’s value meals at discounted prices during lunch is at times even cheaper than food sold in the food court!

The writer who wrote the comment asked, “If we don’t want an influx of foreigners, are we going to pay for higher taxes for our ageing population as a result of our declining birthrate?” The fact is, I am already paying more here and now to just survive with an influx of foreigners. So just what the #@%$& are you talking about? And last I checked Singapore is not a welfare state so is there even an allocation in the budget for the aged? *sigh*

That brings me to the remaining comment – “without immigrants we are a piece of wasteland”. Perhaps that would be true in 1819. But by the time we were expelled from Malaysia in 1965, few of us could claim to be immigrants. Many of our parents are either born here or in Malaya, which is hardly consider ‘foreign’ back then. In fact, Lao Lee himself admitted that he was convinced that Singapore only had a future within the Federation before Dr. Goh Keng Swee negotiated the separation. Not to mention that 4 years after the separation, racial tensions in the Federation spilled over to Singapore after May 13, 1969.

I must ask, in the first 20 years of our nations existence, did our fair country ‘spread her legs’ freely to foreigners? Why haven’t we perished and turned into a waste land then?

I would be surprised if the high cost of living and property prices that enslaved us all hasn’t act like some kind of anti-Viagra / anti-Cialis that kept the Singaporean male (except the mini$ter$ and the high paying civil serpents servants) from getting an erection and making babies. It is certainly cheaper to just get a pack of condoms. ‘Phiak phiak raw and shoot inside’ is a no-no not just with prostitutes.

In short, the best way to raise the fertility rate is to give us real affordable housing and bring down the cost of living. All of this will require some hard work and far reaching policies that will take time to be effective. Unfortunately for us, this gahmen has so far taken the easy way out with our population issues by simply accepting more foreigners (just like how it has resorted to cheap foreign labour to attract investments instead of raising productivity). So much for these so-called top talents paid millions a year! If this policy is allowed to continue, the problem will only worsen with no end in sight.

Fortunately, other than the old man still being ‘tee kee’ [Hokkien for ‘iron teeth’, which means ‘stubborn in words’], it would appear to me that even the ruling party has realised that the current immigration policy is a untenable position in the upcoming election. I would love the old man to just repeat the famous ‘If native Singaporeans are falling behind because “the spurs are not stuck into the hide”, that is their problem” statement. The middle voters definitely need a little shove to cross the line.

Anyway, I do hope that the current property cooling measures and the reduction in number of permanent residency [PR] issued to foreigners are going to be long term policies and not just an election gimmick. Or else there will be no light at the end of the tunnel for the true-blue Singaporean.

Before I end, it was no surprise to me that a recent poll showed that our youths have no sense of belonging and would prefer to leave and work elsewhere if conditions permit. Food for thought?


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Random Thoughts – Immigrants, Citizenship & Singlish

In my previous article I mentioned the concern of a friend who mentioned that an increase in homosexuals may further impact the birthrate in Singapore. The end result maybe even further relaxing of immigration laws to maintain our population growth. While the many Singaporeans who remain single, and those who are married but do not intend to have children ‘contribute’ most to the low birthrate, I am sure most of us can agree that we do not need another factor to aggravate the problem.

The other concern is having more foreign immigrants may only set back our nation building and increase the level of disharmony in our society since new immigrants may not respect our traditions, our values and our way of life. This reminded me of a really minor incident that happened several weeks ago at a handphone shop in People’s Park Complex, though this probably did not involve individual(s) who recently obtained Singapore citizenship.

Excerpts: April 28, 2009 (Tue) [The NewPaper NudePaper]
In Singapore, it is not uncommon to hear someone address a female stranger as ‘xiao jie’ [小姐, miss in Mandarin].

But that was also what got him into hot water with the woman, a Chinese national.

Why?

In China, the term ‘xiao jie’ is often used to mean ‘prostitute’. It is seen as disrespectful to address a woman as ‘xiao jie’ there. (See report below.)

