Ernie Nudes & Briefs:

Civil servants' inflation bonus 29.05.2008
http://www.straitstimes.com/Free/Story/STIStory_242017.html
"Good! Bonuses should see an increase in quality and service from the Government sector. Civil servants are lucky people, they can now combat inflation" - Ern

Tharman: Pay rises no cure for inflation 11.07.2008
http://www.straitstimes.com/Free/Story/STIStory_256258.html
"You're kidding me right?!" - Ern

Businesses, motorists will be worse off in long run if ERP eased 14.07.2008
http://www.channelnewsasia.com/stories/singaporelocalnews/view/360266/1/.html
"Businesses, motorists will be worse off in long run if ERP continues" - Ern

Weblog

Wednesday, July 16, 2008

  • What Is ERP?

    http://www.lta.gov.sg/motoring_matters/index_motoring_erp.htm

    Electronic Road Pricing

    What is ERP

    Electronic Road Pricing (ERP) is an electronic system of road pricing based on a pay-as-you-use principle. It is designed to be a fair system as motorists are charged when they use the road during peak hours.

    LTA reviews the traffic conditions on the expressways and roads, where the ERP system is in operation, on a quarterly basis and during the June and December school holidays.

    After the review, the ERP rates would then be adjusted where necessary to minimise congestion on the roads. ERP has been effective in maintaining an optimal speed range of 45 to 65 km/h for expressways and 20 to 30 km/h for arterial roads.

    So how do you apply the above principle/strategy/equation to a scenario where an ERP gantry is in the midst of completion, build over a road which is not in use yet??!! I'm very very confused. ERP is supposed to control traffic by charging motorist on usage. But somewhere in the equation is missing a "congestion" component. The an$wer to the equation is very very puzzling too! Please mind my typo.
    DSC02277 DSC02282
    DSC02281 DSC02279

  • How HDB flats are priced affordably

    How HDB flats are priced affordably
    I REFER to the letter from Mr See Leong Kit, 'Market-based pricing has cost buyers dearly' (July 7).

    HDB adopts a market-based pricing approach so as to reflect the true subsidy that buyers enjoy. Under this approach, HDB determines the market value of the flat, based on its location, finish and other attributes. Then, it sells the flat at a discount to the market value. HDB buyers understand this, and appreciate that new HDB flats are priced lower than resale flats. Similarly, when they want to sell their flat in the open market, they do so at the prevailing market value, not at their cost of purchase of the flat.

    We also wish to highlight that this approach has enabled HDB to continue to price its flats affordably despite the current sharp escalation in construction costs. Currently, a new four-room flat can cost close to $300,000 to develop, taking into account land, building and other costs. This is significantly higher than the subsidised price of a four-room flat in Punggol/Sengkang sold by HDB at about $200,000 to $260,000.

    Through the market-subsidy approach to pricing, HDB has been able to keep its flats affordable for Singaporeans. On average, first-time flat buyers need to pay only about 20 per cent of their monthly household income to service their housing loan. This is well within the 25 to 30 per cent that is commonly cited internationally as the benchmark for affordable housing. Lower-income households can enjoy additional help in the form of the Additional CPF Housing Grant.

    Mr See commented that young couples have to wait as long as six years for new flats. This is incorrect. New Build-To-Order flats take about three years to complete from time of registration. Those with urgent housing needs can consider the resale market where there is a wide range of resale flats to match the preference and budget of buyers. Eligible first-time buyers can also enjoy a CPF Housing Grant of $30,000/$40,000.

    Kee Lay Cheng (Ms)
    Deputy Director (Marketing & Projects)
    for Director (Estate Administration & Property)
    Housing & Development Board

    ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
    Market-based pricing has cost buyers dearly

    I REFER to the Insight interview with National Development Minister Mah Bow Tan ('HDB neighbours from hell? This minister knows all about it', June 27).

    Private property is mostly beyond the reach of young couples. Even with HDB flats, they are caught either waiting as long as six years for an expensive new flat or paying an exorbitant price for a resale flat.

    In the 1970s, graduate starting pay was $1,000. Then, in Marine Parade, a new three-, four- or five-room HDB flat cost $17,000, $20,000 and $35,000 respectively. By 1990, the average price of a new five-room flat was $70,000. Such prices then reflected a 'cost-based' approach to pricing.

    Now, graduate starting pay is three times higher at $3,000, but prices of similar new flats have gone up by 10 to 30 times.

