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IN FULL: DPM Heng on how Singapore will emerge stronger from Covid-19 pandemic

Deputy Prime Minister and Minister for Finance Heng Swee Keat provided a stocktake on Singapore’s fiscal position amid the Covid-19 pandemic through a Ministerial Statement in Parliament on Monday (Oct 5).

Pointing out that Singapore is at a defining phase of this crisis, Mr Heng shared the Government’s plans for building a more resilient and sustainable economy as the nation moves forward. Read his speech in full here:

“Mr Speaker, Sir, after a most difficult past several months, the Covid-19 situation in Singapore has stabilised, and large parts of the economy have resumed operations. It has been a test of a generation, which we have tackled as one nation.

The Government has rolled out a decisive set of crisis management measures to minimise and cushion economic impact, preserve jobs and capabilities, and support households. This includes the support measures which I announced in August, before the opening of Parliament. I made the announcement then, as some of the support schemes were ending in August, and we needed to give our firms and workers certainty during this difficult period. We are now tabling a Supplementary Supply Bill, which provides for the resources to implement the measures announced in August, for debate in Parliament. My Ministerial Statement today will provide context for the Supplementary Supply Bill.

Mr Speaker, Sir, our four earlier Budgets committed close to S$100 billion of support measures to deal with Covid-19. This is on top of other measures such as special relief measures for debtors and tenants. These measures have substantially cushioned economic damage.

MAS estimates that the combined Budgets will prevent the economy from contracting by a further 5.6% of GDP in 2020, and 4.8% in 2021.

Our economic support measures will also cushion the rise in resident unemployment rate by about 1.7 percentage points this year. This could mean about 155,000 jobs saved over these two years, although we will still see job losses overall. More than half of the jobs saved are due to the Jobs Support Scheme or JSS alone.

This outcome has only been possible with the collective determination, adaptability, and sacrifice of our people and businesses.

Today, I want to look forward, and share how we will approach the next six months as our economy reopens, as well as our plans for our longer-term economic recovery, to emerge stronger.

Our Covid-19 Response

The trajectory of our economic recovery depends critically on how well the world deals with this still dangerous virus. Each passing day brings new surprises, and new hope. Even as we learn more about it, there are profound uncertainties ahead.

One major uncertainty is how effective other countries are in containing the pandemic, and the success of policies they adopt in opening their economies.

Another key uncertainty is whether, and when, an effective and safe vaccine can be developed. Even if such a vaccine becomes available, the pandemic may not end quickly. Supply of the vaccine will be limited initially, and global rollout is likely to be uneven. We also do not know how long the protective effect may last, or if mutation of the virus may render it ineffective.

Our Position in the Fight against Covid-19

But there is also hope that we can overcome this crisis. In our fight against Covid-19, we are currently in a stable position, but we must remain vigilant. Amid the uncertainties, we are adapting to living with the virus. We have worked out the steps to further re-open safely in the months ahead. We are putting ourselves in the best position to fight Covid-19 by focusing on four key prongs.

First, vaccination. We are working very actively to secure early access to safe and effective vaccines, if and when they become available.

Singapore is an early supporter of the Covid-19 Vaccine Global Access (or Covax) Facility, which accelerates the development and production of, and equitable access to potential Covid-19 vaccines. Together with Switzerland, Singapore co-chairs the Friends of the Covax Facility to promote vaccine multilateralisation.

Singapore is also pursuing the procurement of Covid-19 vaccines with a number of pharmaceutical companies. At the same time, we are supporting local efforts to develop a Covid-19 vaccine, and as well as building up vaccine manufacturing capacity.

Second, testing. In the meantime, we have increased our Polymerase Chain Reaction (PCR) testing capacity manyfold, and are close to our target of being able to conduct 40,000 laboratory tests a day. We are also evaluating new testing technologies that are less invasive and can produce test results more quickly. This enhanced testing capability will help us safely resume more activities sooner.

Third, tracing. Swift contact tracing and isolation of infected individuals are key to limiting the spread of the virus. Our contact tracing teams are doing a sterling job, and using digital tools well. The TraceTogether app, together with tokens that are being distributed nationwide, and the SafeEntry programme, enable contact tracing to reach the speed and coverage needed to rapidly contain viral transmission.

Fourth, safe management. We must continue to adhere to safe management measures, and do our part to facilitate contact tracing. Keeping community infections low is the key to re-opening our economy safely.

The Multi-Ministry Task Force co-chaired by Ministers Gan Kim Yong and Lawrence Wong will be releasing more details on the roadmap to Phase 3 in the coming weeks. This will include the expected timeline for moving to Phase 3, changes to current regulations on the size of group gatherings, and participation at mass events.

Our Plan for Next Bound of Support

While managing the healthcare front of the Covid-19 battle, we must also deal with the economic and social fronts. Many of our businesses, workers, and households have been hit hard by the disruptions and uncertainties due to Covid-19. Our path to recovery will not be easy.

Support for Firms and Workers

Our support over the four Budgets has been to provide immediate relief and also to minimise the scarring effects of Covid-19 on our economy, by preparing our businesses and workers to emerge stronger. In short, we are working together to alleviate near-term pains to build for a better tomorrow. We will remain focused on these over the next six months.

With the situation stabilising in Singapore and some parts of the world, we will progressively open up more activities, at a pace that enables new practices to be internalised, to keep everyone safe.

The performance and outlook for different economic sectors is highly uneven.
Some sectors are doing better than before Covid-19. Firms in the IT, biomedical, e-commerce, and finance sectors have benefited from the rise in demand for these services during this period.

Some restaurants and hawkers are on their way to recovery.

Construction activities will gradually resume as we complete the testing of workers and as they adjust to new safe management measures.

But sectors that involve the movement of people across borders, such as aviation and tourism, will recover only when people around the world feel safe enough to resume travel, and this will take some time.

And businesses that involve large gatherings, such as in MICE, sports and concerts, will recover slowly, unless rapid test kits are effective in screening participants for safe entry.

Not only are the outlooks different for different sectors, but within sectors, firms that have been nimble are doing better. For instance, some wet market stalls started online selling, and are enjoying robust business. Given these differences in outlook between and within sectors, we have adjusted broad-based wage support under JSS.

For the hardest-hit sectors such as aviation and tourism, which face an uncertain road to recovery, our aim is to help companies preserve core capabilities and enable workers to retain specialised skills.

As earlier announced in August, this will be through the Enhanced Aviation Support Package, a temporary redeployment programme, and the SingapoRediscovers Vouchers.

In addition, we will extend the Enhanced Training Support Package, or ETSP, which I enhanced in the Resilience Budget. I will extend the ETSP for another six months, until June 30, 2021, to provide enhanced course fee subsidies for firms in our hardest-hit sectors. I will extend the ETSP to the Marine and Offshore sector from today, on top of the existing sectors such as Air Transport, Retail, and Tourism. In recognition of the gradually recovering economic situation, we will also be lowering the absentee payroll rates to 80% from January 2021, capped at S$7.50 per hour.

In tandem, we will continue to provide strong support to firms that are growing. In this way, our workers can move into growth areas, stay employed, and build new skills.

We have enhanced support for startups, via the Startup SG Founder programme. Since I announced the enhancements in August, more than 500 aspiring entrepreneurs have signed up for the 3-month Venture Building programmes.

We will provide wage support of between 25% and 50% for each new local hire in firms which increase their total local headcount, through the Jobs Growth Incentive, or JGI. The support will be for the first S$5,000 of gross monthly wages for up to 12 months.

As persons with disabilities may face greater challenges in finding jobs, I will provide the higher tier of wage support of 50% under the JGI to all Persons with Disabilities. This will apply to new hires of Persons with Disabilities from September 2020 to February 2021.

To give a boost to businesses seeking to internationalise, transform and digitalise, I will extend or enhance our capability-building grants, namely the Market Readiness Assistance Grant, the Productivity Solutions Grant, the Enterprise Development Grant, and the PACT programme. These will enable firms to tap on new sources of growth. MTI will announce details in the coming weeks.

Even as we shift our approach in supporting businesses and workers as the economy recovers, we will make sure that support does not taper off too sharply.

