Rabu, 15 Mei 2024

CNA Correspondent Podcast: What's in store for cross-strait relations ahead of incoming Taiwan president William Lai's inauguration - CNA

Four months after being elected Taiwan’s next president, William Lai officially takes on the role next week. He’s got a lot on his plate, namely safeguarding peace and stability in the Taiwan Strait.

Teresa Tang looks at what to expect from him and from Beijing with correspondents Victoria Jen and Olivia Siong. 

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2024-05-14 23:24:00Z
CBMiXmh0dHBzOi8vd3d3LmNoYW5uZWxuZXdzYXNpYS5jb20vcG9kY2FzdHMvdGFpd2FuLXdpbGxpYW0tbGFpLWJlaWppbmctY2hpbmEtcHJlc2lkZW50LXVzLTQzMzM1NDbSAQA

'Affirmative no': Malaysia PM Anwar Ibrahim rejects second casino in the country - CNA

DOHA: Malaysian Prime Minister Anwar Ibrahim has said no to a second casino in the country, his latest denial on the matter following recent reports that the government was allegedly mulling over one.

"Affirmative no," Mr Anwar said at the Qatar Economic Forum on Tuesday (May 14), when asked if his administration would allow a second casino in the Southeast Asian nation.

The issue has been in the spotlight since last month, when Bloomberg reported that Malaysia was in early discussions with tycoons on opening a casino in Johor’s beleaguered Forest City property development.

The news was picked up by several Malaysian and foreign media outlets, including Singapore daily The Straits Times, which cited unnamed sources in reporting that the casino was among Malaysia’s proposals for the Johor-Singapore Special Economic Zone (SEZ). 

Analysts interviewed by CNA have said the cards are stacked against such a scenario due to it being a hard sell politically and a risky gamble economically, as well as likely having a negative impact on certain bilateral ties.

Mr Anwar, who is also finance minister, said at the forum that Malaysia's current focus areas are adequate to push future growth.

"Malaysia does not have to venture into the (second) casino business. We are focusing on digital transformation, energy transition (and) AI, and we believe these are (among the industries that are) adequate to push the country forward," he said.

The prime minister had already denied late last month any plans to open a casino in Forest City, denouncing the claims as a lie. The businessmen mentioned in the news reports also came out to deny taking part in such a meeting.

Malaysian authorities have charged several people for making seditious remarks in relation to the casino report. On Monday (May 6), local media reported that Malaysian police recorded a statement from Bloomberg journalist Ram Anand over the article.

Malaysia has granted only one casino licence, which was issued to Genting in 1969. The group also has casino operations in the United Kingdom, the United States, and Singapore.

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2024-05-15 04:28:00Z
CBMiY2h0dHBzOi8vd3d3LmNoYW5uZWxuZXdzYXNpYS5jb20vYXNpYS9tYWxheXNpYS1wbS1hbndhci1uby1zZWNvbmQtY2FzaW5vLWxpY2VuY2UtZm9yZXN0LWNpdHktNDMzNzAwNtIBAA

Selasa, 14 Mei 2024

Nearly two in three workers in S'pore willing to move overseas for their jobs: Survey - The Straits Times

Of the Singapore workers willing to relocate, 72 per cent are young professionals aged below 30. ST PHOTO: HENG YI-HSIN

SINGAPORE - Nearly two in three Singapore workers are willing to relocate for work, with Australia being the most popular destination, a recent survey found.

This figure of 64 per cent who are willing to move is a marked drop from the 87 per cent in 2018, prior to the Covid-19 pandemic.

Of the Singapore workers willing to relocate, 72 per cent are young professionals aged below 30.

The survey findings released on May 14 by jobs portal Jobstreet by Seek also show that South-east Asian and global markets have similar proportions of workers willing to relocate, at 68 and 63 per cent respectively.