    These massive price hikes were largely due to the HDB switching to a 'market-based' approach to pricing, following the 1994 property bull run.

    In an ST Forum reply last year, the HDB finally confirmed that 'the prices of new HDB flats are based on the market prices of resale HDB flats, and not their costs of construction'.

    In 2000, the total breakeven cost (comprising construction cost, land cost and other related costs) of a new five-room flat was an estimated $120,000.

    However, under the market-based pricing approach, the HDB will first look at the prevailing market price of, say, $260,000 of a five-room resale flat. It will then pick a slightly lower figure of, say, $200,000 as the selling price of the new five-room flat - regardless of its $120,000 breakeven cost.

    The HDB will then say the new flat buyer is getting a so-called 'market subsidy' of $60,000, the difference between the resale flat market price and new flat selling price. There is thus no actual 'cash subsidy' given to the flat buyer.

    This market-based pricing approach caused new flat prices and resale flat prices to chase each other in an upward spiral, affecting buyers of both new and resale flats.

    It has also caused current prices of 1,000 sq ft four-room new flats to vary so much - from $200,000 in Sengkang to $400,000 in Telok Blangah.

    As a low-cost public housing developer, the HDB owes Singaporeans a proper reply on why it does not pass on to flat buyers the economy-of-scale cost savings in its huge developments through pricing new flats on a cost-based breakeven basis.

    See Leong Kit

    ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

    Apparently, there is some miscommunication here. One - a poor Mr See, writes about how expensive the flats are, the other - a deputy director, writes back and says the price is affordable. Only a millioniare like me can afford to buy a 4-5 room flat. Poor buggers, have no place to stay. HDB has changed some of it's core values and principles. Yeah, affordability is subjective.

Monday, July 14, 2008

  • Typical Singaporean Tai-Ji Karma


    So this is how everyone is.

    I'm in the office and the going gets tough. There are like piles of paper work to greet my face each day, plus a bitchy presence breathing down my neck on my every movement, someone who ridicules me for every little thing I do, gossips about my work performance and about my personal life; it tends to get the better of me and at the end of the day, I just want to rant everything on my blog. And the very next day, I repeat this whole cycle again.

    And the thing is, I don't bring about alot of change in my life either. I don't really care if I have found joy or have brought joy to anyone. I want to have my own space, own pace and own personal views regarding my outlook in life, in short, I want to have my cake and eat it. All I really want is, to do my work the way I see fit, and if anyone who isn't too fond about the arrangements, then to hell with them - in my blog.

    The only sad truth is that, they don't know or don't want to know, and I don't tell them either. So really, it's still my own ass that pays at the end of the day. And I rather like the way I keep my lips seal.

    The problem is, I keep convincing myself everyday that what I am is the way I am - becos I had some dents in my past life so I'm therefore entitled that way I am. Well, it can sometimes get tiring to pretending that everything is alright. But isn't everyone pretending too, in some social stage? Well, it's comforting to know that no one is happy so therfore I can be unhappy too? And then I go back to my blogging world and regurgitate crappiness into cyber space again. I cry, 'Why is the whole so unfair to me!'

    Let's say for example, I had a terrible day at work, and a good idea of unwinding would be a nice round of beer. I head to the nearest bar and proceeded to have my order taken. I sit and wait. And wait and wait and wait. It's 15 mins and my beer isn't here yet.

    I started getting the sensation of a nerve throbbing near my temple signaling a possible impending rage swelling beneath. It's slowly eating into my unwinding session. So when the beer finally arrives, I snap at the waiter.

    Since I am no employee of that premises, it excludes me from any attachment, responsibility or work commitment, and so I let the waiter have it, big time, telling him off about the waiting time, the rights of a customer, basically giving him a piece of me about his overall service. In short, I gave him hell. He serves me the beer dutifully and then retreats to the cashier's counter.

    I finally feel a sense of justification for having a bad day at work. Too bad for him, he doesn't want to say anything. That's life!

    The above example can also be applied to when I'm a customer at a retail shop. Make Singapore proud!

    tai-ji

Friday, July 11, 2008

  • Uncaring Elite Ernie


    "You can choose to take note now and spread the awareness, or you can choose to ignore it, keep quiet, and play safe in your own world of 'I don't really care but I look like I do'. It's all up to your personal strength within, to create a cause."

    I wish to object to the above statement by my conscience. 

