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Thread: Singapore named the world's most expensive city

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    Default Singapore named the world's most expensive city

    Singapore named the world's most expensive city
    3 March 2014 Last updated at 23:19

    Singapore has topped 131 cities globally to become the world's most expensive city to live in 2014, according to the Economic Intelligence Unit (EIU).

    The city's strong currency combined with the high cost of running a car and soaring utility bills contributed to Singapore topping the list.

    It is also the most expensive place in the world to buy clothes.

    Singapore replaces Tokyo, which topped the list in 2013.

    Other cities making up the top five most expensive cities to live in are Paris, Oslo, Zurich and Sydney, with Tokyo falling to sixth place.

    The EIU's Worldwide Cost of Living Survey is a relocation tool that uses New York city as a base. It looks at more than 400 individual prices.

    Continue reading the main story
    Top 5 most expensive cities
    Sydney opera house
    1.Singapore, Singapore
    2.Paris, France
    3.Oslo, Norway
    4.Zurich, Switzerland
    5.Sydney, Australia

    Soaring Asia

    The top 10 cities this year have been dominated by Asian and Australasian cities as well as some in Europe.

    "Improving sentiment in structurally expensive European cities combined with the continued rise of Asian hubs means that these two regions continue to supply most of the world's most expensive cities," said the editor of the report, Jon Copestake.

    "But Asian cities also continue to make up many of the world's cheapest, especially in the Indian subcontinent."

    Most Asian cities that top the list are there for predominantly higher costs of groceries. Tokyo is still at the top of the list for everyday food items.

    Inexpensive India

    However, not all Asian cities are tough on the wallet.

    India's major cities - including Mumbai and New Delhi - were found to be among the least expensive in the world.

    Mumbai's prices are kept low by large income inequality.

    The low wages of many of the city's workers keep spending low, and government subsidies have helped them stay that way.

    Outside of the subcontinent, Damascus in Syria saw the largest drop, becoming the fourth cheapest city in the world as the country's ongoing conflict has led to plummeting prices.

    While the EIU's survey takes into account the cost of living, other firms employ different research methods.

    Mercer conducts research to determine the most expensive cities for expatriate living.

    It found that in 2013, Luanda, Angola was the hardest on expatriate wallets due to the difficulty of finding adequate secure housing, and the high price of imported goods.

    http://www.bbc.com/news/business-26412821

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    Watch out for more inflation (forget about official statistics) in Singapore this year spilling over from Malaysia and Ukraine.

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    Buy Iskandar properties near 1st and 2nd links. The cost of living is not sustainable for the lower - average income to retire comfortably, especially with longer lifespan, higher medical costs and possibly higher taxes (e.g. GST).

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    Re-employment age set to rise to 67
    Lim Yi Han
    MyPaperTuesday, Mar 04, 2014

    SINGAPORE - Older workers may soon get the chance to work till 67 years old, giving their savings for retirement a boost.

    The tripartite partners - the Government, unions and employers - have agreed to work on extending the re-employment age for workers from 65 to 67, said Senior Minister of State in the Prime Minister's Office Heng Chee How on the first day of the Budget debate yesterday.

    Mr Heng, who is also the deputy secretary-general of the National Trades Union Congress (NTUC), said: "With life expectancy continuing to rise, I firmly believe that the re-employment age ceiling need not and cannot stagnate at 65."

    Currently, Singapore's statutory minimum retirement age is 62, but employers have to offer re-employment to those eligible up to age 65.

    Mr Heng also wants workers to be able to work for as long as they can and pushed for a ramp-up of workplace health practices to protect them "against premature loss of employability and employment".

    He said that jobs that need workers to stay on their feet, or use their joints often, or sectors that hire senior workers, should be targeted to ensure that workers "maintain a level of health that can allow them to carry on contributing".

    On the other hand, Dr Lam Pin Min (Sengkang West) suggested abolishing the retirement age altogether, and instead continuing to pay older workers based on their performance and contribution.

    He said: "We need to ensure that, in other areas, the elderly can still participate meaningfully in society...The non-monetary aspects of growing old must not be neglected and the Government can do more to help them."