We had earlier enhanced support through loan schemes to provide working capital support for viable businesses. We will extend the Temporary Bridging Loan Programme for six months, until September 2021, at reduced levels. MAS will also extend the MAS Singapore Dollar Facility for Enterprise Singapore Loans, until September 2021.

We will adjust the support available under the Enterprise Financing Scheme to help Singapore enterprises access financing in areas such as trade and project needs. MTI and MAS will announce more details later.

Later today, MAS will be announcing details on the extension of payment moratoriums, at a tapered level of support. Taken together, the staging of these measures avoids sharp drops in support, while facilitating restructuring where needed. All this support for our firms will ultimately benefit our workers.

The best way to protect the welfare of our workers is a good job. By helping viable firms stay afloat during this difficult period, they can retain their workers. By helping firms to restructure and retrain their workers, they can emerge stronger.
More competitive and productive firms can provide better jobs and better prospects for workers. And more skilled and committed workers make firms more competitive.

This synergy between competitive firms and capable workers is critical for both to do well. As part of our long-standing practice of tripartism, we must not fear, but instead ride on change together to achieve synergies and to emerge stronger.

But even with the best efforts, some firms, especially in hardest hit sectors, may not survive or may have to release their workers. So other than supporting workers through our firms, we will continue to provide our fullest support to workers who have lost their jobs, to help them reskill and move into firms that are hiring.

The National Jobs Council is implementing the SGUnited Jobs and Skills Package that I announced at the Fortitude Budget in May.

The council has curated 117,500 opportunities under the SGUnited Jobs and Skills Package as of end-August. This is good progress, but we must press on.

The council is working closely with companies to hire mid-career job-seekers looking to make a switch in their careers, and to redeploy workers in affected sectors where activities are low, such as aviation and tourism, to areas of need and where their skills are valued, such as healthcare and childcare.

It is also engaging companies to offer traineeships, company attachments, and training opportunities, which can later lead to good jobs.

The key task is now to make sure that workers know of, and are successfully matched to these opportunities. We are doing this across multiple channels.

We have set up SGUnited Jobs and Skills Centres in every HDB town and have Career Ambassadors to reach out to residents.

The Singapore Business Federation, or SBF, is working closely with other TACs and NTUC’s e2i to do business-to-business job matching across sectors, through the SBF SGUnited Jobs Initiative.

MOM and WSG will also be appointing employment agencies as Placement Partners, to assist in placements.

I encourage everyone to step out of your comfort zones and keep an open mind to learn new skills and take on new jobs.

One good example is Ms Tan Bee Lian, who is preparing to be a Healthcare Assistant after being in the Oil and Gas industry for over 30 years. This is very commendable.

To help those who have lost their jobs, MSF has recently extended the Covid-19 Support Grant, and applications are open until the end of the year. Beyond this year, we are studying the support for self-employed persons and workers who are most vulnerable. The continuation and form of support will depend on the labour market situation and economic outlook. One key consideration is to make a stronger link to helping individuals find a new job or to acquire new skills. In this way, we can better prepare our displaced workers for new opportunities as firms restructure. We will provide an update before the end of the year.

Support for Households

Other than supporting our businesses and workers, we will also continue to support our households.

The household support announced earlier continues to flow in the coming months. Please refer to this slide on schedule of support measures, which will also be digitally distributed to Members after the session. In it, you will notice that in October alone, eligible households will receive the GST Voucher – U-Save, the first tranche of Grocery Vouchers, and Service and Conservancy Charges, or S&CC, rebates. Eligible lower-income workers will also receive the October tranche of Workfare Special Payment.

We have received feedback that Covid-19 has caused some aspiring parents to postpone their parenthood plans. This is fully understandable, especially when they face uncertainty with their income. Hence, to help with expenses during this period, we will introduce a one-off additional support for newborns. This will be on top of the Baby Bonus Cash Gift, which provides eligible parents up to S$10,000 in benefits. Minister Indranee will share more details on the additional support soon.

I have laid out our approach to support our firms, workers and households in dealing with Covid-19 in the next six months. We will adjust our support if necessary, in response to changes on the medical front and global economic developments.

I hope that businesses, workers and households will make good use of these resources in the months ahead.

OUR ROADMAP FOR THE FUTURE

Inclusive and Resilient Society, Dynamic and Growing Economy

Beyond the immediate crisis, we want to emerge from Covid-19 stronger as a society and more united as a people. We are determined to have better jobs for our workers, and stronger support to enable them to bounce back if they fall. We want to build an endearing home for future generations, and a fair and caring society based on what we stand for as a people.

To deliver on these priorities, we need a dynamic and growing economy, with good jobs for all Singaporeans. Economic growth is an enabler for individuals and families to realise their aspirations, and ensures that the public sector is adequately resourced to invest in our national priorities. Given the importance of economic growth as an enabler, I will now spend some time to sketch out the broad strokes of our strategy.

Shifts

The post-Covid-19 global economy will be different. Our future economy must be responsive to structural shifts, many of which have been accelerated by Covid-19. Support for globalisation is weakening, and some countries are turning inwards.

The adoption of digital technology has been given renewed impetus, unlocking new sources of return. Digital technology and its many applications are the new capital of the innovation-driven future economy.

Asia continues to rise in global economic weight, as its recovery accelerates. Ensuring sustainability and care for the environment are gaining momentum.

At home, we face slowing resident labour force growth. Future economic growth will come from raising productivity across the economy. So we must make the best use of the skills and talents of our people and use new technology as a key complement.

We are at a critical juncture in our economic development and the stakes are high. In the next few years, economies will undergo rapid transitions. Depending on their response, Covid-19 will benefit some and disadvantage others, whether at the firm-level, sector-level, or across the entire economy. We must take the actions now that will allow us to not just get through Covid-19, but more crucially, gain ground that will pave the way for our next lap of economic growth in the next 5 to 10 years.

I will speak on what we are preparing for in this next lap of growth. Before I get into the details, I wish to stress that everything this Government does to protect, re-open, and grow our economy — we do, not for the economy’s sake, but for our people. We strive to secure a way for Singapore to continue to make a good living, so that Singaporeans can have a good life. That is our guiding principle.

The Way Ahead

Thankfully, we are in a good position. Since 2017, the Future Economy Council has been driving the implementation of our Industry Transformation Maps, or ITMs, to restructure our economy sector by sector, firm by firm. We have made good progress.

Before Covid-19, our resident unemployment rate was low at 3.2% as at end-2019. Between 2016 and 2019, overall productivity, measured by real value added per actual hour worked, rose by a creditable 2.4% per year. This is also an improvement over the 2.2% per year growth in the preceding three-year period.

Overall, real median income for Singaporeans grew by 3.7% per year in the last three years, up from 3.2% in the preceding three years. Incomes at the 20th percentile grew by 4.4% per year in the past three years, up from 4.0% in the preceding three years.

In 2015, we launched the SkillsFuture movement as well as our Research, Innovation and Enterprise, or RIE 2020 plan. These support our ITM work by strengthening our foundations of skills and innovation.

We are building on our good position, and keeping up the pace. In the midst of this pandemic, I set up the Emerging Stronger Taskforce in May to update our economic roadmap to respond to the new realities, and to emerge with a new competitive edge.

There are many new business and growth opportunities for Singapore to seize, and the taskforce has already made significant progress in this through the Alliances for Action.

As rapid-action taskforces, the seven Alliances have rallied key players around common challenges faced by industry. They are developing prototypes to validate new business ideas, new business models, and new business solutions, in areas such as sustainability, robotics, and safe visitor experiences. Government agencies are partnering businesses to review regulations and promote innovation.

Beyond the first wave of Alliances, the taskforce is looking to launch new Alliances to build momentum for change and explore opportunities in new areas of growth, such as MedTech. The taskforce will share more details.

All these moves build on our ITM framework to deliver a refreshed economic strategy for a post-Covid-19 world, with emphasis on three priority areas.

First, remaking Singapore as a Global-Asia node of technology, innovation, and enterprise. We will secure our external economic linkages as a vital global node in Asia, and transform ourselves into a vibrant centre of technology and innovation.

Second, redoubling our efforts to foster inclusive growth. With Covid-19 revealing vulnerabilities in our labour market, we need to better understand its structure, and upgrade jobs and skills across all segments of society.

