How are the retirees and jobless seniors, those above 60, coping with inflation and high cost of living in Singapore? Many of these seniors spent their productive years at a time when cost of living was much lower and their salaries were also much lower. Some were from the time when earning $1,000 pm was considered good income. Many of the middle class were very happy with a $3,000 dollar salary. With such incomes, their CPF and savings are minimal in today's high cost of living. Many would have spent everything, with little or nothing left in their CPF. And many would have to get by with nothing and hopefully getting some support from the govt to live their next 10 or 20 dying years.
Of course there are the natural aristocrats that are stilling gainfully employed and earning tens of thousands or hundreds of thousands today, and financially very comfortable, without a worry. These clever and lucky people are an exception from the hoi polloi that are struggling to fill their stomachs and paying the bills but with nothing to pay, no sources of income and an empty CPF. The people falling into this category is growing by the day, and having to face the high cost of living, with fees, fares, bills all going up, never ending increases. How are they going to get by?
The financial planners are talking about passive income to add to the wealth of an individual. No one is talking about passive expenditure, things that one has to pay without doing anything, without stepping out of the door. The bills for passive spending is no small matter and unforgiving. Pay you must. The conservancy charges, PUB bills, phone bills, GST and food bills.
How much would a person need to pay a month to live in Singapore? Some are talking about $1,500 a month. To some this is small change. To many of the retirees and seniors, this is like a mountain to climb when there is no income and absolutely nothing left in the saving. Let's look at some basic ballpark figures, the absolute minimum to get by. $50 for conservancy, $60 for PUB bills, no phone or TV bills, forget about the GST. Just look at food alone, the bare minimum, $15 a day for 3 meals, and plain water. No transportation, just hang around the neighbourhood or walk to wherever.
Just these alone, it would add up to $560 per month. Pray no sickness and no medical bills. $560 is the absolute bare minimum a person must spend a month just to be alive, with no luxury or entertainment or amusement. For a senior with no income, how is he/she to get by, to get the money to pay the bills? Lucky if he has a roof over his head. But not paying PUB bills could lead to no water or electricity supply, no gas as well.
There are many seniors in such a desperate state. And every now and then, the media would report happily of increases in bills, fees or fares as a normal thing. The govt often even said that increases are to help the poor. Really, how?
How is the govt going to help these poor jobless seniors with no income and no savings? Maybe this is an issue for the Presidential candidate to talk about. But whatever they promise, it is not their job, not within their power to do so. It is not part of their job. Presidential candidate must not make empty promises about things that they have no power to do so, not within in their job specs.
The only people that can do something for the jobless, penniless seniors are the ones in power, the one that is raising the cost of living and making the people pay and pay, got money or no money, just pay. This kind of poverty is structural and systemic and needs to be tackled systematically, not on a case by case basis or when someone is jumping off a flat or starving inside an empty flat. There must be a policy, a masterplan to help the seniors that are still alive and trying to be alive. $1,500 is needed to live a decent minimalist life, $560 is not even near to $1,500 to just be alive.
What is the rich govt that can lose tens of billions without blinking an eyelid going to do to the no income, no money seniors in their dying years or days? More fare hikes, more fee hikes, more GST hikes....to help the no money seniors? This may not be an existential problem for the govt to worry about. But it is an existential problem to the no money and still alive seniors. Some seniors may already be on some govt aid schemes. But many are out there, for some reasons, not asking for help from the govt. As a systemic problem, would the govt work on it and provide assistance to these seniors without them having to beg for alms? Piece meal solutions can only last a few days or a few months. Many seniors have 10, 20 or more years staying alive.
PS. Compulsory medical and life insurance are forced passive expenditure on the seniors and retirees and would add another $200 to the $560 absolute minimum, making the absolute minimum to $760. This is just a rough estimate. Could be much more.
RB I can feel the pressure too
ReplyDeletePassive expenditure is like a guillotine hanging over the neck of all seniors with no income and no savings.
ReplyDeleteOur big local Indian bank is helping the poor
ReplyDeletenews reported
Ya, $1 for you, $1m for me.