Commenting on the findings, Mr David Blasco, general manager at recruitment firm Randstad Singapore, said: “Traditionally, Singaporeans sought opportunities abroad for better remuneration, job satisfaction or a healthier work-life balance.”

But the Covid-19 pandemic changed this significantly, he said. “More companies in Singapore are offering better benefits, initiatives, and reshaping job responsibilities to meet talent expectations, reducing the allure of overseas ventures.”

Similarly, Ms Alyce Cheong, a certified Institute for Human Resource Professionals senior professional, said that Singapore, being home to many regional headquarters and multinational corporations (MNCs), provides workers here with opportunities to advance in their careers locally.

She also noted that the survey sample mainly consists of respondents in their mid-30s to mid-40s, which is a stage in life when individuals begin to start having families of their own, deterring them from moving abroad.

The report was based on a global survey conducted from October to December 2023 of 150,735 people in 188 countries. These included 3,260 respondents from the Singapore workforce, of whom 87 per cent are Singaporean and the rest expatriates.

Among Singapore respondents, those in marketing and media are the most willing to relocate for work. This is followed by those in the digitalisation, data science and artificial intelligence field.

At the other end of the spectrum, the social care and social services industry, and administration and secretariat industry have the lowest proportion of respondents willing to move.

The most popular destination for Singapore workers is Australia, which 33 per cent of respondents ranked in their top three spots, followed by other high-technology economies such as China, Japan and the US.

Jobstreet said neighbouring countries such as Malaysia and Thailand are also popular as they are frequent travel destinations for Singapore workers.

In terms of length of overseas postings, Singapore respondents prefer short-term stints lasting between one and three years. In contrast, the preference among respondents in the wider South-east Asia and Hong Kong region is for medium-term stays lasting more than three years with the intention of returning. Meanwhile, the global average figures show a preference for long-term indefinite stays.

Ms Cheong said Singapore workers’ preference for shorter stays could be “to fulfil familial obligations and be here to nurture the next generation”.

The most prominent factor encouraging Singapore workers to relocate is financial and economic reasons, similar to South-east Asian and global trends. This was cited by 60 per cent of Singapore respondents.

General career considerations such as work experience or job progression are the second strongest reason to move abroad for Singapore, South-east Asian and global workers alike. This is followed by the opportunity for a better overall quality of life.

Better educational and training opportunities proved less of a draw to Singapore respondents, compared with their global peers.

Better social systems and healthcare were cited as a reason to move by 35 per cent of global respondents, while only 24 per cent of Singapore respondents felt the same.

Of the Singapore workers who were not willing to relocate, 66 per cent cited the inability to take family members or life partners as a reason to stay. This is significantly higher than the 55 per cent of the wider pool of respondents in South-east Asia and Hong Kong who cited this reason.

Other reasons to stay as seen by Singapore workers include cost of relocation and concerns about personal safety and security, with 39 per cent of respondents citing each of these factors.

The survey also ranked the most popular work destinations.

To a global workforce, Singapore tops Asian countries as a desirable location to relocate to, and places eighth globally. Better quality of job opportunities was cited as a key reason for relocating to the Republic.

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2024-05-14 21:00:00Z
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China launches campaign to halt school bullying, excessive homework - CNA

HONG KONG: China's Ministry of Education said on Tuesday (May 14) it was launching a campaign to address issues including excessive homework and bullying in schools, as part of efforts to boost students' mental health.

The announcement came a day after the ministry said it was carrying out mental health education for teachers and students, with a particular focus on rural migrant children or those "left behind", whose parents work in large cities for much of the year.

The ministry's notice, published on its website, detailed 12 negative practices at schools, including encroachment during scheduled breaks, neglect and tolerance of bullying behaviour.

Beijing has, since 2021, tried to reform the education sector and ease academic pressure on students, clamping down on a US$120 billion private tutoring industry to cut education costs. Many residents have cited high childcare and education costs as reasons not to have children.

