Showing posts with label ADN. Show all posts
Showing posts with label ADN. Show all posts

Tuesday, April 12, 2011

Asia News Report: Asian Defense News: Is The PAP Finding It Harder To Recruit?

Asia News Report: Asian Defense News: Is The PAP Finding It Harder To Recruit?
April 13, 2011: In a departure from recent history, the powerful People's Action Party (PAP) has found it hard to recruit talent from the private sector to stand as its election candidates.

This contrasts with the past when it enjoyed widespread popularity with little problem in persuading high achievers from private and public organisations to rally to its banner.

The relative failure comes at a time when opposition parties have made significant gains in attracting quality candidates.

It is posing a setback — at least temporarily — to the PAP's plan to use the election, which is expected next month, to produce the next Prime Minister and Cabinetleaders.

Of the 18 newly-recruited PAP candidates announced, only five hailed from the private sector — an assistant professor, two lawyers and two bankers, one of whom is an executive in the government-controlled DBS Bank.

The remaining 13 — or 72 percent — were top people who had served and resigned from public office to contest under the PAP banner.

They were from the civil service, the army, the statutory boards or PAP-controlled unions. The PAP-controlledNational Trades Union Congress (NTUC) contributed five.

Two army generals gave up their stars to take up politics and are tipped to be core members of the fourth generation Cabinet.

The political leaders have described it as a good, diverse team but it is obvious that the inability to attract private talent weighs heavily on officials' minds.

The paucity was confirmed by Senior Minister Goh Chok Tong who admitted that the PAP had difficulty attracting private-sector high flyers to join efforts to form the PAP leadership team.

Extensive efforts, which included 200 "tea sessions" (interviews) to recruit election candidates from the private sector "have not been that successful," he admitted.

For the PAP, which has not lost a single election in the last 50 years, it is a dismal show especially in the face of a resurging opposition which seems to have less difficulty in this area.

Few analysts are predicting this will be a permanent PAP dilemma or that it will cause the PAP to lose the election, but it may have adverse consequences for the party in future.

Bringing together a diverse team comprising the best candidates is fast becoming an impossible task.

The trouble is that some of the targeted high-flyers either do not support the PAP's current strategy for Singapore or some of its political, economic and social policies.

The potential slate would include successful managers, businessmen, academicians and professionals, people that recruiters have paid special interest to.

How will it affect the future? Firstly, it could erode some of the PAP's support among voters which is already in decline over the mass intake of foreigners.

And, secondly, the reduced number of MPs from the private sector could lower the PAP's performance in Parliament.

"To have too many people with civil service or army background may not be a good idea. Parliament may lose touch with the people," one surfer said.

"What about diversity? Where are the professional social workers, the musicians and poets?" she asked.

The issue, which has become a hot topic, has prompted a National University of Singapore (NUS) undergrad to raise it with PM Lee Hsien Loong during a campus dialogue last week.

How is it, he wanted to know, that despite the high salaries, the PAP had not attracted private talents — but the opposition had.

Lee replied: "I'm not sure whether we're looking for exactly the same people. We're looking for a certain type of person ... (one with) commitment, integrity and purpose."

The preferred people, he added, were already set in their careers and not keen to change tracks or face the high risk of a political life.

Not everyone agrees with his explanation. One commentator said: "The real reason is that many of them refused to join because they disagreed with PAP policies. "They don't want to degrade themselves by having to toe the party line."

The fast expanding social media which alternates between being informative to punishing people it doesn't like, also adds to the reluctance of people to seek election for public office. Many successful people are not prepared to have their private lives or their family members be subjected to critical scrutiny or even insults.

What is putting paid to this is the opposition's apparent success in attracting quality candidates to contest, despite all the arguments about privacy and risks.

By entering politics, an opposition candidate is generally seen as facing a higher risk of defeat or failure and financial losses than the one who stands for the PAP, with its superior resources.