Third, investing in economic resilience and sustainability as a source of competitive advantage. Our resilience can be a source of growth, at many levels – for our individuals, industries, nation, and the world.

Remaking Singapore as a Global-Asia Node of Technology, Innovation, and Enterprise

Let me start with the first key move, which is to remake ourselves as a Global-Asia node of technology, innovation, and enterprise.

Global-Asia Node

Covid-19 has changed travel patterns, sharpened the fragmentation of supply chains, and accelerated digitalisation in different markets. It has also heightened emphasis on resilience as companies and countries review their operations.

Asia, in particular South-east Asia, will continue to grow as one of the key global engines. We must deepen and broaden links to build up Singapore’s role at the heart of Asia’s growth, while forging connectivity with other key markets. A role that we have played in our long history as a trading port and which we will renew in two ways:
One, rebuild and grow our physical connectivity — in travel and trade; and
Two, enhance and expand our digital connectivity.

Physical Connectivity

Our air hub has been badly affected by Covid-19, and we are sparing no effort to rebuild it.

Compared with last year, passenger traffic has fallen by more than 98% in August, with daily passenger volume of about 3,000, down sharply from 190,000 previously.

When global passenger traffic resumes, as it surely will, the Changi Air Hub will resume its role at the Global-Asia node, together with all the related sectors such as tourism, manufacturing and logistics.

Accordingly, we must re-establish our position by reopening our borders gradually, positioning Singapore as a safe destination, levelling up capabilities, and refreshing our infrastructure.

We are committed to revive our air hub and restore our air connectivity. The Multi-Ministry Task Force is studying this carefully as part of our broader re-opening plans, and the Minister for Transport will share more in his Ministerial Statement tomorrow.

Our maritime trade has to date remained resilient to Covid-19, and we will accelerate moves to strengthen our position.

Notwithstanding the 13.5% drop in global trade on a year-on-year basis in the first half of 2020, container throughput at Singapore’s ports fell by a milder 1.1% over the same period. At the same time, firms are more prepared to diversify their operating bases to increase resilience.

So we must press on with improving transhipment capabilities, inking trade facilitation agreements, and anchoring key shipping routes through Singapore.

The first few berths of Tuas Port are on track to be operational by 2021.

The Regional Comprehensive Economic Partnership is slated to be signed this year, connecting a trade region of 15 countries accounting for about 30% of the global population and GDP.

Moving ahead, we will further strengthen our value proposition through greater regional cooperation, and by building up a leading trade and logistics ecosystem.

South-east Asia can benefit from the greater premium on supply chain resilience through regional cooperation.

For example, the Iskandar Malaysia and Batam, Bintan, Karimun region presents good opportunities for companies to cluster the full value chain of complementary activities from research and development, to regional headquarters and manufacturing.

To support our ambitions, we will significantly strengthen our entire trade and logistics ecosystem, deepening capabilities in our port, airport, and beyond.

We will enhance our infrastructure for Singapore to handle larger flows of food, pharmaceuticals, electronics, and e-commerce.

Digital Connectivity

We will accelerate the build-up of digital capabilities, which will be a game-changer for Singapore’s connectivity with Asia and the world. Digital payments and data facilitate physical trade. It makes the exchange of varied goods and services more efficient, opens up new possibilities, and strengthens our value proposition as a trading node.

Within Singapore, the Alliance on Supply Chain Digitalisation is exploring options and bringing together key players across the supply chain in this venture.

We have also concluded Digital Economy Agreements with Australia, Chile, and New Zealand, and have ongoing talks with South Korea. These agreements establish common frameworks and rules for digital trade, enabling our businesses, especially SMEs, to access international markets more easily.

These moves to enhance Singapore’s digital connectivity will open up new markets and opportunities for our businesses.

As part of our ITM work, we are helping firms to make full use of digital technology. Covid-19 has accelerated the digitalisation and transformation of many businesses, big and small.
Since January this year, enterprises have embarked on over 27,000 projects to improve their productivity and build new capabilities through the Productivity Solutions Grant and the Enterprise Development Grant schemes.

During my dialogue with businesses on Friday, I met the founder of Seonggong, a restaurant group with brands such as Seorae Korean BBQ. Seonggong used digital technology to revamp its operations, from accounting to ordering to procurement. So much so that increased sales from online deliveries have more than offset losses from their dine-in business, by 10%.

The experience of businesses shows that digitalisation is a strategic capability to unlock growth, evolve their models to harness digital possibilities, and to integrate processes such as logistics, payment, and marketing.

We will press on with our ITM work, which helps businesses big and small, to transform holistically, bringing together the different aspects needed to upgrade.

A key priority for us now is to build on this momentum and bring digitalisation to our heartlands. Senior Minister of State Sim Ann and Minister of State Low Yen Ling will be announcing further plans for heartland enterprises in the coming days.

Technology, Innovation, and Enterprise

I have spoken on seizing new opportunities through physical and digital connectivity. Beyond being an effective and trusted broker for trade and digital flows, we must be a key node where new ideas are born and nurtured into globally-competitive enterprises.

Today, we have a business-friendly environment, strong rule of law, a skilled and diverse workforce, advanced infrastructure, and a globally-competitive ecosystem of financial and professional services. We must continue to build on these complementary strengths built up over the years.

We will be unveiling a new five-year Research, Innovation and Enterprise, or RIE plan in December. The plan will build on earlier investments and enhance research to support areas of national priority, such as early childhood development, lifelong learning, and keeping our seniors healthy. We will expand our transformation of the manufacturing, aviation and maritime industries, and deepen our capabilities as a Smart Nation and sustainable society.

We will also position Singapore as a global intellectual property (or IP) centre in Asia. Ministers Indranee Rajah and Edwin Tong are leading our efforts on our Singapore IP Strategy 2030, and will share details at World IP Day.

A major effort will be to integrate the work of the Future Economy Council and our RIE plan, so as to accelerate our transformation into an innovation-led economy, powered by technology. In this way, our businesses can be more competitive, and our workers can achieve more.

An example of how we will scale up the translation of ideas and technology into business improvements is through the use of innovation platforms that bring industry and researchers to work together on specific challenges.

We are also promoting the Open Innovation Network, an online platform which brings problem owners and problem solvers together to create industry-led solutions.

Since 2017, a total of close to S$13 million in grant and prize monies has been awarded to firms with viable solutions to deploy and scale their ideas under Enterprise Singapore’s Gov-PACT and IMDA’s Open Innovation Platform.

This year, we have taken this further, with two rounds of National Innovation Challenges. We hope to see the outcome of these in the coming months.

To summarise, we are making good progress in our move to position Singapore as a Global-Asia node of technology, innovation, and enterprise. By enhancing our connectivity and making innovation pervasive, we can better meet the challenges of a post-Covid world, and create good jobs and a brighter future for all Singaporeans.

Fostering Inclusive Growth

Our aim is not just to grow a vibrant, innovative economy, but an inclusive economy, where growth uplifts all Singaporeans.

To achieve inclusive growth:
Our workers need to have the skills to stay relevant; and
We need to provide holistic support to uplift our vulnerable workers.

Growing Skills for Every Worker

First, skills. To take on good jobs and enjoy the fruits of growth, our workers need the right skills for the job. We have a strong base of human capital developed through our education system. But there are big changes upon us. There is stiffer global competition. With deep technological changes, skills are going obsolete faster.

We will, therefore, need extensive upskilling and continual reskilling of our workforce, to equip our workers to continue to get good jobs. We want to do so for every worker at every age. We are investing significantly.

This year, we have set aside about S$3 billion for the SGUnited Jobs and Skills package to provide immediate employment and training support for our workers.

This is on top of the close to S$5 billion set aside over three years for our longer-term structural measures, to support workers of all ages to upskill and access new job opportunities.

Firms and training providers have a major part to play. I urge all firms to make full use of the schemes for developing our people.

We have a suite of leadership development programmes for Singaporeans at various stages of their careers, such as the Global Ready Talent Programme, and the SkillsFuture Leadership Development Initiative.

Companies on the Human Capital Partnership, or HCP Programme, which recognises fair and progressive employers, have also benefited, as the HCP mark endorses them as employers of choice.

We will work closely with industry and training providers, to make sure that the skills workers learn are useful.

