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January is the time of the year in which all Singaporean households can take a breather. We get $300 worth of Community Development Council (CDC) vouchers from the government, half of which can be used in supermarkets and the other half used in hawker centres and food courts.
This is how the vouchers look like on my phone.
I choose a voucher from 3 choices ($2, $5 & $10) and show the stallholder the QR code. Once he scans it, I am deemed to have paid for my groceries or food with the voucher. It’s quite idiot-proof.
The vouchers are aimed at alleviating the pressures that arise from the rising costs of living. Erm, the increase in our GST is partly responsible for our noose-like living costs. It’s 9 per cent this year, a jump of 2% from 7 per cent as recently as 2022. I’m sure it’s a calculated political move to manage public displeasure about exorbitant prices. Mercer ranked us as the 2nd most expensive city to live in - worldwide.
Not sure how I feel about this dubious honour.
Anyway, just curious to know how this injection of economic stimulus is perceived by the larger world out there? A sound financial move or a stop-gap measure that fails to manage the repercussions that might arise later on? Let me know what you think.
It's definitely a temporary measure and it's not going to help anything in the future...
I think it's an even authoritarian measure because they give you what they want to give you... And you have to spend it where they say you should spend it!!
I liked this quote😅 "I'm not sure how I feel about this dubious honor."
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Shhhh but my wife calls us Happy North Korea. I should be insulted, but I’m quite amused by her observation haha
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Ok😅
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It's CBDC training for the plebs.
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91 sats \ 1 reply \ @Aardvark 4 Jan
Personally, I'm never overly grateful for the government sending me money thst they could have just not taken in the first place.
Whenever I see things like this, it just makes me think some politician just wants his/her name on a check so people remember to vote for them.
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You have a point, and believe me, this skepticism/jadedness runs deep among some groups of Singaporeans too
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As a way of spending government revenue, it's probably a better idea than most.
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Glad to receive your vote of confidence haha
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It's pretty small, so I doubt it has much effect. Technically, this sounds like a really tiny Universal Basic Income Guarantee.
The expected effects would be higher consumer prices on the things people buy because they have this extra money and higher reservation wages (the wage that must be offered to get people to take a job).
I'd only expect to see the price effect, though, and maybe not even that. Another related effect might be delayed consumption. Do people what for their CDC's to arrive before making certain purchases?
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Thanks for your Eoncomist lens!
I don’t think the price effect has happened. Singaporeans are pretty price conscious. I don’t think supermarkets and stallholders are in the position of inflating their prices because we will just take our business elsewhere haha
My wife just told me that she has aimed to spend $120 on groceries at a supermarket called NTUC FairPrice next weekend. Apparently, it is giving out $5 vouchers for every $60 spent on its products. I’m sure my wife is not the only one to hasten her consumption to meet the end-Jan deadline for this voucher giveaway!
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Something has to happen with prices or inventories, because here's what I know does not happen: CDC's do not create $300 worth of new stuff to buy per person.
It might be that prices rise slightly in the lead up or that inventory that would have gone on sale remains at its normal price.
Like I said, there shouldn't be much impact. For a nation as wealthy as Singapore, $300 is pretty trivial, especially when it's on a schedule.
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Gotcha.
I will be more observant and see if there are any price changes in the lead-up to the next distribution of vouchers
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24 sats \ 1 reply \ @galt 4 Jan
First steps from Singapore towards socialism, it creates a dependant population after Covid mismanagement which led prices go to the roof and a lot of discontentment within the population. The values that led to where Singapore is today did not pass on to the new generation of leaders who only see themselves as relays of the globalist class. The only thing that holds Singapore together is that elsewhere it is getting worse faster
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How would you say that Covid was mismanaged in my country?
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