ReplyDeleteJust last Thursday, was told by SGH financial counsellor that PAP govt had (quietly) reduced the C-class ward inpatient subsidies for Singaporeans since last November! Thank you PAP Health Minister Ong!
ReplyDeleteAnd my Medishield life can shockingly claim only $410 for a $10,000 C-class operation while having to compulsory pay nearly $1,000 in Medishield Life premium yearly!
Now medishield can't even cover c class ward after subsidies. 5 days in c class was 5000 plus after subsidies and medishield still need to pay 2000 plus in cash
DeleteI have a plan when face with no more $$ to live..I will just hold a big smiley face card with a middle finger in front of any papies ministar..they will then have to charge me & send me to live in those super big B&W bangulow in changi, with 3 meal provided & medical taken care of.
ReplyDeleteGood idea. Your GCB will be bigger than those in Ridout Park.
ReplyDeletehttps://www.straitstimes.com/politics/staying-put-in-yishun-6-things-to-know-about-president-elect-halimah-yacobs-jumbo-flat
ReplyDeleteMadam Halimah and her husband Mohamed Abdullah Alhabshee bought the jumbo flat - comprising two adjacent five- and four-room flats with the dividing wall between them knocked down - in Yishun Avenue 4 more than 20 years ago on the resale market as she wanted to live near her mother.
She had jumped at the chance to buy both units when she heard the two sisters living there wanted to sell.
According to Mr Mohamed, the flat, which is in a 12-storey block built in 1987, is "as huge as a penthouse".
2. Good enough for Singaporeans, good enough for her
In a Straits Times interview shortly before she became Speaker of Parliament in 2013, Madam Halimah was asked if she would still live in her HDB flat.
Her reply? "More than 80 per cent of our population live in HDB flats and if it is good enough for them, it is good enough for me."
The way things are increasing in price in Red Dot is quite astounding. I am a retiree and there is pressure for me, as cost of living is rising really fast. But since HDB flats are said to be also affordable, what can I say?
ReplyDeleteA loaf of bread just went up by 20 cents from S$2.30 to S$2.50. This is not the first increase. It is another 10% increase. Inflation is said to be just around 4.5%, believe it or not? S$2.50 is still affordable they will tell us. Another 1% GST increase is coming and God knows what will be the result for us grassroot poor. A cup of kopi-O now cost S$1.30. It is atrocious. But if you complain they will scoff at you and denigrate you, saying if you cannot afford it, don't drink. This is the reality in Red Dot today. Of course there are places to find cheaper kopi-O, but transport is not free and it becomes penny wise pound foolish 'tua gong' to follow the good advice.
Just read about all the complaints being aired on social media, mostly about food prices that are now on another planet. Just a day or two ago, there was even a complaint about a haircut costing S$20, when the display on the shop front was clearly advertising a haircut for S$10. The customer really suffered a rude shock when asked to pay S$20, after it was revealed that the S$10 haircut was only for members, but never highlighted. Some commented that the customer should have asked the price first. Why is there a need to ask when the S$10 haircut offer was displayed right outside the shop? This is now the reality in Red Dot as well. Customers beware or buyers beware has now been taken to a whole new level. Forget about the prices displayed.
Not to worry. The more they hike GST, the more they can help you, provided they don't lose another $30b. $1 for you, $1m for me.
ReplyDeleteGST is to help the poor. Free toothpicks is the help the rich. And the rich can still unashamedly confess that the restaurant will fill up the toothpick holder knowing he is patronising. OMG, the mother of all revelations!
ReplyDeleteJoshua Benjamin Jayeratnam already told us long, long time ago in a country called Red Dot the reality of the situation unfolding then, that 'You can die, but cannot fall sick'. Well, he was right after all!
ReplyDeleteNot to worry. Long tale teller assured us that 'no one will be left behind'. He also forecast Goal 2010. Wonder what was that? We are now in 2023 and still attempting to flog a dead horse.
ReplyDeleteCompulsory CPF medical and insurance schemes are also passive expenditure. No money must also pay.
ReplyDelete