"Yet they are pushing ahead with their principles, unfazed," said an admiring female undergrad — a little too innocently to describe the tough world of politics. Not every politician who fights for the weaker team — or who joins the winning one — does so for a selfless cause.

The reward in Singapore that comes with political success can be very large — for all aspirants.

The high Cabinet salaries, which exceed those of even the richest nations in the world, have attracted top talent to help build Singapore's collective wealth.

But as the public backlash rises, it may be contributing to dissuading successful high flyers from joining the government for fear of becoming a target of criticism and even insults.

In other words, this high pay system may even deter a few potential leaders from joining the political arena.

Related Article:

Opposition: an emerging breed

A former Reuters correspondent and newspaper editor, the writer is now a freelance columnist writing on general trends in Singapore. This post first appeared on his blog, www.littlespeck.com, on 9 April 2011.


*Source: By Elena Torrijos | SingaporeScene

Monday, April 11, 2011

DTN News - Asian Defense News: Singapore News ~ ‘No Casino? I’ll Kill Myself’

Asia News Report: DTN News -
Asian Defense News: Singapore News ~ ‘No Casino? I’ll Kill Myself’
(NSI News Source Info) TORONTO, Canada - April 11, 2011:
Her children tried to stop her from gambling, but she threatened to kill herself.

After a two-hour stand-off on the third day of last Chinese New Year, the children's 51-year-old mother got her way and went back to the casino.

When she returned 24 hours later, she had lost S$7,000.

It was then the children gave up trying to get their mother to quit gambling. She had already racked up debts of more than S$300,000.

Speaking to The New Paper from their four-room HDB flat in Simei, accountant Jayden Liu, 24, said, "Now, we can only pray that a miracle happens before we lose her or the roof over our heads."

He recounted that his mother cried, pleaded and lashed out at her children during that confrontation. She put a stool to the kitchen window and threatened to jump after Jayden's younger sister, Jessie, 16, angrily said that they were considering applying for a family exclusion order to the casinos.

Jayden said, "We weren't sure if she'd really do it, but we couldn't take the risk. We had lost our father (to cancer) six years ago, we didn't want to lose our mother."

Taking up a job at a convenience store last December, Jessie now works Saturdays in order to pay for her math tuition and ease her brother's burden.

She also refuses to take money from him. "He should be dating and not taking on another job after office hours and over the weekends."

Jayden now works part time in a karaoke chain, and more than half his S$3,900 take-home pay goes towards paying relatives from whom he borrowed money to clear his mother's debts.

When asked by the same paper about her children's struggle, the hawker mum said, "I really don't think it's any of their business what I do, even if the creditors come hounding. If they are so unhappy, they can always move out."

On her suicide threat, she added that it was only a threat, and she never really intended to jump.

Charles Lee, a senior counsellor at Tanjong Pagar Family Service Centre, was not surprised.

"Normally, when a gambler is in a desperate situation, he will resort to emotional blackmail," he said.

Lee, who is in charge of the problem gambling counselling programme at Tanjong Pagar FSC, said that only trained and experienced counsellors can tell if a threat is real.

"While no one should take it lightly, most times, the threat could be just a threat," he said.

Lee, who has handled such cases before, advised the Liu siblings to seek professional help.



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DTN News - Asian Defense News: BRICS News ~ Politics To Temper "BRICS" Broader Ambitions

Asia News Report: DTN News -
Asian Defense News: BRICS News ~ Politics To Temper "BRICS" Broader Ambitions
(NSI News Source Info) BEIJING, China - April 11, 2011:
When Indian media reported recently that Chinese troops were in Pakistan-administered Kashmir, the response from China was vehement.

"Such talk is utterly baseless and totally absurd," Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesman Hong Lei told reporters last week.

The episode was a small reminder of the big political differences that confront the leaders of five of the world's big emerging economies as they meet in China this week.

The leaders of the "BRICS" nations of China, Russia, India, Brazil and South Africa have voiced lofty goals, from rebalancing the global economy to giving the developing world more say in the G20 and IMF.