    Meanwhile, other labour issues were thrown up during the Budget debate. Mr Zainal Sapari (Pasir Ris-Punggol GRC) called for more help for low-wage workers in the form of a fund to tide them over in case their companies go bust. Workers tend not to get paid when a firm folds.

    He also asked for the National Wages Council's (NWC's) recommendations for low-wage workers to be made mandatory for all companies.

    The NWC's recommendations included a pay rise of at least $60 a month for workers earning up to $1,000 last year. Firms were left to choose to implement them, or not.

    Nominated MP Teo Siong Seng, immediate past president of the Singapore Chinese Chamber of Commerce and Industry, asked for more government support for micro-enterprises and traditional industries, such as bakeries, noodle factories and tentage companies.

    "Currently, these traditional industries face a number of problems - the inability to find successors, shrinking markets, rising rentals and increasing manpower costs," he said in Mandarin.

    [email protected]

    http://business.asiaone.com/news/re-...ge-set-rise-67

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    On the flipside, high cost associated with high taxes collected means SG government now one of the richest on the list?

    Quote Originally Posted by hyenergix View Post
    Singapore named the world's most expensive city
    3 March 2014 Last updated at 23:19

    Singapore has topped 131 cities globally to become the world's most expensive city to live in 2014, according to the Economic Intelligence Unit (EIU).

    The city's strong currency combined with the high cost of running a car and soaring utility bills contributed to Singapore topping the list.

    It is also the most expensive place in the world to buy clothes.

    Singapore replaces Tokyo, which topped the list in 2013.

    Other cities making up the top five most expensive cities to live in are Paris, Oslo, Zurich and Sydney, with Tokyo falling to sixth place.

    The EIU's Worldwide Cost of Living Survey is a relocation tool that uses New York city as a base. It looks at more than 400 individual prices.

    Continue reading the main story
    Top 5 most expensive cities
    Sydney opera house
    1.Singapore, Singapore
    2.Paris, France
    3.Oslo, Norway
    4.Zurich, Switzerland
    5.Sydney, Australia

    Soaring Asia

    The top 10 cities this year have been dominated by Asian and Australasian cities as well as some in Europe.

    "Improving sentiment in structurally expensive European cities combined with the continued rise of Asian hubs means that these two regions continue to supply most of the world's most expensive cities," said the editor of the report, Jon Copestake.

    "But Asian cities also continue to make up many of the world's cheapest, especially in the Indian subcontinent."

    Most Asian cities that top the list are there for predominantly higher costs of groceries. Tokyo is still at the top of the list for everyday food items.

    Inexpensive India

    However, not all Asian cities are tough on the wallet.

    India's major cities - including Mumbai and New Delhi - were found to be among the least expensive in the world.

    Mumbai's prices are kept low by large income inequality.

    The low wages of many of the city's workers keep spending low, and government subsidies have helped them stay that way.

    Outside of the subcontinent, Damascus in Syria saw the largest drop, becoming the fourth cheapest city in the world as the country's ongoing conflict has led to plummeting prices.

    While the EIU's survey takes into account the cost of living, other firms employ different research methods.

    Mercer conducts research to determine the most expensive cities for expatriate living.

    It found that in 2013, Luanda, Angola was the hardest on expatriate wallets due to the difficulty of finding adequate secure housing, and the high price of imported goods.

    http://www.bbc.com/news/business-26412821
    Believing me is like believing Puaka Hill is in D10!

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    Quote Originally Posted by hyenergix View Post
    Buy Iskandar properties near 1st and 2nd links. The cost of living is not sustainable for the lower - average income to retire comfortably, especially with longer lifespan, higher medical costs and possibly higher taxes (e.g. GST).
    Agree. Sg is getting too expensive esp car ownership. Glad my JB retirement plan is still on track...

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    Live in jb another set of problems. When there is a blackout, good luck

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    http://www.cnbc.com/id/101462586
    Singapore now world’s most expensive city

    Singapore, which was the world's 18th most expensive city ten years ago, has steadily crept up the rankings on the back of a strong currency, the high cost of owning a car and soaring utility bills.