Skills upgrading is most effective when the training is relevant to the company’s needs, and job-seekers have certainty in the value of the training. For example, through NTUC’s Company Training Committees, our Professional Conversion Programmes, or PCPs, and TechSkills Accelerator Company-Led Training programme for ICT jobs. These have had good outcomes. For example, about nine in 10 of PCP employees remained in employment 24 months after being placed, and about seven in 10 saw a wage increase after starting their new jobs.

As part of this whole-of-society movement to build skills, companies too, need better skills! Skills to develop their workers, and redesign skills-based jobs to move beyond paper-based qualifications. We will continue our work through our ITMs, together with our unions, to drive these changes in each firm and in each sector.

And finally, individuals have a key part to play in taking charge of their own learning.

Our schools provide a good foundation. We are increasing the digital skills content in our schools and Institutes of Higher Learning, to prepare our young for a digital future.
But learning does not stop after leaving school. We spend more years outside of school than in school. We all need to learn through life. In the process, we can enrich our lives, and our society at large.

Even as we level up the skills of every worker at every age, we still need to bring in global talent to complement our Singapore talent. By building on complementary strengths, we can build cutting-edge capabilities in our workforce and our firms, and plug into global networks. This will ultimately benefit all Singaporean workers.

We will continue to update our foreign workforce policies carefully, such as our Employment Pass and S Pass rules, to achieve this synergy.

Let us all play our part in building a strong, skilled workforce together. Singaporeans, growing up in a multicultural society, have an edge in building relationships with people around the world, especially in a more fragmented post-Covid landscape. Let us build on this.

Supporting Workers Across Society

I have covered how we will grow skills across the workforce to keep our workers competitive. The second way to ensure inclusive growth is to help vulnerable and lower-wage workers raise their skills and secure good jobs.

I had a good discussion recently with career coaches and union leaders, to better understand the challenges experienced by different groups of job-seekers.
Each worker also faced different challenges. For some, it was a skills gap issue. For others, it was an issue of expectations — trying to find a job which matched their earlier salary. For yet others, especially mid-career and mature executives, employers were concerned about whether they could adapt.

These are all important issues that we need to tackle together, urgently. For example, our lower-income workers have been particularly hard hit by Covid-19. Many of these workers face a twin challenge, as they are also in sectors that will be affected by longer-term structural changes in the economy, such as retail or F&B. Some are also in the gig economy.

Our middle-income and middle-age workers also have heavy family responsibilities and commitments, but face the challenges of a rapidly evolving labour market.
For all these workers, there is even more urgency to upskill and transition into jobs with good long-term prospects.

In the design of our support schemes, we have been deliberate in channelling additional support to vulnerable groups, to help them access opportunities and stay in good jobs.

For example, mature and older workers are eligible for higher wage support in our career conversion programmes, as well as higher course subsidies. I announced some of these earlier this year as part of our SkillsFuture Mid-Career Support Package.

Our lower-income workers also get additional support for skills upgrading via the Workfare Skills Support scheme. This has been implemented in July 2020 to better support acquisition of skills and qualifications that are more likely to lead to higher wages.

The Progressive Wage Model, or PWM, is an important labour policy innovation. PWM is more than a sector-based minimum wage.

It is a 4-in-1 framework comprising a Job Ladder, Skills Ladder, Productivity Ladder and Wage Ladder. These four upgrading ladders are mutually reinforcing.

By offering a proper career ladder, skills upgrading ladder, productivity improvement ladder and wage enhancement ladder, our 4-in-1 PWM transforms jobs that are traditionally less attractive to our locals.

We will expand PWM to more sectors over time, while making sure that businesses in those sectors can absorb this change. Companies that voluntarily pay progressive wages and provide advancement pathways for lower-income workers will also be recognised with a PWM Mark.

In doing so, we will raise skill levels, and create more and better jobs. And in time, we will slow down the future growth of the foreign workforce in these sectors.

We may still be battling the downturn, but will be actively looking to identify the next few sectors where we can use this 4-in-1 framework, to redesign jobs and raise skills levels, and expand PWM to benefit more groups of lower-wage workers as soon as conditions allow.

This will also mean that business costs will go up, which will add to the difficulty of businesses during this time. But Covid-19 has highlighted why it is critical, for long-term survival, for firms to be more manpower-lean, productive, and have jobs that are attractive to our locals.

We will have to explore solutions, and the Government will provide support for the transition.

It is a continuing journey to improve the job market for our more vulnerable workers. Beyond incentives, we need to shift culture and employer mindsets. But if we focus on the strengths of our workers and adopt flexibility in job design, we can customise creative solutions for different groups of workers.

For example, we know that some workers find it hard to travel far for work. At the same time, some of the shops in our heartlands may find it difficult to find workers. By putting these job openings together, and placing them at potential touchpoints like Social Services Offices, CCs, MyCareersFuture portal, and SGUnited Jobs and Skills Centres, we can facilitate job matches for these workers.

I have asked Minister of State Low Yen Ling, who is also Chairperson of the Mayors’ Committee, to look into how we can better help our displaced mature professionals, and how we can make better use of micro-jobs to bring job opportunities closer to the heartlands. More details will be announced later.

Given the scale of structural changes in the global economy, we need to redesign jobs and reskill workers, across all our ITMs, in significant ways. We need to be innovative in pursuing this, and work in close partnerships between employers, workers, and our unions. It will take time and effort, but if done well, will usher in a more dynamic and inclusive economy.

Investing in Economic Resilience and Sustainability as a Source of Growth

I have covered the first and second moves in this next phase of our industry transformation journey. Our third key move is to invest in our economic resilience and sustainability as a source of growth and competitive advantage.

Economic resilience is not a new idea for Singapore. We have achieved resilience through a diversified economic structure, with multiple engines of growth. No one industry accounts for much more than 20% of our GDP, so we do not put all our eggs in one basket.

We thus entered the Covid-19 pandemic on a relatively strong footing. We were able to ensure sufficient medical supplies and essential goods for our public and healthcare workers because we had a strategic national stockpile in place, supported by a combination of local production of essential supplies, and a diverse network of trading partners.

Nonetheless, Covid-19 exposed vulnerabilities around the world. Beyond essential goods, critical inputs for industrial production and access to workers were cut off due to global work stoppages and travel bans. Demand also ground to a halt in many industries.

Economic Resilience

We must, therefore, act now to improve our economic resilience. In doing this, we may have to creatively combine the efficiency of having things ready “just in time” with the resilience of building buffers “just in case”.

Will this drive for resilience come at the expense of growth and efficiency? Not necessarily so. For example, firms that embrace technology raise not only productivity, but also resilience.

Lingjack, a manufacturer of fire extinguishers, automated its labour-intensive production lines in 2017. With over 90% of its production lines automated, Lingjack achieved efficiency gains of up to 40%. At the same time, this also made the company less vulnerable to worker shortages during the Covid-19 pandemic.

One key way to enhance our resilience and to grow is to produce essential supplies locally, which can be used both for local consumption and export. One example is medical supplies, such as masks and test kits.

Another example is food. We set ourselves the ambitious “30 by 30” goal of producing 30% of our nutritional needs locally by 2030, up from less than 10% today. Our agri-food sector will enhance our resilience to food supply disruptions.

The technology developed in support of this strategy, such as in seeds and alternative proteins, can be exported. We can grow these capabilities, building on our strengths in R&D and our standing as a trusted hub.

Singapore is already the global R&D centre for AgriProtein, one of the world’s leading insect protein companies. The R&D team develops technologies to upcycle food waste into sustainable animal feed solutions.

Sustainability

As we grapple with climate change, environmental sustainability is an important aspect of our economic resilience for a low-carbon and resource-constrained future. Here again is an opportunity for the green sector to be a growth industry in its own right, and to power our economy.

First, we are transforming our industries to build a sustainable economy.
We will continue to invest in research into energy and resource efficiency technologies, and encourage adoption of these technologies through various incentives under EDB, EMA, BCA and NEA.

Going forward, we will further promote the decarbonisation of the economy and pursue initiatives for a more sustainable economy.

Under our Zero Waste Masterplan, we will promote the circular economy, and support businesses to turn “trash to treasure” – namely, to recycle or transform waste into useful inputs for production. Harnessing the circular economy model, JTC is working with companies on Jurong Island to build a more sustainable Jurong Island.