But while they together make up nearly a fifth of the global economy and they indeed share a lot of common gripes, they also have many mutual rifts, China's close relationship with Pakistan among them. Their broader aspirations will likely be frustrated by suspicion and diverging views on key issues.

Thursday's gathering in the southern Chinese beach resort of Sanya, attended by South Africa for the first time, will last just a few hours, according to diplomatic sources.

"They share their relative underdevelopment ... and their willingness to establish a new world economic order, which is where they have greater weight and where they are listened to," said Uri Dadush, head of the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace's International Economics Programme.

"Beyond that, the differences are huge. There are rivalries, large rivalries, particularly between China and India. And there are potential rivalries between Russia and China in the long term."

Even questions like whether the five should set up a more formal mechanism, like a secretariat, have no consensus; nor is there a clear idea about when or how they might add other members, such as Indonesia, Turkey or Mexico. The previous two summits, in Russia and Brazil, were inconclusive.

Still, while the summit is unlikely to achieve much concrete, it will give the world's big rising economies a venue to coordinate views on global financial reforms, commodity prices and other shared concerns.

"It is an important meeting; it's added a new member and it's demonstrated a commitment to position themselves in a political way," said Chris Alden, head of the emerging powers programme at the London School of Economics.

"They wanted to represent all of the emerging and developing world, so that's a rationale for bringing South Africa in, and all that suggests to me that there's a self-conscious political motivation in how they see themselves," he added.

A NOT-SO-UNITED FRONT

The BRICS group -- evolving from the BRIC term coined by Jim O'Neill of Goldman Sachs in 2001 -- has emerged as a loose united front to press the rich Western economies, especially the United States, which traditionally dominated global diplomacy.

South Africa asked to join the grouping at the G20 summit in Seoul and was invited by China to attend the Sanya gathering.

The five member countries accounted for just under 18 percent of the world's $62 trillion economy in 2010, though China's GDP was bigger than the rest of the BRICS put together.

Their economic clout is growing, as the developed world struggles with debt and low growth, and the BRICS are starting to operate as a common bloc in the G20, providing a counterpoint to the rich countries' club, the G7.

China says it hopes in particular that the Sanya meeting will be able to get the group to form a common stance on commodity price fluctuations at the G20 summit in the French city of Cannes later this year.

Yet their politics, in some cases, differ wildly.

Brazil, India and South Africa are vibrant democracies, with close ties to the United States. China, now the world's second-largest economy, is a Communist-ruled country with a low tolerance for political dissent and brittle relations with Washington.

China and India, despite a warming relationship, stare at each dubiously across a disputed, militarised border. India is also wary of China's tight friendship with Pakistan.

The BRICS countries do not even really understand that much about each other, noted Pei Changhong, head of the Institute of Finance and Trade Economics at the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences, a top government think-tank.

"We cannot say that we have a good understanding of these large developing countries ... These countries also don't understand much about China," he told a seminar last week.

It is far from certain that the summit in balmy Sanya will reach much of a firm conclusion about anything, even on economic topics.

Brazil has expressed concern that China's yuan currency is kept unfairly and intentionally cheap, fuelling a flood of cheap imports into the country. China is adamant the yuan will not be a subject of discussion.

The future direction of the grouping is a source of uncertainty too, with some members wanting a much more official structure for the BRICS.

Brazil's new president, Dilma Rousseff, who has adopted a much more pragmatic, result-oriented foreign policy, may have less patience for diplomatic niceties and will want the BRICS to be more than a political talk shop.

Senior Brazilian diplomat Gilberto Moura, who deals directly with the BRICS, said Brazil was very keen to turn the group into a political forum, trying to forge common positions on a host of global issues.

"We are no longer a creation of Jim O'Neill," he said, adding the situation in the Middle East and North Africa was likely to be on the agenda at Sanya.

Even here there has been a difference of opinion.

China, with Russia, India, Brazil and other developing countries have condemned the U.S.-led air strikes on Libyan forces.

