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 Working Life in Singapore V3a, new version...

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seantang
post Sep 8 2010, 06:18 PM

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What is a PR abuser anyway?
seantang
post Sep 9 2010, 01:38 PM

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QUOTE(alicekang88 @ Sep 9 2010, 10:21 AM)
But the thing is when last time my friend drove me out from Singapore to M'sia through Tuas, I only gave them my access card and passport, then they just let me go. So since I can go out, why not I can't go in?

All countries are more careful with entry vs exit at immigration checkpoints.

It makes sense. Once you leave, you're someone else's problem. But when you enter, you become their problem. Or course they'd be more careful with those entering.

seantang
post Sep 9 2010, 06:59 PM

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QUOTE(Mackiddo @ Sep 9 2010, 06:42 PM)
nope.... still considering a cross-over  rclxms.gif  ...but if they 'invite' me then i'll cross i guess ... how bout u ?

If you have no assets in Malaysia and don't intend on getting any, giving up Malaysian citizenship is not a big issue. If you already own property... then susah.
seantang
post Sep 11 2010, 12:38 PM

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QUOTE(Aloong @ Sep 11 2010, 12:34 AM)
How bout if i intend to retire in Msia?
Can i apply as SG citizen, then apply PR in Msia in the future? Wat about the that Malaysia my second home Msia was promoting? is it applicable to "ex-Msia citizen?

For PR... my understanding is that ethnic Chinese and Indians will never be given PR by the Malaysian govt. Spouses of Malaysian citizens who are not ethnic Malays from Indonesia for eg. and not Muslim are not given PR. What more if it's an ethnic Chinese or Indian who gave up Malaysian citizenship in the first place... and for archrival Singapore some more. At least I have never heard or read of such miracles. I hope I'm mistaken, but I don't think I am. If you are Malay, it's quite possible I think.

As for MM2H, yes it's applicable to ex-citizens. My uncle who gave up his Malaysian citizenship 40 years ago for British citizenship got his MM2H application approved 5 years ago.


Added on September 11, 2010, 12:53 pm
QUOTE(alicia1122 @ Sep 10 2010, 11:16 PM)
then, by working at Sg for 2 years, can I get PR straight away? is this true? is this still affective?

No, entirely not true. These days, PR is on a case by case basis.

They are tightening criteria for PRs and employment permits. If you don't have a degree from a good university, or significant experience in a high demand industry, and as well as be the right age and nationality (for integration and racial balancing purposes), you're not going to get a PR anytime soon. Perhaps even an employment permit might be unlikely unless the hiring company can show that there is no demand from qualified Singaporeans for that position.

Maybe after the elections, but I think the long term foreign talent situation is going to go the way of the car population. Tightened and capped.

This post has been edited by seantang: Sep 11 2010, 01:03 PM
seantang
post Sep 11 2010, 04:35 PM

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QUOTE(cikopek @ Sep 11 2010, 02:11 PM)
If give up my mareshia citizenship,
was will happen to my property & insurance in marehsia?

Foreigners are not allowed to own property in Malaysia. Exceptions are MM2H etc. So if you are no longer a Malaysian citizen, the Land Office won't know (I don't think the National Registration Dept will check with the Land Office) - but you will definitely face issues if you try to take any legal action on that property, eg. sell, transfer, register etc etc.

For assets like shares, bank deposits, cars etc, the procedures for locals and foreigners are different. At a minimum, you will need to do the paperwork to change your citizenship status before you're allowed to make any legal transactions. At worst, you might be forced to liquidate those assets or use a local nominee company or legal firm to hold them on your behalf. Otherwise transfer them to someone else in Malaysia whom you trust.

Insurance... what about it? I'm talking about property and assets. Insurance is an expense and the only thing you have legal right to is the policy. Policy holders wouldn't have their rights affected by changing citizenship, I don't think.

This post has been edited by seantang: Sep 11 2010, 04:38 PM
seantang
post Sep 12 2010, 09:04 PM

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QUOTE(Aloong @ Sep 12 2010, 08:16 PM)
So wat is the status of a MM2H?
ARe they PR, citizen, or something else?
Any renewal policy for it?

Besides being allowed to buy property, they are also allowed to open bank accounts, get 2 APs to import cars, convert their foreign driving licences to Malaysian ones and get a long term visa. Not given citizenship or PR.

seantang
post Sep 12 2010, 10:12 PM

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QUOTE(Lester1987 @ Sep 12 2010, 09:58 PM)
u have not mention that they can only buy houses that are higher than 500k. must open a bank account with XX amount of money to be eligible for it.