We are increasing our deployment of renewable energy sources, such as solar energy, at both the national and industry level.

And we will invest in new capabilities and solutions such as hydrogen and carbon capture, utilisation and storage to complement our existing R&D efforts. In time, we hope that these promising technologies can become commercially viable decarbonisation pathways in future.
Even as we transform our existing industries, we are seeking new business opportunities in the green economy, given our region’s growing needs for sustainable development.

We will establish ourselves as a carbon services hub in Asia. Efforts to limit the growth of carbon emissions will increase the demand for engineering, legal, and consultancy services related to carbon services.

The Alliance for Action for Sustainability is market-testing some concepts and business opportunities. Finance is also an important enabler of green growth. We are developing financing solutions and markets in Singapore to help firms finance their adoption of more sustainable practices under MAS’ Green Finance Action Plan.

Taken together, our moves to strengthen our economic resilience and sustainability serve a dual purpose. They strengthen our economy so that we can bounce back quickly and better from shocks, while adding to our value proposition as a vital global node in Asia. In turn, all these initiatives will create many new opportunities and valuable jobs for our people.

Summary

Mr Speaker Sir, I have set out a set of interlocking strategies that will enable us to build back better and emerge stronger from this crisis. These strategies strengthen both our economy and our social compact.

The key to achieving our objectives is working together. In our system, tripartism – between the Government, businesses and the Labour Movement – has been a tremendous source of strength.

Our Emerging Stronger Taskforce’s Alliances for Action are a new form of collaborative partnership – nimble, action-focused partnerships that involve people from a wide spectrum of society, while putting ideas into action quickly. This will further strengthen our capacity for economic transformation and change.

By working together, our businesses will be better positioned to capture new opportunities in Asia, digitalisation, innovation, and to build a more resilient and sustainable economy. Our people will be better placed to take on these new opportunities and bounce back from setbacks. We can then emerge from this pandemic stronger as an economy, as a society, and as one people.

OUR FISCAL POSITION

As I announced in my August Ministerial Statement, the continued support for our fight against Covid-19 will cost a further S$8 billion this financial year. The additional measures I have spoken on today remain within this and earlier voted sums.

I will fund the additional expenditure by reallocating monies from areas with reduced spending, such as development projects that have been delayed due to Covid-19. The proposed reallocations are indicated in the Supplementary Estimates presented to Parliament today.

When I announced the Fortitude Budget just after the start of the financial year, the economic situation and overall revenue picture were highly uncertain. We are now in the middle of the financial year, and are in a better position to revise the overall revenue estimates.

Hence, I am presenting the revised revenue estimates to Parliament, which also take into account the revenue forgone arising from measures in the Fortitude Budget. The revised estimates will reflect a S$1.5 billion draw on Past Reserves resulting from these measures, such as the Foreign Worker Levy waiver, for which the President had given in-principle approval. There is no additional draw for this latest support package itself. The total draw on Past Reserves remains within S$52 billion.

When I briefed the President and the Council of Presidential Advisers in August, I thanked them for their earlier support and approval for the use of Past Reserves to fund our response to Covid-19. In total, we are dedicating close to S$100 billion to support our people and businesses.

We are starting this new term of government from a most challenging fiscal position. For this financial year, we already expect operating revenues to be 16% lower than initial estimates presented at the Unity Budget in February 2020.

Revenue collections are expected to fall across all categories of revenue. For example, compared to the estimates at the start of the year, we expect GST collections to be down by 14%.

We expect our revenue position to be weak for a number of years, as the effects of Covid-19 on the global economy linger, and our economy slows. At the same time, our expenditure will rise as we continue to provide support for our people and businesses.

In short, the Government is bearing a substantial part of the economy-wide adjustment during this crisis, through reduced revenues and substantial transfers to households and businesses.

This challenging fiscal position is a result of a global pandemic that no one could have predicted. What is within our control is how we use our fiscal resources well to respond to this crisis, and to prepare for the future.

We have dedicated close to S$100 billion to support our people and businesses through this difficult period. As we do so, we must be careful not to spend in a way that squanders what generations before us have painstakingly built up.

Our guiding principle is prudence, not austerity. We will continue to invest decisively in our national priorities, with a deep commitment to leave behind a better future for our children.
There is much work to be done to transform our economy, and to build a fair and inclusive society, a sustainable and liveable city, and a safe and secure Singapore. We will have to find ways to fund these sustainably — higher taxes, and more effective spending. These are difficult choices, but we must meet them head-on.

We will pay for our recurrent needs, like healthcare spending, with recurrent revenues, such as taxes. We will also maintain a disciplined and judicious use of borrowing, reserving its use for long-term infrastructure whose benefits are spread across many generations.

Our Past Reserves have been critical in our fight against Covid-19. Governments around the world have committed trillions of dollars in response to Covid-19, and their debt levels have risen to record highs. Such debt will take generations to pay off.

We have avoided this outcome, because successive generations have built up strong reserves ahead of this crisis. We must have the discipline to start earning, saving, and investing for the future again. Covid-19 is not our first crisis, and certainly will not be the last.

CONCLUSION

My Speaker, Sir, before I conclude, allow me to say a few words in Mandarin.
新加坡的冠病疫情已经稳定下来。国人的配合是我们控制疫情的关键。我们绝对不能掉以轻心,大家还是必须配合防疫工作,遵守安全距离措施。

冠病检测、病例追踪和疫苗的研发和生产,以及其他国家控制疫情的进度将决定我国什么时候能够安全地重启所有经济活动。目前,各经济领域复苏的速度不一样。因此,我们将从现在到下一个财政年或以后,继续为国人和企业提供援助。

我知道许多企业仍然面对资金周转的问题。因此,我将延长过渡性贷款计划到2021年9月,但政府的资助将减少。新加坡金融管理局也将同样延长新元贷款计划,协助企业继续获得信贷。
另外,我们也会延长升级版培训援助配套到2021年6月,为受重创的行业如航空及旅游业等提供培训方面的补贴。

我们了解疫情带来的不确定性导致许多年轻家庭推迟生育计划。因此,我们将为符合条件的夫妇提供一次性额外补贴,协助他们减轻养育孩子的负担。

此外,政府已经开始制定2021年的财政预算案。我们将继续同企业、工友和社区团体紧密合作,共同规划新加坡未来的发展方向。

要为国人创造更多优质的工作,我们需要有一个蓬勃的经济。所幸的是,政府之前已经开启了企业转型的工作,设立了未来经济理事会,为各个领域推出了产业转型蓝图。我们也成立了“越战越勇工作小组”来更新我国的经济蓝图,为后冠病时代做好准备。我们也成立了 “新加坡群策群力行动联盟”,由业界牵头,试行创新点子。

我们也需要进一步巩固新加坡作为全球及亚洲科技、创新及商业枢纽的地位。
我们必须加强我们经济韧力,发展绿色经济,为可持续的低碳未来做好准备,保持我国的竞争优势。新加坡也必须实现包容性增长。我们的工友必须拥有所需的技能,以跟上发展步伐。

我们将在更多行业逐步推行渐进式薪金模式,重新设计工作和提升工友的技能水平,让更多低薪工友受惠。这样一来,我们也能让这些行业的外籍员工增长速度放缓。

我在八月份发表的部长声明中,推出了额外八十亿元的援助措施来对抗冠病疫情。连同之前宣布的四份预算案,我们已承诺拨出近一千亿元来协助国人和企业度过难关。除了必须应付庞大的开销外,我国的税收也因全球经济持续放缓而面对不少压力。

尽管如此,政府在规划我国财政时,还是会遵循谨慎理财、勿紧缩的原则。因此,我们将继续在家庭、医疗和基建等方面投入资源,为国人提升生活素质。一个欣欣向荣的经济不但能让国人实现理想和抱负,也能确保政府拥有足够的资源来照顾国人的需要。

后冠病时代将会是个截然不同的世界。我们会根据局势的发展不断改进我们的经济策略,与时俱进、求新求变,让我国经济能够保持优势。不管眼前的挑战有多艰巨,我们都会把国人的利益和福祉放在第一位。我相信只要大家同舟共济、保持团结坚韧,我们必能克服眼前困难,迎接更美好的未来。

Mr Speaker, our people and businesses are in the thick of battling Covid-19. We have adapted together, and I am glad that many continue to give their utmost in this difficult situation, and do their best for their families and communities.