I find it amusing that a salesman who addressed a woman from China who walked by his shop as ‘xiao jie’ got him into hot water. Not to mention that the report mentioned that the salesman who called out to her came from Malaysia. If I hadn’t read through the article, I would have thought this to be a case of mistaken identity by some local Ah Beng in a second hand mobile phone shop either in City Plaza near Paya Lebar MRT or some old shop houses in Geylang.

What the heck, really? For ages Singaporeans addresses ladies as ‘xiao jie’ out of courtesy. No one has taught us that it meant anything offensive – be it night club hostess or prostitute. The fact that it has independently evolved in China to carry those negative connotations doesn’t mean it applies here as well! There is certainly no special meaning behind that term nor is there any intention to insult by doing so. Perhaps, the Ministry of Foreign Affairs (MFA) should work with the Chinese Embassy on some familiarisation courses for PRC (People’s Republic of China) citizens coming to Singapore to avoid such misunderstanding. Or as another friend jokingly say, have this said in the announcement on incoming flights: possession and trafficking of drugs in Singapore carries the death sentence, and in Singapore ‘xiao jie’ is a polite term and does not mean prostitute。 [在新加坡拥有和走私毒品可能处以死刑,还有小姐在新加坡是友善的称呼,并没有妓女的意思。].

Funny, but it is such incidents that convinced my friend and I in some way, that an increase in immigrants will only retard our nation building efforts. It had already worried us when a woman during the AWARE EOGM said she has no confidence in a dominantly Christian and Chinese ExCo in taking care of her concerns. To me, this person is the testimony that 44 years after our separation from Malaysia, Singaporeans remained independent of one another due to our race and religion. By making that comment, this person had trampled upon our national pledge. With this in mind, we are concerned that an further increase in foreign immigrants will only add or amplify another problem: former nationality.

It is reasonable that some of us will be concerned with the loyalty of new citizens. In fact, not too long ago I was told an Indonesian undergrad in one of our local universities complained about her Indonesian citizenship, and expressed her desire to be a Singaporean – simply because of the difficulty to obtain visas to enter the Russian Federation as a result of her Indonesian nationality.

Several days later, the same undergrad accused the Singapore authorities of covering up in the case of NTU Student David Widjaja. The best part here is, she is not a NTU student but had expressed ‘outrage’ at the local authorities even before the investigations are completed simply because she is also Indonesian. Granted she isn’t a former Indonesian turned Singaporean (yet!), but we are reasonably worried that some new immigrants would behave likewise, and share such sentiments when it comes to cases involving people of their former nationality. If such people applied for Singapore citizenship merely for the matter of convenience, and they are actually granted citizenship, it would only debase its value. To me personally, it further reinforces the impression that serving National Service is really nothing more than a monumental waste of time.

Fortunately, my friends and I have not come across new citizens who are derisive of Singapore while they remain proud of their former nationality. But if there is ever such a day, I can only say we have ourselves to blame. There is a Chinese term for that and it is called 犯贱. I am not good with translation, but I think it carries the meaning of debasing one self, asking to be looked down upon and getting it all rolled together.

Sadly, it appears to me we are awarding citizenship not on merit but simply by the immigrants’ education level and his / her expected economic value to Singapore. As long as they have stayed here long enough, simply being a graduate, or making a certain amount of money would almost automatically ensures success in citizenship application.

Anyway, before I end, let me say this, stop beating down Singlish – it is the only thing that is a true product of our nation building, even though it may not have been intended and merely a by-product as a result of the integration of the cultures of our people. It gives us the identity as Singaporeans and is truly the one thing that we can really call our own. It is not shameful or dirty!

To emphasize, the Malaysians I chat with over Windows Live Messenger or exchange emails within the Kuwakchai game writes in a mix of Cantonese, Hokkien, Malay and English. To me it adds color and flavor to the conversation and it gives them an identity distinct from ours. So, the language nazis can go do to themselves the anatomically impossible and ease up on our true national language – Singlish.


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