The announcements come after the killing of a 13-year-old boy in northern China, whose case triggered a heated media debate over juvenile crime and the plight of children left at home by migrant workers.

Three boys were arrested after they allegedly bullied and killed the student in the small city of Handan on Mar 10.

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2024-05-14 09:22:49Z
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Biden to increase tariffs on $18 billion in Chinese imports in a new warning to Beijing - CNN International

Washington CNN  — 

President Joe Biden is increasing tariffs on $18 billion in Chinese imports across a handful of sectors deemed strategic to national security – an attempt to cripple Beijing’s development of critical technologies and instead prioritize US production.

The increases will apply to imported steel and aluminum, legacy semiconductors, electric vehicles, battery components, critical minerals, solar cells, cranes and medical products. The new tariff rates – which range from 100% on electric vehicles, to 50% for solar components, to 25% for all other sectors – will take place over the next two years.

“China’s using the same playbook it has before to power its own growth at the expense of others,” said Lael Brainard, director of the White House National Economic Council. “China’s simply too big to play by its own rules.”

Biden’s predecessor, former President Donald Trump, enacted a sweeping tariff program on $300 billion in Chinese imports during his administration, drawing authority from a provision in US trade law that allows tariffs to be used to stifle competition that would threaten national security interests. That same trade law also requires the effectiveness of such tariff programs to be evaluated every four years, and the Biden administration decision is the result of that study. CNN previously reported on the forthcoming changes.

White House officials said they also redrew the parameters of the program to reflect the Biden administration’s policy priorities, most notably the transition to clean energy.

“China can’t be the only country that produces clean technology for the world we need,” a senior administration official said. “We need diversified, not concentrated, production of our most critical goods and technologies. … That’s the kind of dynamic we think will produce resilient supply chains and clean technology.”

Electric vehicles imported from China will see their tariffs more than quadrupled from 27.5% to 100% – a policy lever meant to challenge Beijing’s practice of encouraging aggressively low pricing by domestic EV manufacturers while levying a 40% tariff on US car imports. Chinese manufacturer BYD’s Seagull electric vehicle retails for roughly $10,000, a fraction of what rival American products cost.

“It was important to have a large enough step-up in the tariffs to ensure that we try to level the playing field,” a second senior administration official said.

Beijing has been known to introduce costly counterpunches. Chinese foreign ministry spokesperson Wang Wenbin told reporters Tuesday that China opposes “the unilateral imposition of tariffs which violate (World Trade Organization) rules, and will take all necessary actions to protect its legitimate rights.”

After Trump unveiled his wide-ranging tariff policy, China slapped tariffs on $101.4 billion in US exports, retaliation that the Brookings Institute estimated affected 294,000 American export-related jobs.

The White House has declined to speculate on how Beijing may hit back now. Officials have pointed to parallel investigations by partners in Europe, Brazil and Turkey as bolstering their position.

“China is producing [goods] at a rate and with a trajectory that’s far in excess of any plausible estimate of global demand,” the first senior administration official said.

Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen and Secretary of State Antony Blinken each raised that point with Chinese counterparts during formal visits to the country in April. Administration officials discussed releasing the changes in April to set the stage for a tariff speech Biden delivered mid-month, but ultimately held off to preserve the diplomatic visits, according to two sources familiar with the matter.

On April 17, Biden spoke at the United Steelworkers headquarters in Pittsburgh, calling for a tripling of tariffs Trump placed on certain steel and aluminum products imported from China, and a new investigation into unfair shipbuilding practices. The Chinese government, Biden argued, is providing state money to Chinese steel companies to make more steel than the economy demands, pushing down the price and making it impossible for other companies to compete.

“They’re not competing,” Biden said of China. “They’re cheating.”

It’s a message that plays favorably across the so-called blue wall, the handful of Midwest manufacturing-heavy states that will be critical for either candidate during an election where trade will once again figure prominently.