Ummm.... like all things in Malaysia... the details are negotiable.

I know of some cases where the property was purchased using the profit made by selling the 2 cars imported. As a result, there's actually a net amount of money going out of Malaysia as the cars were sold for much more than the price paid for the property.

This post has been edited by seantang: Sep 12 2010, 10:16 PM
seantang
post Sep 13 2010, 09:15 PM

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Females tenants are easier to control and much less risk of ever being a physical or sexual threat to the landlord or their kids. The only increased risk is to their husbands.
seantang
post Sep 17 2010, 10:27 PM

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QUOTE(gloomberg @ Sep 17 2010, 10:08 PM)
Yes, u r right... which is why i say he's lucky lo... to have meet an INTERVIEWER who speaks cantonese, and USES cantonese to conduct the interview.

It's all about cliques.

I'm a Ipohite. My first boss who hired me to Singapore was a HKee. His boss was a Ipohite. My next boss was a Ipohite. Now that it's my turn, my own #2 is Singaporean but a fluent Cantonese speaker. The current GM whose business unit I support is a HKee and his right hand man is also a HKee.

When I put it down on paper, it all sounds contrived and very political for such a big MNC, but somehow that's just the way circumstances play out. One thing is for sure... people will want to work with people that they are comfortable/enjoy working with... and will consciously/subconsciously seek those people out.

seantang
post Sep 19 2010, 02:49 PM

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QUOTE(wlcling @ Sep 19 2010, 02:20 PM)
any1 with experience in logistics ah? what is SIM (strategic inventory management)?

It's just simple inventory management lah. Inventory costs money and any inventory (and the management thereof) is always strategic. No company manages inventory for fun. The only question is whether the strategy is the right one.

The only purpose of holding inventory is to ensure product is available for sale. To achieve that purpose, you have a strategy. As with ALL strategies, it lies in answering the questions of what, where, when, who, how and how much.

seantang
post Sep 20 2010, 09:56 PM

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QUOTE(blue_winter @ Sep 20 2010, 09:25 PM)
How is the demand for accountants in SG? Lets say with about 2 years of working experience, how would I fare?

Question is too open ended.

Do you have a degree? Where was it from?
Finished all the professional exams? With only 2 years, you won't be professionally qualified.
2 years where? Doing what?
Were you promoted during those 2 years? What salary are you drawing now?

This post has been edited by seantang: Sep 20 2010, 09:57 PM
seantang
post Sep 20 2010, 10:42 PM

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QUOTE(blue_winter @ Sep 20 2010, 09:58 PM)
ACCA...1 year in audit...1 year in tax...in a big4 accounting firm

Stay one more year in the Big4 and qualify first before leaving.

The commercial sector (like MNCs) values qualified accountants from the Big4 and will pay a premium for them. But if you join them before you qualify, your salary is rarely adjusted significantly after you qualify.

Better yet if you qualify AND leave the Big4 as a senior.

seantang
post Sep 20 2010, 11:39 PM

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QUOTE(Jurlique @ Sep 20 2010, 11:10 PM)
But may i know approx how much one can expect if an individual follow ur advice?

Big 4 senior, 3 years experience, fully qualified... $4-5K is not an issue at bigger companies.
seantang
post Sep 21 2010, 09:42 PM

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QUOTE(icycokes @ Sep 21 2010, 04:43 PM)
lets say i have a NUS econs degree + ACCA with no related working experience. how are my chances of entering a big four?

Quite good, I think. Sg degree and a professional qualification... more than satisfies the basic criteria.

QUOTE(icycokes)
i am really curious to know as i heard ACCA is not very much valued in spore.

Many Malaysians, for some inexplicable reason, seem to think that the ACCA is at the pinnacle of accounting profession.

In Singapore, it's just one of the many professional qualifications available. You'll be on equal footing with other holders of professional qualifications, generally. However if you have ACCA without having a degree... you're in a bit of trouble. A degree is commonplace in Singapore... so much so that NOT having a degree is certainly suicide in terms of competitiveness versus other candidates.

