Growing new ideals of progress
THIS WEEK'S TOPIC: How do you see Singapore's economic and business policies evolving as a younger electorate looks beyond bread-and-butter issues to matters of social inclusiveness and equality?
THIS WEEK'S TOPIC: How do you see Singapore's economic and business policies evolving as a younger electorate looks beyond bread-and-butter issues to matters of social inclusiveness and equality?
Yeoh Oon Jin Executive Chairman PwC Singapore
Singapore is not immune to the megatrends shaping our world today: asymmetry, disruption, age, polarisation and trust erosion, which we at PwC have acronymed as ''Adapt''. Globally, governments, businesses, and societies are all struggling with the near-term manifestations of these trends and are looking for answers. It is important that these three groups work together to seek out the answers with greater emphasis on the processes leading to the policies rather than the policies per se, with a view to increase inclusiveness as we seek sustainable growth as a nation. Bread-and-butter issues will remain pressing in the near term due to Covid-19. Beyond this, economic and business policies that are grounded and fundamentally sound will continue to be important albeit with more focus on driving sustainable growth, with added emphasis in the areas of environment, workforce and skills development, and uplifting those who have fallen behind.
TRENDING NOW
Malaysian tycoon Vincent Tan’s sell-downs point to pruning rather than an exit plan
OCBC rolls out AI-native banking, to hire 600 relationship managers in wealth push
Three Holland Village shophouses sold for S$70 million to Tat Lee Bank’s Goh family unit
The billion-dollar question Singapore Airlines shareholders should ask during its AGM