    "Car costs have very high related certificate of entitlement fees attached to them, which makes Singapore significantly more expensive than any other location when it comes to running a car," the EIU said in its report.
    "As a result, transport costs in Singapore are almost three times higher than in New York. In addition, as a city-state with very few natural resources to speak of, Singapore is reliant on other countries for energy and water supplies, making it the third most expensive destination for utility costs," it added.

    And according to the EIU, Singapore is also the most expensive place in the world to buy clothes given an influx of luxury brands and expensive shopping malls and boutiques.

    ---------------

    bec of COE and too many luxury shops, SG become most expensive?

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    incidentally, parliament was talking about high business cost

    1. high rental cost > what do you expect from the millions dollars property price
    2. high labour cost > what do you expect from levy getting higher and higher
    3. high operating cost > transportation, utilities, cost of goods, etc ... all gone up

    it's true that business cost had skyrocketed ...

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    Singapore has no natural wonders to admire, shopping also so expensive, living expenses also so high, wages not fantastic also, so majority of expats come here for what? The uber rich come here to avoid tax in United States I understand, the average foreigner come to our congested island don't know for what.

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    expensive meh

    i still can have mixed rice at less than $3 and feel full.

    i still can buy $6.90 shirts/tee at Uniqlo sales basket.

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    to look for JOB

    Quote Originally Posted by Patrickstar View Post
    Singapore has no natural wonders to admire, shopping also so expensive, living expenses also so high, wages not fantastic also, so majority of expats come here for what? The uber rich come here to avoid tax in United States I understand, the average foreigner come to our congested island don't know for what.

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    Now u open sg taps water come out. In malaysia be prepared to bring pails.


    More Malaysia households face water woes; Expanded water rationing will affect over 300,000 households in KL and Selangor this month
    2014-03-01
    Kuala Lumpur - Pails and water containers have been selling like hot cakes, especially after Malaysia said it will expand water rationing in and around its capital, in a move affecting millions as drought continues to scorch the region.
    The national water commission said last Friday that over 300,000 households in Kuala Lumpur and nearby Selangor will experience cuts for the whole of this month, after a two-month dry spell depleted reservoirs.
    Some 431,617 households and businesses in the districts of Gombak, Kuala Lumpur, Petaling, Klang, Shah Alam, Kuala Selangor and Hulu Selangor will be affected. They will have water for 41 hours, after which there will be no supply for 55 hours.
    TTS Distribution, a convenience store in Taman OUG, said people were coming from as far as Subang and Klang to buy water containers to store water.
    "Previously, we re-stocked about a dozen containers a week. Now, we're selling six to seven dozen a day," business owner Lim Say Wei, 24, told The Star yesterday.
    "But we are not increasing prices because we are long-established in the business," he added. The best-selling items were the 172.7-litre containers priced at RM80 (S$30) each, he said.
    "I have customers telling me that in Petaling Jaya, the price for these containers had gone up to RM135," he said.
    Last Friday, National Water Services Commission chairman Ismail Kassim said rationing had to be expanded because of the reduced amount of water released from the Selangor and Klang Gate dams. The level at the Selangor dam is 47.5 per cent, while at the Klang Gates, it is 54 per cent, both of which are deemed critical.
    He said that in Johor, residents in the Kluang district would continue to face rationing. Some 51,036 households in the district started getting two days of water supply, followed by two days of dry taps, from yesterday. Before this, they had two days of supply followed by one day of no water.
    Malaysia tends to experience dry weather early in the year, but the current spell has been unusually long.
    Singapore, which had a record 27 consecutive days without rain from Jan 13, is preparing for the dry spell to persist into the first half of this month.
    The Star/ANN, AFP

    Copyright 2014 Singapore Press Holdings Limited
    All Rights Reserved

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    so these couple of weeks, do msia still supply (sell) water to spore?

    Quote Originally Posted by star View Post
    Now u open sg taps water come out. In malaysia be prepared to bring pails.