ICPAS membership is the most appreciated by local companies.
seantang
post Sep 21 2010, 10:51 PM

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QUOTE(Jurlique @ Sep 21 2010, 10:37 PM)
I am in disagreement with you that Degree is more appreciated or more pretigious than ACCA.
I have ask my former FC and some job recruitment agents, my feedback was when there are 2 candidates with the same exp but 1 is having a degree and the other is having an ACCA, they will opt for the ACCA.
This is because the field of study of ACCA is very much similar and can greatly applied in today working world particularly when one study for the final 3 papers of the entire syllabus.
Apart from this, an ACCA graduate is well governed by the code of ethics and professionalism of the ACCA code of conduct.

Unlike a degree holder, after obtaning is degree... one can help their bosses to falsify and manipulate accounts as they have nothing to lose due to they have obtain their Degree and cant be revoke.

ACCA shall retain its rights to remove the candidate from its ACCA database/register when an ACCA qualified accountant failed to follow rules.

Perhaps you might want to read my post again.

I said having ACCA without a degree is career suicide because virtually all your competitors will have degrees. And to be your competitor, it goes without saying that they (your competitors) will ALSO already have professional qualifications.

So my point is... don't skip the degree, no matter what. There is no career upside to skipping the degree.

In any case, your example is true for straight accounting jobs. For MNCs etc. where they prefer you to be multi-faceted so that you can be moved between depts, businesses etc., a degree is a better launchpad than ACCA alone, even if the degree holder does not have a professional qualification.
seantang
post Sep 22 2010, 07:26 PM

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QUOTE(yiivei @ Sep 22 2010, 06:39 PM)
Seantang, are you of accounting field?

Finance rather than accounting, but yes. I haven't posted a debit or credit in more than 10 years.

QUOTE(yiivei)
Btw, i'm a chartered accountant registered with MIA, and a CPA holder with 4.5 years of working experience. Do you think i can get a job easily over there?

I think so, especially if you have a degree from a university that the hiring managers would know. And hopefully your 4.5 years of experience is with a well know company.

QUOTE(yiivei)
As far as i concern, i'm worrying 'bout the reporting flows and standards of which might not be equivalent to what we have in Malaysia. Your advise is very much appreciated.

That's if you do statutory financial accounting or public auditing. If you do finance stuff like costing, treasury, internal audit, business analysis, M&A, project financing, funding etc etc... it's a non-issue.

This post has been edited by seantang: Sep 22 2010, 07:26 PM
seantang
post Sep 23 2010, 09:33 PM

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Singapore corporate culture... damn a lot of free mooncakes from our banks and suppliers.
seantang
post Sep 26 2010, 07:33 PM

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QUOTE(yinyum @ Sep 26 2010, 06:46 PM)
not me definitely!! I tot someone mentioned about BBQ @ east coast???

You haven't been working long enough leh. You'll soon learn that 'he/she who proposes suggestions/improvement, becomes project manager accountable for the results'. The only exception is if you're the boss, and can assign someone to do it.

seantang
post Sep 28 2010, 09:31 AM

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QUOTE(Aloong @ Sep 27 2010, 10:27 PM)
Purchase Agreement/Tenancy Letter (with proof of more than 6mths occupancy); and
I think they just want proof of the billing address. Because it is postpaid, once they send the bill to that billing address, that means you have technically been "billed".

What I did was use my office address for my EP, then open a bank a/c with the EP & add, and after that with my bank statement as proof of billing, open all my utility and telecom accounts with that add.


Added on September 28, 2010, 11:04 am
Interesting article. Whatever you think of LKY, he's one helluva chess player. Always a few moves ahead.
QUOTE
"It's Stupid to be Afraid"

Singapore's first-ever prime minister, long-time government head and current political mentor Lee Kuan Yew talks about Asia's rise to economic power, China's ambitions and the West's chances of staying competitive.

SPIEGEL: The political and economic center of gravity is moving from the West towards the East. Is Asia becoming the dominant political and economic force in this century?

Mr. Lee: I wouldn't say it's the dominant force. What is gradually happening is the restoration of the world balance to what it was in the early 19th century or late 18th century when China and India together were responsible for more than 40 percent of world GDP. With those two countries becoming part of the globalized trading world, they are going to go back to approximately the level of world GDP that they previously occupied. But that doesn't make them the superpowers of the world.

SPIEGEL: Their leading politicians have publicly discussed the so-called "Asian Century".

Mr. Lee: Yes, economically, there will be a shift to the Pacific from the Atlantic Ocean and you can already see that in the shipping volumes of Chinese ports. Every shipping line is trying to get into association with a Chinese container port. India is slower because their infrastructure is still to be completed. But I think they will join in the race, build roads, bridges, airports, container ports and they'll become a manufacturing hub. Raw materials go in, finished goods go out.