    It is starting to bug me again with all the social-political awareness crap. I can't seem to get any uncaring-elite time for myself. I've always assume that almost everyone owes me a living. I have a talent call face value. It is of the upmost critical that I uphold this trait. Face value gives my a sense of superiority over everything and everyone. There is no such thing as No Face. 

    I've always enjoyed the superior saftey in Singapore all my life that it becomes a default expectation when I travel overseas. Somehow I expect the same safe treatment.

    I have enjoyed finanical freedom from whence I started working, and it has never cross my mind that giving back to society was ever one of my agendas. Oh, those NKF sms donations I made were never considered charitable since it pained nothing at all to strained my thumb on the mobile key pads... and most of the time I just action action nia

    My uncaring-elite notion of giving back to society can be summorised as:

    Clubbing - because I pump money into night life entertainment;
    Fine dining - because I help support the F&B industry;
    Shopping - because I get to generate revenue to the retail sector;
    Driving nice cars - because I get to speed up congested traffic when I pay painless ERP;
    Being a model Singaporean - because I want be famous and envied.

    elitism

Thursday, July 10, 2008

  • Finance Minister: Singapore could face another round of inflation if firms raise wages

    Singapore could face another round of inflation if firms raise wages
    By May Wong, Channel NewsAsia | Posted: 09 July 2008 2154 hrs
    http://www.channelnewsasia.com/stories/singaporelocalnews/view/359295/1/.html

     
     
    Photos 1 of 1

    Tharman Shanmugaratnam
      
     

    <<SINGAPORE : Finance Minister Tharman Shanmugaratnam has warned that Singapore could face another round of inflation if companies increase wages to help workers cope with the higher cost of living today.

    He said this will also affect Singapore's competitiveness and the ability to create jobs.

    Mr Tharman was speaking to some 500 workers at the Singapore Industrial and Services Employees' Union dinner on Wednesday evening.

    Higher rice and oil prices have led some Singaporeans to call on the government to set the tone by raising wages.

    But Mr Tharman said such short-term measures are not prudent. Instead, he said the government has provided assistance to help Singaporeans deal with the higher cost of living.

    These include S$500 million in GST Credits - to help citizens cope with the increased Goods and Services Tax - and special bonuses for senior citizens. - CNA/ms
    >>
    ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

    Dear Sir,

    What you have warned is the upmost correct thing every employer should follow. We must not increase the pay of our employees, so that cost reminds low for the company. And if employees fall short of cash from inflation, can't pay rent, can't pay medical fees, can't pay income tax, or contribute to their CPF, I can order their asses into the 'needy' line to collect goodies from the government. All these to help them not to die so soon! A meritocratic case of prudency on my part. I scored good points. Yes? Excellent!

    Oh yes, since you are also an "employee" of the state, can I also suggest that the country does not increase your wages? Keep all the ministers competitive yes? And also save cost for the country. Why? Because increasing wages is short-term only... and also because journalists praised PM Lee for he "practices what he advocates" http://www.straitstimes.com/Free/Story/STIStory_255637.html.

    C'mon Mr Finance Minister! Hurray hurray! Show us you are the man to set the tone, lead us by example so that we may follow your wisdom and fine leadership! Clap clap.


     

Tuesday, July 08, 2008

  • Successful S'poreans obliged to give back to society: PM

    Successful S'poreans obliged to give back to society: PM
    http://www.straitstimes.com/Latest+News/Singapore/STIStory_255502.html 
    "I will bare the load!"
    SUCCESSFUL Singaporeans who have gained from society should give back something to their fellow citizens and help build a giving nation, said Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong.

    'This is especially crucial in this era of abundant economic opportunities, yet stagnating wages at the lower end, and widening income gaps. To respond to these trends, the more successful Singaporeans must pitch in to help the weaker ones.'


    '...Those who have succeeded must feel the impulse to give back to society. The more they have gained from society, the greater their obligation to give back something to their fellow citizens. They must not allow society to be split between the haves and have-nots, and undermine the whole basis for able people to succeed and create wealth in Singapore,' - PM Lee

    Read also: http://www.channelnewsasia.com/stories/singaporelocalnews/view/358825/1/.html
    ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

    Remember when I told everyone that I was a millionaire and that it was terribly unbearable to have sooo much personal wealth? It was trully painful. The torture of having millions in your account is the worst nightmare of every Singaporean. It will destroy your future. But never fear, there is hope!