I have shared with this House and our people a stocktake of where we are, and where we are headed. I give you our commitment that we will continue to support our workers and businesses in this difficult time.

We have worked out the steps to further re-open safely in the coming months. We have refreshed our economic strategy for a post-Covid-19 world, to Remake Singapore as a Global-Asia node of technology, innovation, and enterprise, achieve inclusive growth, and build resilience; So as to create better lives and opportunities for our people.

Given the great uncertainty ahead, we have to remain vigilant, work in close partnership, and continue to adapt as we plan and move ahead. Work on Budget 2021 is well underway. I encourage each of you to share with us your perspectives and ideas, and do your part to build our future as part of our Singapore Together movement.

Together, we will overcome this crisis and emerge stronger.” /TISG

Lee Hsien Yang looks back at his mother’s passing

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Marking the 10th year since his mother’s passing, Mr Lee Hsien Yang took to social media to share a clip of a eulogy by his son, Li Shengwu.

In a Facebook post, Mr Lee, brother of Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong wrote: “My mother passed away 10 years ago on 2 Oct 2010. Shengwu gave the closing eulogy at the funeral”.

Mr Lee said of Li Shengwu’s eulogy: “He (Li Shengwu) quoted poetry extensively as she (Mdm Kwa) so much enjoyed poetry. He (Li Shengwu) also talked about her (Mdm Kwa) having “the patience to sow the seeds that take longer to fruit” and described his grandparents’ love for each other as “steadfast” rather than in youthful romantic terms”.

In his post, he shared a video of his son.

My mother passed away 10 years ago on 2 Oct 2010. Shengwu gave the closing eulogy at the funeral. He quoted poetry…

Posted by Lee Hsien Yang on Friday, 2 October 2020

Last week, in a video interview with Yahoo News, Mr Lee’s wife, Lee Suet Fern recalled feeling frightened of her mother-in-law when she and Hsien Yang were living in Cairnhill Mansions when her husband was often away for military training. They were living just above Hsien Loong and his first wife Wong Ming Yang after their marriage.

She said: “I did feel a little isolated and unprotected. I confided that in Yang, that when I first got married, she (her mother-in-law) was quite frightening. Yang just gave me every assurance that it was him that I married and not his mother and that he would always put me first.”

A turning point in Mrs Lee’s relationship with her mother-in-law apparently came after Wong’s death due to a heart attack in October 1982. She said: “Thereafter, she was much more reserved and reticent and more careful.”

Mrs Lee also revealed that she was irked by some of her mother-in-law’s advice after she had children: “I was often ticked off by her (but) not in a terrible way. And when I had my first two sons, this was her typical refrain.”

“You know Fern, you must raise your children like the queen. Leave others to raise your children, and inspect them every day at tea time’.”

The young mother even hid the fact that she nursed her babies due to her mother-in-law’s disapproval of breastfeeding.

Suet Fern said: “She would say, ‘Yang’s fully bottle-fed and he turned out all right, leave them to maids and a bottle’.” /TISG

Pompeo slams China’s ‘corruption, coercion’ at Tokyo talks

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by Hiroshi HIYAMA / Shingo ITO

US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo called on key Asian allies to unite against China’s “exploitation, corruption and coercion” in the region, as he held talks Tuesday in Tokyo.

Pompeo was speaking at the start of discussions with his Japanese, Indian and Australian counterparts — the so-called Quad grouping, seeking to present a united front against an increasingly assertive Beijing.

But it was the top US diplomat who took the hardest line on China, referring to the “pandemic that came from Wuhan”, which he said was “made infinitely worse by the Chinese Communist Party’s cover-up”.

He warned it was “more critical now than ever that we collaborate to protect our people and partners from the CCP’s exploitation, corruption and coercion”, citing China’s actions in the Himalayas, Taiwan Strait and elsewhere.

This rhetoric was not fully echoed by Washington’s partners in the grouping, although Australia’s Foreign Minister Marise Payne pointedly spoke of the desire for a region “governed by rules, not power”.

The talks come with Washington, Sydney and New Delhi all at loggerheads with Beijing.

Indian Foreign Minister Subrahmanyam Jaishankar noted the fact that the meeting was happening at all, given the coronavirus pandemic, was “testimony to the importance” of the alliance.

But Japan, under the leadership of new Prime Minister Yoshihide Suga, is seeking to balance the need to support its allies with its desire to continue gradually improving ties with China.

Foreign Minister Toshimitsu Motegi notably did not mention China in his remarks, and the government has said the talks are not directed at any one country.

“Lately, the present international order has been challenged in various fields and the new coronavirus is accelerating the trend,” Motegi said at the start of the meeting.

“Our four countries share the objective of strengthening a free and open, rule-based international order.”

– Other stops scrapped –
Pompeo’s visit, which included bilateral talks with his counterparts as well as a meeting with Suga, took place despite the coronavirus crisis in Washington, where President Donald Trump and several staff and advisors have tested positive.

Although planned stops in South Korea and Mongolia were scrapped, Pompeo said it was important to go ahead with the four-way talks in Tokyo, promising “significant announcements”.

However, no joint statement or press conference is expected after the meeting.

Pompeo is a vociferous critic of China on issues from security to human rights to the pandemic, which Trump’s administration has sought to blame squarely on Beijing ahead of the US election next month.

He is the first senior American official to visit Japan since Suga took office last month, and he said he was confident Tokyo and Washington were on the same page.

Earlier Tuesday, Suga said the spread of the coronavirus had shown “exactly why right now is the time that we must further deepen coordination with as many countries as possible that share our vision”.

But he too avoided any specific mention of Beijing, which has made clear its disdain for the grouping, and last week urged countries to avoid “closed and exclusive ‘cliques'”.

“We hope the relevant countries can proceed from the common interests of countries in the region, and do more things that are conducive to regional peace, stability and development, not the other way around,” Chinese foreign ministry spokesman Wang Wenbin said.

The Quad grouping was heavily promoted by Japan’s former prime minister Shinzo Abe as a way for the region’s major democracies to step up cooperation in the face of military and other threats posed by China.

The first Quad meeting took place in New York last year, and there are moves to make the gathering an annual event.

hih-si-sah/kaf/qan

© Agence France-Presse

/AFP

Biden slams Trump over reassuring remarks on Covid-19

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Democratic White House hopeful Joe Biden on Monday castigated Donald Trump for saying Americans should not be afraid of Covid-19 or let it “dominate your life,” even after the president tested positive for coronavirus.

“I saw a tweet he did, they showed me, he said ‘don’t let COVID control your life,'” Biden told Florida news station Local 10 as he campaigned in the key battleground state.

“Tell that to the 205,000 families who lost somebody.”

Biden was refering to the number of Americans — now past 210,000 — who have died from coronavirus, even as the president downplays the seriousness of the disease.

The former vice president added to his comments later Monday at an outdoor town hall event in Miami, where he criticized Trump for ignoring the importance of masks.

“I would hope that the president, having gone through what he went through — and I’m glad he seems to be coming along pretty well — would communicate the right lesson to the American people: masks matter,” Biden said.

“These masks, they matter. It matters, it saves lives, it prevents the spread of the disease.”

Biden’s remarks came just minutes after Trump concluded a four-day period of Covid-19 treatment at Walter Reed military medical center in Maryland, returned to the White House, and defiantly removed his facemask as he stood on the mansion’s balcony.

“It’s a great concern,” Biden said. “I hope no one walks away with the message thinking that it’s not a problem.”

Biden faced Trump on stage in their rollercoaster debate last Wednesday, just days before the president announced his positive Covid diagnosis.

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© Agence France-Presse

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Trump leaves hospital for White House — removes mask immediately

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by Sebastian Smith

President Donald Trump checked out of hospital Monday after four days of emergency treatment for Covid-19, pulling off his mask the moment he reached the White House and vowing to quickly get back on the campaign trail.

Shortly beforehand, Trump had tweeted that Americans, who have lost nearly 210,000 people to the virus, have nothing to fear.