SPIEGEL: You've been the leader of a very successful state for a long time. Returning from your time in China, are you afraid for Singapore's future?

Mr. Lee: I saw it coming from the late 1980s. Deng Xiaoping started this in 1978. He visited Bangkok, Kuala Lumpur and Singapore in November 1978. I think that visit shocked him because he expected three backward cities. Instead he saw three modern cities and he knew that communism -- the politics of the iron rice bowl -- did not work. So, at the end of December, he announced his open door policy. He started free trade zones and from there, they extended it and extended it. Now they have joined the WTO and the whole country is a free trade zone.

SPIEGEL: But has China's success not become dangerous for Singapore?

Mr. Lee: We have watched this transformation and the speed at which it is happening. As many of my people tell me, it's scary. They learn so fast. Our people set up businesses in Shanghai or Suzhou and they employ Chinese at lower wages than Singapore Chinese. After three years, they say: "Look, I can do that work, I want the same pay." So it is a very serious challenge for us to move aside and not collide with them. We have to move to areas where they cannot move.

SPIEGEL: Such as?

Mr. Lee: Such as where the rule of law, intellectual property and security of production systems are required, because for them to establish that, it will take 20 to 30 years. We are concentrating on bio medicine, pharmaceuticals and all products requiring protection of intellectual property rights. No pharmaceutical company is going to go have its precious patents disclosed. So that is why they are here in Singapore and not in China.

SPIEGEL: But the Chinese are moving too. They bought parts of IBM and are trying to take over the American oil company Unocal.

Mr. Lee: They are learning. They have learnt takeovers and mergers from the Americans. They know that if they try to sell their computers with a Chinese brand it will take them decades in America, but if they buy IBM, they can inject their technology and low cost into IBM's brand name, and they will gain access to the market much faster.

SPIEGEL: But how afraid should the West be?

Mr. Lee: It's stupid to be afraid. It's going to happen. I console myself this way. Suppose, China had never gone communist in 1949, suppose the Nationalist government had worked with the Americans -- China would be the great power in Asia -- not Japan, not Korea, not Hong Kong, not Singapore. Because China isolated itself, development took place on the periphery of Asia first.

SPIEGEL: Such a consolation won't be enough for the future.

Mr. Lee: Right. In 50 years I see China, Korea and Japan at the high-tech end of the value chain. Look at the numbers and quality of the engineers and scientists they produce and you know that this is where the R&amp;D will be done. The Chinese have a space programme, they're going to put a man on the Moon and nobody sold them that technology. We have to face that. But you should not be afraid of that. You are leading in many fields which they cannot catch up with for many years, many decades. In pharmaceuticals, I don't see them catching up with the Germans for a long time.

SPIEGEL: That wouldn't feed anybody who works for Opel, would it?

Mr. Lee: A motor car is a commodity -- four wheels, a chassis, a motor. You can have modifications up and down, but it remains a commodity, and the Chinese can do commodities.

SPIEGEL: When you look to Western Europe, do you see a possible collapse of the society because of the overwhelming forces of globalization?

Mr. Lee: No. I see ten bitter years. In the end, the workers, whether they like it or not, will realize, that the cosy European world which they created after the war has come to an end.

SPIEGEL: How so?

Mr. Lee: The social contract that led to workers sitting on the boards of companies and everybody being happy rested on this condition: I work hard, I restore Germany's prosperity, and you, the state, you have to look after me. I'm entitled to go to Baden Baden for spa recuperation one month every year. This old system was gone in the blink of an eye when two to three billion people joined the race -- one billion in China, one billion in India and over half-a-billion in Eastern Europe and the former Soviet Union.

SPIEGEL: The question is: How do you answer that challenge?

Mr. Lee: Chancellor Kohl tried to do it. He did it halfway then he had to pause. Schroeder tried to do it, now he's in a jam and has called an election. Merkel will go in and push, then she will get hammered before she can finish the job, but each time, they will push the restructuring a bit forward.

SPIEGEL: You think it's too slow?

Mr. Lee: It is painful because it is so slow. If your workers were rational they would say, yes, this is going to happen anyway, let's do the necessary things in one go. Instead of one month at the spa, take one week at the spa, work harder and longer for the same pay, compete with the East Europeans, invent in new technology, put more money into your R&amp;D, keep ahead of the Chinese and the Indians.