    So when PM Lee suggested that people who have gained from society should be obligated to give back, I sighed a tremendous relieve! Our esteem PM Lee with all his wisdom has again shown me the path to salvation and washed away the pain and suffering I have endured all these times. The rich and successful people who have gained from society must be rejoicing with this magnificent news. I will start giving.

    However, I believe our brave PM Lee and his ministers will carry on with their heavy load of their million dollar salary and bonus package, what brave men to continue to bare this burden/pain/nightmare as an excellent example of personal perseverance and leadership. Clap Clap. What great sacrifice. So proud to be Singaporean now.

Thursday, July 03, 2008

  • Piss-ism of MRT-ism

    If you are Singaporean traveling by MRT on a daily basis and you feel kinda pissed off about the service, waiting time or price hike, I urge you not to get pissed off immediately. Try to make some sense of yourself before you flip-table.


    Please feel free to understand the chart below, rather than get pissed for the sake of getting pissed off and just end up red faced with no grasp of where your red faced originates from. Please see below to make sense of your piss-ism of ... public transport, or so they say.

     

    You Me Pissed By

    Operated By

     

    Owned By

     

    Run By

     

    Spouse Of

    ·Longwaiting

    Between trains

    SMRT Corporation

     

    >> 

     

    Temesek

    Holdings

     

    >> 

     

    Ho Ching,

    CEO

    >> 

    PM Lee

     

    ·Jammed

      packedcommuters

    ·Price hike


    See: Stock Info,
    Halimah Yacob

     

     

     

    See: SMRT

     

    See: CEO

     

    See: 2nd last para

    Now, you can get pissed with some sense, or maybe some cents missing.

Wednesday, July 02, 2008

  • Political Juvenile and near-psychopath

    Whenever MM Lee says of someone of that magnitude, I always take note. http://www.straitstimes.com/Free/Story/STIStory_241769.html
    Because it is not everyday that any man gets called by MM Lee as crazy. Dr Chee is really one nut case who fights for Singaporeans who don't give a hoot about him, he is that crazy. Crazy enough to write this psychotic article after he crossed swords with MM Lee in court. Prepare for craziness. I oso think I'm crazy too.

    Tearing down the facade
    Chee Soon Juan
    http://yoursdp.org/index.php/perspective/vantage/38-vantage/556-tearing-down-the-facade

    His words are explained, researched and re-explained, every jab of the finger or the bringing down of his fist for effect is broadcast, accolades are reported in greater detail than a doctoral dissertation, and every smile is published in vivid colour.

    This is the Lee Kuan Yew that Singaporeans have come to know. Confident. Unerring. Sharp. Superhuman.

    But this is not the Lee Kuan Yew I saw.

    The man I confronted in court regurgitated his lines, was lost for words, and sought refuge in his counsel depending on the question I asked.

    Of course, he was his usual belligerent self and seemed like he was looking for a good intellectual joust. But he was nothing like the sharped-tongue sage that many, including me, were persuaded by the media to believe -- the one they call Minister Mentor.

    My first glimpse of the Lee's ordinariness came at the beginning of my cross-examination when I asked him why he insisted on testifying through lunchtime and why he refused to tell the court the "important matter" that he had to attend to that afternoon. It was a straightfoward question that required only a simple answer.

    But the Minister Mentor was tongue-tied despite ample opportunity for him to recover. Looking at Mr Lee from where I stood, I could see that his mouth was agape. But while he attempted to speak, no words came forth. After several agonising seconds, his counsel had to come to his rescue.

    Was age catching up and slowing the MM down? No, in the middle of that exchange Mr Lee let out one of his laughs, not the kind evoked from jollity but the sort laced with contrived cynicism meant for covering up embarrassment. This demonstrated a mind that was still clear but not the superlative one that his propagandists would have us believe.

    Cherry-picking

    MM Lee was also unremarkable in his ability to think on his feet. I discovered this during the exchange where he mentioned foreign organisations lauding his achievements, organisations such as PERC (Political and Economic Risk Consultancy) and Transparency International-Malaysia. Incidentally, one of PERC's chief, Bruce Gale, now works for the Straits Times as Senior Writer.

    When I listed out at least ten other organisations that criticised his undemocratic ways, Mr Lee countered that the organisations I had named were "liberal organisations" whereas those he cited were rating agencies concerned about "where investors put their money in."

    Such argument could easily be pulled apart by a secondary school student. The dichotomy was simplistic as it was false. The practice of liberal democracy and the ability to attract investments are not mutually exclusive. If they were India would not be one of the biggest magnets for investments, and neither would democracies like Ireland, Chile, South Korea, Hong Kong and Taiwan.

