Jamus Lim Profile picture
Jul 28, 2022 14 tweets 5 min read Read on X
Inflation, as understood by economists, is the rate of change in prices. When prices rise, stuff gets more expensive. This is what is happening across the world now, as well as in Singapore. (1/n)
But one-off price increases, while unpleasant, do not give rise to inflation. Inflation happens when price rises are persistent. Many economists, while worried about inflation, do not expect it to persist beyond this year or next. (2/n)
Yet even when this inflation storm passes, not everyone will be made whole. For many Singaporeans, inflation is not just an inconvenience. If salaries don’t increase to offset higher prices, the current episode will quickly morph into cost-of-living crisis. (3/n)
In the meantime, we can always sit back and wait for wages to catch up to prices. But there are risks in leaving it all to the market. If everyone expects prices to keep rising, it could become a self-fulfilling prophecy. Inflation becomes “unanchored.” (4/n)
There are actually tools for short-circuiting the inflation process, to keep a lid on rising costs and prices. Economists understand how some of these tools, like interest rate hikes, work (mainly by discouraging speculative investment and exuberant consumption). (5/n)
In Singapore, our policy rate targets the exchange rate, so it isn’t available. But this doesn’t mean we are stuck. MAS can sell government bonds that mature far in the future, which lowers their price & increases their yield. This trick allows us to raise interest rates. (6/n)
We can also allow the Sing dollar to appreciate. Some may be aware that MAS has reported losses as a result. There are some technical reasons why I believe this isn’t necessarily a big deal, which I suspect MAS will explain in due course. (7/n)
But more importantly, we should recognize that even if there are losses incurred to keep inflation low for Singaporean consumers, the costs may well be worthwhile, from the perspective of national welfare. (8/n)
We can also spend a little more than we have. The MOF fiscal package, which appropriately seeks to help out those hardest-hit by price rises, only comes up to $1.5 billion. This is actually far smaller than the increase in revenue collected in the most recent fiscal year. (9/n)
Just as important: we don’t want our policies to act at cross purposes. Because raising interest rates, while needed to tame inflation, is contractionary, we want our fiscal policy to be as expansionary as possible. (10/n)
Think of it this way: we want to tap on the brakes and slow the economy, but we don’t want to slam on them so hard we trigger a recession. We want to pump in some gas so that the engine doesn’t stall. (11/n)
Needless to say, raising the GST at the end of this year would not serve this purpose. When the GST increase was debated, Finance Minister Wong said that they would remain open to macro conditions. It now seems poorly timed, and we should postpone it. (12/n)
In his response to my speech, Minister of State Alvin Tan shared that the government was concerned with the cost of living, and that inflation wasn’t “a theoretical exercise” for them. (13/n)
That’s good to hear, not least because the challenges Singaporeans are facing are indeed very real for everyone, but what the government has done thus far to tackle the problem doesn’t seem to be sufficient for anyone. #makingyourvotecount (n/n)

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More from @jamuslim

Feb 27, 2023
As an educator and lifelong learner myself, I really buy into the idea of reskilling and continuous education. So it is unsurprising that I support the general thrust of the SkillsFuture program. (1/n) Image
Where I have more quibbles is in its execution, which is also informed by my background and experience in the education sector. A big part of the problem is the sort of retraining on offer. (2/n)
What’s there isn’t necessarily bad. I’ve heard complaints about some are using their credits for seemingly-useless courses like flower arrangement or sake tasting; but truth be told, these could springboard career changes, and we shouldn’t preemptively rule them out. (3/n) Image
Read 12 tweets
Feb 26, 2023
I was somewhat bemused by something DPM Lawrence Wong said, about the lower burden of taxation, in his roundup speech to #Budget2023. He showed, with charts, that the tax burden faced by our middle class was lower than elsewhere. (1/n)
He also said that Singaporeans enjoy a much higher quality of public service than elsewhere, for what they pay. There’s a certain truth to that; our public sector, insofar as efficiency is concerned, is pretty value-for-money. (2/n)
Why then do our middle classes feel so aggrieved and embattled? Are we spoiled complainers, ungrateful for the how good we have going? Or is there something about our lived experience that speaks to a greater truth? (3/n)
Read 16 tweets
Oct 26, 2022
When I first arrived in the United States for my doctoral studies, I was shocked at how expensive mandatory healthcare insurance was. At several thousand a year, it seemed a lot more expensive than the twenty or thirty dollars we’d pay when we saw our doctor. (1/n) Image
Plus, I was 25. I would go to the doctor maybe twice a year, if even that often (remember when you were that invincible?). I thought that U.S. healthcare was just an unfair tax on the young and healthy, a reflection of the overall poor health of the American population. (2/n)
I’ve since learned that, all things considered, the couple thousand bucks was a pretty decent deal. Insurance covered visits to the dentist and eye doctor, plus routine care. And if I was admitted to hospital, the out-of-pocket expenses, while high, wouldn’t break the bank. (3/n)
Read 20 tweets
Oct 18, 2022
The idea of trusts and foundations may conjure up images of rich people and their lofty estates, and seems to be far removed from the everyday concerns of most Singaporeans. (1/n)
But the truth is, most of us have encountered trusts in some form. We donate to charities, which is a type of trust. We nominate beneficiaries for insurance or CPF, both of which are trust arrangements. (2/n)
And if you invest, you may have purchased a share in a unit trust, or a real estate investment trust (or REIT). So in reality, most of us have at least a passing familiarity with what a trust is, and how they play a role in our lives. (3/n)
Read 13 tweets
Mar 4, 2022
At the commencement of this session of Parliament, Prime Minister Lee expressed his hope that, with a more sizable Opposition, there would be more sophisticated policy debate, with alternatives instead of just objections being offered. (1/n)
My #workersparty colleagues and I took that charge seriously. So when the GST hike was proposed, we took pen to paper, and worked out a range of revenue options that we felt could stave off the need to raise GST. (2/n)
By our estimates, the hole that GST would fill is around $3.6 billion. So we went ahead and worked out four different ways—we call these levers—that we could pull in more revenue, each built around a different theme. (3/n)
Read 18 tweets
Mar 2, 2022
In January’s Parliamentary sitting, members debated the transition toward a green economy. It will also feature in the budget and Committee of Supply debates, currently ongoing. The issue is urgent and important, not least because steps need to taken today to get us there. (1/n) Image
I’m not usually a Debbie Downer, but my contributions to the debate were mostly cautionary. I spoke about the importance of measuring progress, and warned about how green financing wasn’t some magic bullet, as well as risks from greenwashing. (2/n) Image
We’ve heard about how the financial sector can make a massive difference to getting us to the promised land of limiting climate change. Of course, finance is important (I teach, research, and practice it, after all!) but not quite sufficient. (3/n) Image
Read 15 tweets

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