A series of made-for-TV moments allowed Trump to squeeze the maximum from his medical discharge, starting by exiting alone from the large gold-colored front doors of the Walter Reed military hospital just outside Washington.

Live on television, he then walked in a mask to a limousine, giving the thumbs up, before boarding Marine One helicopter for the quick flight to the White House — which he left on Friday after falling ill.

After landing, he walked up the steps onto the South Portico’s stately balcony, demonstratively removed his mask and offered a 23-second salute to the departing Marine One.

With less than a month until Election Day on November 3, polls show Trump trailing Democrat Joe Biden. The president’s hospitalization left him scrambling even harder to catch up.

The return to the White House was minutely stage-managed to show he is physically fit, while a series of striking tweets demonstrated Trump’s coming angle of political attack: that he personally beat Covid and will now lead the country to its own comeback.

“Will be back on the Campaign Trail soon!!!” he said in one tweet.

“Don’t be afraid of Covid,” he said in another, claiming to be feeling rejuvenated after his illness.

The remark startled his rival, who was campaigning Monday in Florida.

“Tell that to the 205,000 families who lost somebody,” Biden snapped.

The former vice president added to his comments later Monday at an outdoor town hall in Miami, where he criticized Trump for downplaying the importance of masks.

“I would hope that the president, having gone through what he went through — and I’m glad he seems to be coming along pretty well — would communicate the right lesson to the American people: masks matter,” Biden said.

That recommendation appeared to go unheeded, as Trump pushed out a new, unfiltered message to Americans: “Don’t let it dominate your life — get out there, be careful,” Trump said in a tweeted video.

– Sickness around Trump –
The 74-year-old Republican’s display of bravado came the same day that his own chief spokeswoman tested positive — the latest in a viral outbreak raging within the White House.

And despite his claims to be in good health again, a combination of secrecy, conflicting information from officials and the viral spread among his own circle damaged his credibility.

In a briefing at Walter Reed, presidential physician Sean Conley said Trump is “back” but that he would not be “entirely out of the woods” for another week.

Despite Trump’s characteristic claim that Covid-19 should not be of major concern, polls show it is a huge worry for Americans. His widely panned handling of the crisis this year is also reckoned to be the main reason Biden, 77, is surging in polls.

Illustrating the divide between the reality described by health experts and the White House’s defiance, Press Secretary Kayleigh McEnany became the latest to announce a positive test result Monday.

Other positive cases close to Trump now include his wife Melania, aide Hope Hicks, campaign manager Bill Stepien, two of McEnany’s assistants according to US media, and more than half a dozen others from the president’s circle.

– Trump singlehandedly ‘defeats’ Covid? –
Beset by revelations that he avoids paying almost any federal income tax and a slew of other scandals, Trump was already behind Biden when he fell ill.

But the biggest liability in his scramble for a second term was always his pandemic response.

For months, Trump has given the appearance of trying to wish away the catastrophe and get back to his reelection narrative of a strong economy.

Trump now looks poised to try and claim that in getting quickly out of hospital, he has personally vanquished the virus — and will go on to do the same for the rest of the country.

An unofficial White House-themed gift shop announced Monday it will sell a commemorative coin titled “President Donald J. Trump Defeats COVID” for $100.

– Biden gets advantage –
For all of Trump’s determination to reassert himself, he has lost several precious days of a campaign that revolves heavily around his large-scale rallies and image of personal strength.

The day after he announced his positive test, he was to have flown to battleground Wisconsin, ignoring the fact he would gather crowds in one of the nation’s worst coronavirus hotspots.

Biden, meanwhile, has maintained his slow-but-steady campaign that has always emphasized health precautions — a pared-back style that Trump calls weakness and mocked as recently as last week.

The upheaval has led to unusual interest in this Wednesday’s televised debate between the vice presidential candidates — Republican Mike Pence and Biden’s running mate Kamala Harris — who will be separated by a Plexiglas barrier for the event.

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© Agence France-Presse

/AFP

Trump flies back to White House over cheering fans

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by Cyril JULIEN

After days of hush around the military hospital where he was being treated for Covid-19, President Donald Trump emerged to the clatter of helicopter rotor blades and the cries of supporters chanting, “Trump, Trump, Trump.”

Some had waited all day to see him and were hoping for another drive-by in his armoured limo, as he had done the day before.

Nevertheless, they were happy when he boarded Marine One and flew off over the crowd gathered in front of Walter Reed military hospital in Bethesda, just outside Washington, DC.

“I’m not disappointed based on the security,” said Jasmine Rochon, who had driven 120 miles on Monday from Philadelphia. “But the fact that he flew in and made sure that he turned and waved at us, that’s good enough for me,” she said.

For Andrew Roff, clutching a huge “Trump 2020” flag in his hands, the departure from hospital in the presidential chopper was emblematic.

“That lift off seemed very symbolic, cathartic, it was like victory. He beat Covid, he’s back to work, he is okay,” said the 54-year-old from nearby Frederick, Maryland, who served in the army for 23 years and — like many Trump fans here — was not wearing a mask.

Wearing their red “Make America Great Again” baseball caps, the fans of the real estate tycoon and reality TV star waited all day at the main entrance to the hospital, waving flags and singing the songs usually blared out at Trump rallies — “Proud to Be an American,” “Born in the USA,” “Sweet Home Alabama,” “Beat It” and “Rocketman.”

– Back to the campaign –
The crowd was later moved on by police, regrouping on the other side of the wide road running past the hospital grounds, close to the group of journalists whom some of the Trump fans had spent the day hurling insults at.

At the outset, there were around 20 people in the gathering, which swelled to around 100 in the middle of the afternoon after Trump announced on Twitter that he would be leaving the hospital in the evening.

“I’m very happy, that is wonderful news,” said a maskless Karen Sloan, 50, a resident of Washington holding a sign that read “Prayers for the president, 4 more years.”

“That means that he was able to overcome that flu,” she said. “He’s just made of iron. The first thing he should do at the White House is to give Melania a big kiss and get back to work.”

A little further along, Sally Ashcroft, 72, wanted the president to “go back to the campaign trail,” which he had to abandon due to his illness, with just a month to go before the November 3 election.

Philadelphia resident Rochon said the president “should prove now to the world that this Covid-19 virus is not that lethal,” even though the president was the beneficiary of an experimental treatment not yet available to other Americans.

“We should go back to normal, we need to reopen the whole world,” she said. “A lot of people are suffering, losing their job and their income” from the pandemic that has killed more than 210,000 people in the United States.

cyj/jh/to

© Agence France-Presse

/AFP

Singapore PM’s defamation suit against blogger begins

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Singapore’s prime minister testified in court Tuesday at the start of his defamation suit against a blogger who shared an article on Facebook linking the leader to a corruption scandal.

Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong accuses Leong Sze Hian of spreading false claims about him over the article relating to the money-laundering scandal at state fund 1MDB in neighbouring Malaysia.

Critics say the case is the latest example of the tightly-regulated city-state’s government being heavy-handed and seeking to silence dissent online.

Singapore’s leaders have frequently turned to the courts to take on critics, ranging from political opponents to foreign media outlets, and insist such action is necessary to protect their reputations.

Taking the stand at the start of the trial, Lee accused Leong of making “malicious and baseless” allegations, which had undermined the government’s “integrity and honesty”.

The article that Leong shared, originally published in a Malaysian news portal, alleged that Lee was the target of an investigation in Malaysia over the 1MDB state fund.

Billions of dollars were looted from the investment vehicle in a scandal that involved Malaysia’s former leader Najib Razak and his inner circle.

Lee, 68, also said he suffered damage to his own reputation.

Leong’s lawyer Lim Tean argued the libel suit was unnecessary as authorities had denied the allegations, adding the prime minister had “picked on the defendant when there are many others who shared the (defamatory) article”.

The case will run until the end of the week.

On Friday, Lim, who is also an opposition politician, was arrested on suspicion of harassment and misappropriating money and claimed the move was politically motivated. Police denied his claim.

Singapore’s leaders are sensitive to allegations of graft, but rights groups frequently accuse them of resorting to tough laws to silence criticism.