SPIEGEL: You have seen yourself how hard it is to implement such strategies.

Mr. Lee: I faced this problem myself. Every year, our unions and the Labour Department subsidize trips to China and India. We tell the participants: Don't just look at the Great Wall but go to the factories and ask, "What are you paid?" What hours do you work?" And they come back shell-shocked. The Chinese had perestroika first, then glasnost. That's where the Russians made their mistake.

SPIEGEL: The Chinese Government is promoting the peaceful rise of China. Do you believe them?

Mr. Lee: Yes, I do, with one reservation. I think they have calculated that they need 30 to 40 -- maybe 50 years of peace and quiet to catch up, to build up their system, change it from the communist system to the market system. They must avoid the mistakes made by Germany and Japan. Their competition for power, influence and resources led in the last century to two terrible wars.

SPIEGEL: What should the Chinese do differently?

Mr. Lee: They will trade, they will not demand, "This is my sphere of influence, you keep out". America goes to South America and they also go to South America. Brazil has now put aside an area as big as the state of Massachusetts to grow soya beans for China. They are going to Sudan and Venezuela for oil because the Venezuelan President doesn't like America. They are going to Iran for oil and gas. So, they are not asking for a military contest for power, but for an economic competition.

SPIEGEL: But would anybody take them really seriously without military power?

Mr. Lee: About eight years ago, I met Liu Huaqing, the man who built the Chinese Navy. Mao personally sent him to Leningrad to learn to build ships. I said to him, "The Russians made very rough, crude weapons". He replied, "You are wrong. They made first-class weapons, equal to the Americans." The Russian mistake was that they put so much into military expenditure and so little into civilian technology. So their economy collapsed. I believe the Chinese leadership have learnt: If you compete with America in armaments, you will lose. You will bankrupt yourself. So, avoid it, keep your head down, and smile, for 40 or 50 years.

SPIEGEL: What are your reservations?

Mr. Lee: I don't know whether the next generation will stay on this course. After 15 or 20 years they may feel their muscles are very powerful. We know the mind of the leaders but the mood of the people on the ground is another matter. Because there's no more communist ideology to hold the people together, the ground is now galvanised by Chinese patriotism and nationalism. Look at the anti-Japanese demonstrations.

SPIEGEL: How do you explain that China is spending billions on military modernisation right now?

Mr. Lee: Their modernisation is just a drop in the ocean. Their objective is to raise the level of damage they can deliver to the Americans if they intervene in Taiwan. Their objective is not to defeat the Americans, which they cannot do. They know they will be defeated. They want to weaken the American resolve to intervene. That is their objective, but they do not want to attack Taiwan.

SPIEGEL: Really? They have just passed the aggressive anti-secession law and a general has threatened to use the nuclear bomb.

Mr. Lee: I think they have put themselves into a position internationally that if Taiwan declares independence, they must react and if Beijing's leadership doesn't, they would be finished, they would be a paper tiger and they know that. So, they passed the anti-secession law to tell the Taiwanese and the Americans and the Japanese, "I do not want to fight, but if you allow Taiwan to go for independence, I will have to fight." I think the anti-secession law is a law to preserve the status quo.

SPIEGEL: Another critical point in Asia is the growing rivalry between China and Japan.

Mr. Lee: It's been dormant all this while, right? But I think several things happened that upped the ante. They possibly coincide with the policy of Japanese Prime Minister Junichiro Koizumi. There is this return to "we want to be a normal country." They are sending ships to Afghanistan to support the Americans, they sent a battalion to Iraq, they reclaimed the Senkaku islands, and most recently, they joined the Americans in declaring that Taiwan is a strategic interest of Japan and America. That raises all the historical memories of the Japanese taking away Taiwan in 1895. Then they're applying to be a permanent member of the Security Council. So, I think the Chinese decided that this is too much. So, they have openly said they will object to Japan becoming a member of the Security Council.

SPIEGEL: Well, the United States said the same to Germany.

Mr. Lee: Exactly. So, the whole process is trying to define the position for the next round, maybe in 10 to 15 years, by which time the world will be a different place.

SPIEGEL: Can the Chinese convince their North Korean ally Kim Jong-Il to get rid of his nuclear program?

Mr. Lee: North Korea is a riddle wrapped up in an enigma. The leaders in North Korea believe that their survival depends upon having a bomb -- at least one nuclear bomb. Otherwise, sooner or later, they will collapse and the leaders will be put on trial like Milosevic for all the crimes that they have committed. And they have no intention of letting that happen.