South Africa, on the other hand, voted in favour of the United Nations Security Council resolution authorising the strikes. However, during a visit to Tripoli on Sunday, South African President Jacob Zuma called for NATO to stop air strikes.

China, though, has been somewhat less than enthusiastic about making BRICS into anything more than the rather informal bloc it now is.

India is also wary about the BRICS' future direction.

"There is a lot of cooperation in diverse areas such as climate change and trade to name a few. Even in the G20 the BRICS formulation is a very strong grouping. But it cannot be a blanket or a default south-south political formation," one senior Indian government official told Reuters.

(Additional reporting by Raymond Colitt in Brasilia and Abhijit Neogy in New Delhi; Editing by Alex Richardson)



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*This article is being posted from Toronto, Canada By DTN News ~ Defense-Technology News

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DTN News - Asian Defense News: Automobile News ~ China Auto Sales Rebound But Growth Weak

Asia News Report: DTN News -
Asian Defense News: Automobile News ~ China Auto Sales Rebound But Growth Weak
(NSI News Source Info) TORONTO, Canada - April 11, 2011:
China's auto sales rebounded in March but growth was well below last year's rapid expansion asgasoline pricesrose and government incentives wound down.

An industry group, the China Association of Automobile Manufacturers, says sales rose 5.4 percent over a year ago to 1.8 million vehicles. That was up from February's 4.6 percent increase but below 2010's 30 percent expansion.

China passed the United States in 2009 to become the biggest auto market by number of vehicles sold.Industry analysts expect total Chinese sales to rise 10 to 15 percent this year though growth should be much slower than in 2010.


*Source: AP - Associated Press - The Associated Press

Global Car / Automobile Industry

  1. News for China Auto Sales


    INAUTONEWS
  2. China auto sales rebound but growth weak
    1 hour ago
    AP , 04.11.11, 04:25 AM EDT SHANGHAI -- China's auto sales rebounded in March but growth was well below last year's rapid expansion as gasoline prices rose ...
    Forbes - 43 related articles

  3. China auto sales up 4.6% last month - Taipei Times

    10 Mar 2011 ... Auto sales in China, the world's largest car market, rose by 4.57 percent last month from a year earlier, data from an industry group showed ...
    www.taipeitimes.com/News/biz/archives/2011/03/10/2003497791 - Cached
  4. China's auto sales growth seen near 2010 rate-exec | Reuters

    11 Mar 2011 ... BIRMINGHAM, Mich., March 11 (Reuters) - The Chinese automarket'ssalesgrowth in 2011 will be close to last year's 32percent increase ...
    www.reuters.com/article/.../china-autos-idUSN1129734320110311 - Cached
  5. China Auto Industry: GM First Quarter China Auto Sales Up 10% - CNBC

    3 Apr 2011 ... General Motors said on Saturday it sold 685583 vehicles in China in the first quarter, up 10 percent from a year earlier.
    www.cnbc.com/id/.../GM_First_Quarter_China_Auto_Sales_Up_10 - Cached
  6. With Tax Incentives Gone, Chinese Auto Sales Drop Like A Rock

    9 Mar 2011 ... China's automobile sales market just tanked, declining 33%, month-over-month ... Definitely a slow down auto investors should take note of. ...
    www.businessinsider.com/china-auto-sales-february-2011-3 - Cached
  7. Chinese auto sales hit monthly record - Business - CBC News

    18 Feb 2011 ... Factory sales of Chinese passenger cars rose 16.8 per cent in January from the same month a year earlier, an industry grouped reported ...
    www.cbc.ca/news/business/story/2011/02/.../china-auto-factory-orders.html
  8. China Auto Sales Jump 27 Percent in November | CNSnews.com

    9 Dec 2010 ... Shanghai (AP) - China's auto sales powered ahead in November, jumping 27 percent to 1.7 million vehicles as car buyers rushed to beat ...
    www.cnsnews.com/news/.../china-auto-sales-jump-27-percent-novembe

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