    Mr Lee seemed unable to grasp the fact that Singapore is a country and as a country, its people don't just robotically seek investments. There are such things as happiness that stem from being able to participate in the country's decision-making process and, as an extension, feeling a sense of rootedness to society. Is it any wonder that Singaporeans are one of the gloomiest and most stressed-out peoples in Asia?

    When confronted with these observations, Mr Lee could only regurgitate that without his system, there could not be the prosperity that Singapore was enjoying.


    Patriotism? Who cares

    Yes, prosperity. But for whom? When I persisted and pointed out that even if Singaporeans were as well off as Mr Lee wanted to believe and, as a consequence, as happy and contented, why did a survey conducted in 2007 show that 50 percent of young Singaporeans wanted to leave the haven given a chance and a shocking 37 percent indicated that they were not patriotic to the country.

    Mr Lee responded that he was "not moved one way or the other other." The final test, he pointed out, was whether these people were leaving permanently.

    He had apparently forgotten that just a few months ago, he had admitted in an
    interview that the brain drain in Singapore was a "pretty serious" problem because many of our top talent were going overseas and not coming back.

    When I made it plain to him that talented Singaporeans were leaving on a permanent basis, and one of the reasons for their leaving was that they were disenchanted with his system, the MM couldn't engage further. He changed the subject and asked me to quickly discharge myself from bankruptcy so that I could campaign in an election against the PAP.

    Mr Lee's response was troubling. The finding that nearly 40 percent of our youth did not feel loyalty to the country ought to raise a monumental alarm across the government. (How are our National Servicemen going to defend a country that they are not patriotic to?) Yet, Mr Lee indicated that he didn't quite care. What has this country become when the government is keener on attracting investments than the patriotism of its citizens?

    From London de-classified

    One way to duck a question is to change the subject. The other is to take refuge behind counsel.

    When I asked the MM about the declassified memos and letters from London regarding his role in the incarceration of his political opponents, in particular Mr Lim Chin Siong, and his manoeuvring to keep Lim from challenging for the prime ministership, Mr Lee uncharacteristically chose to remain silent, preferring to let his lawyer plead the irrelevance of my question.

    I had expected a robust defence of his so-called fight with the so-called communists in the left-wing of the PAP, his pet topic. But despite my stressing that this went to the issue of his integrity, Mr Lee shied away. No matter how hard I pressed, the MM remained silent.

    Contrast these: Mr Lee had volunteered the award by Transparency International-Malaysia to bolster his claim of his unblemished integrity. But when confronted with the question of his treatment of Mr Lim Chin Siong he was stone-cold silent.

    Oh yes, there was also the PM

    The courtroom confrontation with Mr Lee was not the only subject. There was also his son, the PM. The fact that Lee Jr's performance was so completely overshadowed speaks volumes of the his leadership.

    For all of his bluster Mr Lee Kuan Yew, at least, ventured his own thoughts and his own philosophy. Hsien Loong was altogether different. He kept his eye firmly on his lawyer and relied heavily on counsel's objections to avoid any engagement (see
    here). His crossing swords with Siok Chin also exposed his limitations in a toe-to-toe debate.

    At one point, Mr Davinder Singh even said that he was the one to make the decisions in the courtroom leaving his client - the country's top decision-maker no less - looking limp and unable to hold his own. Maybe the Minister Mentor position is not so redundant after all.

    I take pains to point out these tribunal encounters not to denigrate Mr Lee Kuan Yew. I make them so that Singaporeans are disabused of the image that Lee's propaganda machine has made him out to be, the image of a God-like figure to be held in fearful awe and never questioned.

    Nations run into trouble when the people allow their politicians to be cast in such reverential light. Autocrats work to ensure that they are cast in a mystical portrait -- larger-than-life and beyond reproach. We must undo what has happened in Singapore. Mr Lee Kuan Yew is most certainly not the person that the media paints him to be.

    For our own sakes and for the sake of our nation, we must see that he is one with all the foibles and weaknesses of any other man. For that he must be held accountable just like any other man.

     

Tuesday, July 01, 2008

  • Millionaire Problem$

    million


    I'm a millionaire....
    With alot of millions to spent. With millionaire dollars comes with a package of million friends. Million dollar lifestyle. Million dollar home. With a million problems.