It played less favorably across the Pacific, with China’s Ministry of Commerce accusing the US of “false accusations” and “wrong practices.”

CNN’s Sam Fossum contributed to this report.

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2024-05-14 09:00:00Z
CBMiVGh0dHBzOi8vZWRpdGlvbi5jbm4uY29tLzIwMjQvMDUvMTQvcG9saXRpY3MvYmlkZW4tdGFyaWZmcy1jaGluZXNlLWltcG9ydHMvaW5kZXguaHRtbNIBAA

Australia to deliver 2024 budget as it battles worsening housing crisis, rising cost of living - CNA

MAIN GOAL: TO LOWER INFLATION

Lowering inflation, which is currently at 3.6 per cent, has become the government’s all-consuming goal.

Wages have also not been keeping up with the pace of inflation, and the job market is showing signs of weakening.

Economist Chris Richardson from Rich Insight told CNA: “It’s a really tricky time. Basically, inflation is the everything of the budget - it has not come down as fast as the central bank would like.”

Nevertheless, Mr Richardson said the government must be careful “not to poke the inflationary bear” and not to “add too much extra money into the economy”.

While Australia’s Reserve Bank has decided to keep interest rates on hold for the moment, growing global uncertainty and a huge increase in immigration, is only adding to the country’s woes.

Close to 548,000 immigrants arrived in the 12 months leading up to September last year, and 105,000 arrived this February alone. 

Many are international students seeking rental accommodation, while others are short and long-term visa holders.

The government aims to cut arrivals by 50 per cent to ease the severe accommodation shortage.

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2024-05-14 01:54:54Z
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Senin, 13 Mei 2024

Former fixer Cohen testifies Trump told him to pay hush money - CNA

Trump faces 34 counts of falsifying business records tied to the reimbursement. Prosecutors say the altered records covered up election-law and tax-law violations - since the money was essentially an unreported contribution to Trump's campaign - that elevate the crimes from misdemeanours to felonies punishable by up to four years in prison.

Trump, who is running against Democratic President Joe Biden in November has pleaded not guilty and denies having had a sexual encounter with Daniels, who testified last week. He argues the case is a politically motivated attempt to interfere with his campaign to take back the White House.

Trump's defence has suggested the payment to Daniels was meant to protect his family from embarrassment. But Cohen testified that Trump appeared solely concerned with the effect on his campaign.

"He wasn't thinking about Melania. This was all about the campaign," Cohen said, referring to Trump's wife. At the defence table, Trump shook his head.

Cohen said Trump urged him to delay sending payment to Daniels' lawyer until after the election, telling him that the story would no longer matter.

Trump's lawyers have argued that Cohen acted on his own, a notion he rejected on the witness stand.

"YOU'LL GET THE MONEY BACK"

"Everything required Mr. Trump's sign-off," Cohen said. He said he resisted paying out of his own pocket but eventually relented after Trump promised him, "You'll get the money back."

Offering a detailed timeline of the chaotic days during the campaign's final weeks, Cohen described how he set up a shell company - falsely listed as a "real estate consulting company" - to facilitate the payment through a bank across the street from Trump Tower.

Prosecutors showed phone records to jurors indicating that Cohen called Trump's line twice on the morning he visited the bank.

The Manhattan trial is widely seen as less consequential than three other criminal prosecutions Trump faces, all of which are mired in delays.

The other cases charge Trump with trying to overturn his 2020 presidential defeat and mishandling classified documents after leaving office. Trump pleaded not guilty to all three.

Trump, who is on trial while also campaigning to avenge his 2020 loss to President Joe Biden, could still stand in the November election and be sworn in as president if he were to be convicted and even jailed.

Trump's son Eric, who was joined in court by Senator JD Vance, a contender for Trump's vice presidential pick, tweeted he had "never seen anything more rehearsed" than Cohen's testimony.

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2024-05-13 21:37:47Z
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