Last year authorities introduced a law against online misinformation, which empowers ministers to order the blocking of social media posts they deem false, sparking criticism that it would chill free speech.

mba-sr/rbu

© Agence France-Presse

/AFP

PM Lee at Supreme Court on first day of defamation suit against blogger Leong Sze Hian

Singapore — Videos have been circulating online of Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong arriving at the Supreme Court on Tuesday morning (Oct 6) for the first day of his defamation suit against blogger Leong Sze Hian.

PM Lee Hsien Loong arrives at the Supreme Court

Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong arrives at the Supreme Court on Tuesday (6 October) for the first day of his defamation lawsuit against blogger Leong Sze Hian. READ: https://yhoo.it/3iA4FF5(VIDEO: Wan Ting Koh / Yahoo News Singapore)

Posted by Yahoo Singapore on Monday, 5 October 2020

 

According to reports, all tickets for the public gallery of the court had been snapped up by 7 am. With safety restrictions still in place, only 50 people were allowed in the courtroom, with 20 spaces reserved for members of the public.

Mr Leong is being sued over a public Facebook post he had shared on his page on Nov 7, 2018, containing a link to an article by The Coverage, a Malaysian news site.

The article alleged that former Malaysian Prime Minister Najib Razak signed “secret deals” with Mr Lee in exchange for assistance from Singapore banks in laundering money from 1MDB, the embattled sovereign wealth fund.

Two days after Mr Leong shared the article, he said that he was told by the Infocomm Media Development Authority (IMDA) to take down his post with the article within 6 hours, to which he complied. However, on Nov 12, he received a Letter of Demand from Mr Davinder Singh of Drew and Napier LLC, alleging that he had defamed Mr Lee and demanding a public apology as well as compensation for damages.

He wrote on his Facebook page, “the Letter of Demand also stated that I had posted TheCoverage.my article maliciously and to damage his client. I reject all these allegations categorically”.

Mr Leong also said a Writ of Summons and other court papers were posted on his front gate on Dec 4, 2018. He included photos of his gate, as well as the documents, in his Facebook post, which ended with “I turned 65 on 23rd of November and belong to the so-called “Merdeka” generation. I have fought for fundamental human rights in Singapore for the better part of my adult life in the last 2 decades or so, and the freedom of speech is one of the most fundamental of these human rights”.

The blogger is being represented by opposition Peoples Voice party leader Lim Tean. In a Facebook post on Monday (Oct 6), he characterised the lawsuit as “One Vs Five!”

He wrote: “In addition to dealing with police harassment on the eve of a big trial, I will be up against 5 lawyers representing Lee Hsien Loong in his defamation suit against Leong Sze Hian … In other words, I will be flying solo for Leong Sze Hian.”

Mr Lee’s lawyers are Davinder Singh S/O Amar Singh, Lin Xianyang Timothy, Fong Cheng Yee David, Darveenia Rajula Rajah and Shannon Valencia Peh. They are all from Davinder Singh Chambers LLC, which was set up in 2019.

In an unrelated matter, Mr Lim was arrested in his office on Friday (Oct 2) for suspected criminal breach of trust under the Penal Code. He is also being investigated for an alleged offence of unlawful stalking under the Protection from Harassment Act. /TISG

Read also: Lim Tean: “One Vs Five!” in PM’s defamation suit against blogger Leong Sze Hian

Lim Tean: “One Vs Five!” in PM’s defamation suit against blogger Leong Sze Hian

Netizens want to know if Singapore youths lack Discipline

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Singapore – Netizens are wondering if the youth in Singapore lacks discipline after separate accounts of reckless behaviour.

The reports of reckless behaviour have garnered comments from a disappointed online community.

Facebook user Raven Qiu uploaded a video on Complaint Singapore’s page on Monday (Oct 5), showing a young person in a purple shirt hanging by the handrail of an MRT station escalator.

As the escalator moved upwards, the boy held on until he was near the ceiling portion of the lower floor. He then let go to tumble to the floor.

Members from the online community commented on the post, wondering what was wrong with the youth nowadays.

If they were bored, Facebook user Sam Tan suggests they take up volunteer work. A netizen expressed concern that such actions could set precedence for other kids to follow. “Should take action against these kids,” commented Facebook user Tan Richard.

Photo: FB screengrab/Complaint Singapore
Photo: FB screengrab/Complaint Singapore
Photo: FB screengrab/Complaint Singapore

Meanwhile, others searched for the TransCom officers tasked to keep public transport safe and stop such misbehaviour.

Photo: FB screengrab/Complaint Singapore
Photo: FB screengrab/Complaint Singapore

Kids nowadays really never know what is call dangerous if something happen start to regret

Posted by Raven Qiu on Sunday, 4 October 2020

KICKING A PARKED VEHICLE

In a separate account, another youth in a white shirt was recorded ‘high-kicking’ the side-mirror of a parked vehicle in a car park. Facebook user Low Hang Poh shared the incident to Complaint Singapore on Monday.

The video began with the boy preparing himself for the task. After being prodded by the cameraman, he ran towards the vehicle’s side-mirror, kicking it in the process. A cracking sound could be heard, and a part of the mirror tumbles to the ground.

With over 200 comments, netizens expressed their disappointment with the youth’s behaviour.

Photo: FB screengrab/Complaint Singapore

Many called for stricter disciplining or punishment for such reckless acts. “Caning is the best solution for these boys,” commented Facebook user Eric Zhang.

A netizen highlighted that schools must “re-emphasise to all students that vandalism is a crime and subject for jail and caning.”

Photo: FB screengrab/Complaint Singapore
Photo: FB screengrab/Complaint Singapore
Photo: FB screengrab/Complaint Singapore
Photo: FB screengrab/Complaint Singapore
Photo: FB screengrab/Complaint Singapore
Photo: FB screengrab/Complaint Singapore
Photo: FB screengrab/Complaint Singapore

Facebook user Rafie Chua empathised with the owner of the vehicle who would return to their parked car with a broken side-mirror.

Photo: FB screengrab/Complaint Singapore

Others mentioned the video could serve as evidence for the authorities to put the perpetrators to the task and teach them a lesson.

“It is always good to expose these types of anti-social actions,” said Facebook user Robert E Chan. “There is no defence for these types of misbehaviour.”

Photo: FB screengrab/Complaint Singapore

ah boy ah. why like that?

Posted by Low Hang Poh on Monday, 5 October 2020

Read related: 10 youths arrested for riding on e-bicycles along Sheares Avenue

Kate and Princess Charlotte have now mastered the floss dance

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The Duke of Cambridge revealed some surprising details about his family in a new ITV documentary, Prince William: A Planet for Us All.

The 38-year-old prince visited Liverpool, a visit documented in the film. He had an opportunity to surprise a bunch of children who built a big bug hotel which they whimsically named ‘Bugingham Palace’.

A student asked the father of three if George had taught the family how to do the floss dance.

“No, Charlotte can floss,” William replied, noting that their daughter had mastered it at the age of 4 and that his wife could also do the popular dance style.

“Catherine can floss but I can’t. It’s, it’s like a really horrible film to watch me floss,” he added.

In the documentary, he says his wife, Kate Middleton has some wicked dance moves!

They also discussed the importance of insects on the environment, the children asked about the royal father’s children: Prince George, 7, Princess Charlotte, 5 and Prince Louis, 2.

“Is Princess Charlotte cheekier than Prince George?” asked one child, according to Hello! magazine.

“No they’re about as cheeky as each other,” William answered. “They’re very cheeky.”

PROTECT THE ENVIRONMENT

Prince William reflected on how his children have impacted his commitment to protecting the environment in the new documentary which airs in the UK on ITV on Monday.

“I really want to make sure that in 20 years, George doesn’t turn around and say, are you ahead of your time? Because if he does, we’re too late,” William says.

“I’ve got George, Charlotte and now Louis in my life, your outlook does change. You want to hand over to the next generation, the wildlife, in a much better condition,” he adds.

The Duke and Duchess of Cambridge. Picture: Instagram

The prince’s kids may still be young but they already share their father’s love of the environment.

The royal couple showed off some adorable images of the family in the garden at Kensington Palace last weekend, meeting one of their favourite TV stars, Sir David Attenborough.

And on Saturday, a video was released showing the three children asking the revered naturalist a question while helping to raise awareness of the challenges of the natural world.