SPIEGEL: Who can stop them? The Americans?

Mr. Lee: Yes, but at a price, a heavy price.

SPIEGEL: Could the Chinese do it?

Mr. Lee: Possibly. By denying food, denying fuel, so they would implode. But will the Chinese benefit from an imploded North Korea? That brings the South into the North. That brings the Americans to the Yalu River. So, the North Koreans have also done their calculations and know that there are limits.

SPIEGEL: So Kim is in a strong position?

Mr. Lee: If I were Kim I would freeze the programme, tell the Americans you can inspect, but if you attack me, I will use it. That leaves the Americans with the problem of checking and verifying and intercepting ships, aircraft, endless problems.

SPIEGEL: Would that save Kim's regime?

Mr. Lee: In the long run I think they will implode sooner or later because their system cannot survive. They can see China, they can see Russia and Vietnam, all opening up. If they open up, their system of control of the people will break down. So they must go.

SPIEGEL: If the six party talks fail, do you foresee an arms race in Eastern Asia?

Mr. Lee: If the nuclear program is frozen, there won't be an arms race. Eventually, it is not in China's interests to have an erratic Korea nuclear-armed and a Japan nuclear-armed. That reduces China's position.

SPIEGEL: Many Americans fear that China and the US are bound to become strategic rivals. Will this become the great rivalry of the 21st century?

Mr. Lee: Rivals, yes, but not necessarily enemies. The Chinese have spent a lot of energy and time to make sure that their periphery is friendly to them. So, they settled with Russia, they have settled with India. They're going to have a free trade agreement with India -- they're learning from each other. Instead of quarrelling with the Philippines and the Vietnamese over oil in the South China Sea, they have agreed on joint exploration and sharing. They've agreed on a strategic agreement with Indonesia for bilateral trade and technology.

SPIEGEL: But the Americans are trying to encircle China. They have won new bases in Central Asia.

Mr. Lee: The Chinese are very conscious of being encircled by allies of America. But they are very good in countering those moves. South Korea today has the largest number of foreign students in China. They see their future in China. So, the only country that's openly on America's side is Japan. All the others are either neutral or friendly to China.

SPIEGEL: During your career, you have kept your distance from Western style democracy. Are you still convinced that an authoritarian system is the future for Asia?

Mr. Lee: Why should I be against democracy? The British came here, never gave me democracy, except when they were about to leave. But I cannot run my system based on their rules. I have to amend it to fit my people's position. In multiracial societies, you don't vote in accordance with your economic interests and social interests, you vote in accordance with race and religion. Supposing I'd run their system here, Malays would vote for Muslims, Indians would vote for Indians, Chinese would vote for Chinese. I would have a constant clash in my Parliament which cannot be resolved because the Chinese majority would always overrule them. So I found a formula that changes that...

SPIEGEL: ... and that turned Singapore de facto into a one party state. Critics say that Singapore resembles a Lee Family Enterprise. Your son is the Prime Minister, your daughter-in-law heads the powerful Development Agency...

Mr. Lee: ... and my other son is CEO of Singapore Telecoms, my daughter is head of the National Institute for Neurology. This is a very small community of 4 million people. We run a meritocracy. If the Lee Family set an example of nepotism, that system would collapse. If I were not the prime minister, my son could have become Prime Minister several years earlier. It is against my interest to allow any family member who's incompetent to hold an important job because that would be a disaster for Singapore and my legacy. That cannot be allowed.

The interview was conducted by editors Hans Hoyng and Andreas Lorenz.

Translated from the German by Christoper Sultan


This post has been edited by seantang: Sep 28 2010, 11:05 AM
seantang
post Sep 28 2010, 01:48 PM

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QUOTE(Chrisky @ Sep 28 2010, 01:23 PM)
juz asking : lets say my room got a cable point inside, can I DIY to setup if getting a home broadband line from Starhub ? or hav to let the technician to do that ?
Assuming the point has been activated (ie. can see free-to-air TV channels and SCTV test screen), you can just signup for any of Starhub's cable broadband packages and buy the cable modem from them. The modem will come with the required splitter and cables.

Starhub activates/tracks your bb user account using your modem's code (is it IMEI?... can't remember). So when your modem is connected to the network, Starhub knows it's your account. That also means that you can bring your cable modem with you to other people's flats etc and still login using your account.

This post has been edited by seantang: Sep 28 2010, 01:51 PM

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