    I hate being a millioniare, becos I get to brag my millions here. I so hate that I brag. I hate to tell the world how disgusted I feel of my millions that it really hurts even more. Millions of dollars are pump into the industry but I get to filter the first million before I pass down the profits to employees and then to the rest of the citizens.
    They say millions cannot buy you happiness, true, it cannot. Yeah! It cannot. It really does not! Believe you me, it really doesn't. Not in this life time. It will never buy you happiness!

    You have to have atleast a million dollars in your account to feel the unhappiness I feel. It's so hurtful.

    But if you ask me to give up the millions, I will reply that question in the next entry, or maybe never. Now, let's focus on the million dollar crisis I have at hand. So, I'm telling you how hurt and disgusted I am to be in such a dilema. Help me! But what I want more is less attention and less self gratification. Please make me poor! 

     

     

    Okie ..this is my version of pretty slim girls complaining about being fat. :)

Monday, June 30, 2008

  • Policies on ERP and COEs

    Policies on ERP and COEs seem contradictory
    http://www.straitstimes.com/ST%2BForum/Story/STIStory_252977.html
    I AM puzzled by the recent announcements on the impending Electronic Road Pricing (ERP) rate changes, with effect from July7.

    I vividly remember reading a Straits Times article in March or April this year on a Land Transport Authority (LTA) report on the benefits of introducing ERP in Orchard Road.

    The report stated that before ERP was introduced, retailers were worried the measures would drive away customers.

    However, instead of business going downhill, retailers in Orchard are enjoying record boom. One reason was that ERP deterred motorists who used Orchard Road as a thoroughfare, and genuine shoppers flocked there to shop. The report also stated that car speeds were an optimum 20kmh to 30kmh, and ERP gantries in Orchard succeeded in keeping down traffic.

    Now, on June 17, the LTA announced that car speeds in Orchard have fallen considerably, ERP charges will go up from $1 to $2 and operating hours on Saturdays will be from 11.30am to 8pm.

    My question is, who validates and verifies that cars are moving at optimum speed? Who checks these reports? Who decides that, three months ago, the speed was optimum, but now it is no longer so?

    One possible reason is that there are more cars on the road now. Cars are cheaper, application for car loans is easier, COE prices have dropped considerably, and rebates are given to motorists who switch to CNG cars.

    The LTA controls the number of COEs issued, and although it says it will control the number of COEs issued because of highly congested roads, many policies are implemented to make car ownership easier.

    So why does the LTA continue to issue COEs, even though it stated in a report last year that COEs issued are way above the stipulated quota - 9 per cent instead of 3 per cent?

    And after issuing so many COEs, the LTA introduces ERP gantries everywhere with higher prices and longer operating hours to discourage vehicle use. Why not control the issuing of COEs in the first place?

    I hope the LTA can shed some light on these apparently contradictory policies.

    Jennifer Wong (Ms)

    ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

    I think our transport minister Raymond Lim had once said ERP was about road usage and not about car ownership. Ofcos, they still need Singaporeans to buy more cars, becos it's most Singaporeans dream to have one and demand is there for cars, and also it helps to justify that that there are more cars on the roads and, thus, the need for ERPs. Why would they want to kill the goose that lays golden eggs?

    The same principle can be said to - Smoking kills, why import cigarettes? Ofcos no elite in their uncorrupted mind would ever let something as human rights and ethics get in their way of "running" Singapore Inc.... I think everyone has a rough idea what the moral answer is that justifies the question to ERPs. Ka-Ching!

    I think they need to come out with a better long term solution, that actually solves traffic congestions. Can they try something else that does not involve MONEY?

    http://www.lta.gov.sg/motoring_matters/motoring_erp.htm . Check out the BENEFITS ...benefit who..?

    Aim

    The pay-as-you-use principle of ERP makes motorists more aware of the true cost of driving. This way, road usage can be optimised.

    Charges are levied on a per-pass basis and rates are set based on traffic conditions at the pricing points.
    A motorist is encouraged to decide whether to drive, when to drive and where to drive.
    He may choose a different route, mode of transport, time of travel, or not travel at all.
    Those who choose to pay and stay on the road will enjoy a smoother ride.

     

    Benefits

    Fair
    Charges are based on usage so those who contribute more to the congestion pay more. Those who use the roads less frequently or who travel during non-ERP hours will pay less or not need to pay at all.
    Convenient
    Motorists need not purchase daily/monthly licences.

    Reliable
    As a fully automated system, there is no risk of human error as human enforcement is not required.


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