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    Quote Originally Posted by wt_know View Post
    so these couple of weeks, do msia still supply (sell) water to spore?
    If Malaysia decides not to sell to Singapore because of their own dwindling supply, Sg will suffer more.

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    Good smart pills good for your kids.

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    Congested still look for job?

    Quote Originally Posted by wt_know View Post
    to look for JOB

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    Quote Originally Posted by wt_know View Post
    so these couple of weeks, do msia still supply (sell) water to spore?
    I am glad sg govt is well planned with desalination plants and new water and not rely solely on reservoirs. Someone mocked at us for new water last time but now it makes sense to have it.

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    Quote Originally Posted by star View Post
    Good smart pills good for your kids.
    You can take it for your own kids if you have any...anyway it did not happen in jb and it is not like they forced it down their throats.

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    For sure government will now do something to cool things down... Last thing they want is companies moving out due to high cost of living here

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    Desalination should have been thought of since independence. Why take so long to come out with this n this is not even a govt initiative, it was hyflux. What has the so called top brains up there been doing for decades before hyflux came about?

    Quote Originally Posted by star View Post
    I am glad sg govt is well planned with desalination plants and new water and not rely solely on reservoirs. Someone mocked at us for new water last time but now it makes sense to have it.

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    Just find the direction we are going in very sad, most number of millionaires here but huge income gap with the poor struggling to survive and retirement age for the ordinary folks pushed furthur and furthur back. A high percentage of the millionaires must be rich FT and PRs and new citizens that the present government is so keen to attract. IMO, the rich should be taxed more and more help given to the poor.

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    Quote Originally Posted by star View Post
    I am glad sg govt is well planned with desalination plants and new water and not rely solely on reservoirs. Someone mocked at us for new water last time but now it makes sense to have it.
    My views:

    1. The true cost of Newater and desalinated water might not have factored into current PUB residential water tariffs. If you ramp up the utilisation of the plants, parts of the system will wear out, as demonstrated clearly by MRT infrastructure. Maintenance cost will go up as well.

    2. When the weather is hot, the demand actually goes up. Without supply from Malaysia, it is difficult for Singapore to be self-sufficient at current water tariffs. In the past, we had NParks watering the plants once there was a slight drought. To lower the demand for water, NParks may have actually cut down the watering, as evident by dying grasses, shrubs and trees.

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    Quote Originally Posted by Patrickstar View Post
    Desalination should have been thought of since independence. Why take so long to come out with this n this is not even a govt initiative, it was hyflux. What has the so called top brains up there been doing for decades before hyflux came about?
    There were some newspaper articles on this before. I roughly recall the technology wasn't cost effective then. Hyflux, IMHO, is just a well connected.

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    Quote Originally Posted by babyt View Post
    expensive meh

    i still can have mixed rice at less than $3 and feel full.

    i still can buy $6.90 shirts/tee at Uniqlo sales basket.
    True, but there are many people near retirement or already in retirement who are caught off guard by the sudden inflation in recent years. They cannot afford medical treatment too.

    I hope you can recall this case of Samsui woman committed suicide in Nov 2013. Do you see a link of this with the recently announced Pioneer Generation Package? http://forums.hardwarezone.com.sg/ea...e-4472673.html

    Do open your eyes wider, there are many people suffering in silence.

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    Being the most expensive country is not a good sign. Perhaps this is the world #1 position phenomenon that we are chasing after and we bag this one as well.

    Next time, we may have to stand and eat in caferia like Japan and squeeze to live in shoebox units like HK.

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    Quote Originally Posted by Royston8H View Post
    Being the most expensive country is not a good sign. Perhaps this is the world #1 position phenomenon that we are chasing after and we bag this one as well.

    Next time, we may have to stand and eat in caferia like Japan and squeeze to live in shoebox units like HK.
    It is okay if the median salary is comparable to those countries that rank near it. But it is not.

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    Quote Originally Posted by hyenergix View Post
    It is okay if the median salary is comparable to those countries that rank near it. But it is not.
    Touché.........

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