As we celebrate the birth of our nation today, the
wife and I will like to share our "birthday wishes" as Singapore
turns 49 (operative word here being "OUR", which may not necessarily
concur with everyone else's):
1. Do the LABB
LABB, which is our acronym for
"Let Able Buyers Buy". We are not seeking a total removal of
ABSD for Singaporeans buying a second private property. But with the TDSR
already showing its "teeth" in restraining buyers from
overstretching themselves financially and SSD putting a curb on
speculative activities, maybe the government can consider reducing the
ABSD from the current 7% to say, 3%?
2. Upsize the shoebox
The government had already
tried to manage the proportion of shoebox units in suburban areas by insisting
an average unit size of 70sqm gross floor area for new developments. We
say let's do one better by putting a minimum size requirement for all "small
format" units and set this at, say 400sqft. With the demand for such
unit type waning in both the sales and rental fronts, we are probably
already in an excess supply situation. Maybe buyers and tenants have
finally realised that a space of around 300sqft (some even less) is really
a tad too small?
3. "Learn the xylophone" campaign
Given
our nation's love for "campaigns", let us add
this one to our list. The music from the xylophones are sure to sound better than those xenophobic trumpets,
and if we gather enough xylophonist, we make may just be
loud enough to drown out them "xenophonist".
4. Strengthen our MRT, not just the SAF
While residential
projects near/next to a MRT station is still a big draw, this notion is increasingly
being challenged these days with the more-than-frequent train break-downs.
Although the occasional "walking tour of our MRT train tunnels"
sounds fun, it may not be so once this becomes a regular chore. So if the
one-point-something million fine that the government had imposed so far is
no deterrent enough, maybe we can consider increasing this to, say 10
million?
5. Better water/glass proofing at our Shopping Malls
And we aren't talking about those old and dilapidated ones rather the
glittering (literally speaking, from water and glass fragments) new mega malls
that have commenced business recently. While an interior water fountain may
be an attraction, a "waterfall" from bursting water pipes is
not. Same goes with shattering glass roofs or doors. And speaking of glass
door, this is meant to keep the air-conditioning in and not as a form of
amusement for toddlers - we sure hope that parents with young children can
keep this in mind.
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