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  1. Even more worrying now that weight lifting, and gym training are getting more popular among the youngster. More education is needed on the long term harmful effects of steroid. http://www.channelnewsasia.com/news/sport/rise-in-steroid-misuse-by-singapore-teens-a-worrying-trend-8912576
  2. Asia's worrying European exposure 04:45 AM Jun 01, 2012 by Stephen S Roach Asian authorities were understandably smug in the aftermath of the financial crisis of 2008-09. Growth in the region slowed sharply, as might be expected of export-led economies confronted with the sharpest collapse in global trade since the 1930s. But, with the notable exception of Japan, which suffered its deepest recession of the modern era, Asia came through an extraordinarily tough period in excellent shape. That was then. For the second time in less than four years, Asia is being hit with a major external demand shock. This time it is from Europe, where a raging sovereign-debt crisis threatens to turn a mild recession into something far worse: A possible Greek exit from the euro, which could trigger contagion across the euro zone. This is a big deal for Asia. Financial and trade linkages make Asia highly vulnerable to Europe's malaise. Owing to the former, the risks to Asia from a European banking crisis cannot be taken lightly. Lacking well-developed capital markets as an alternative source of credit, bank-funding channels are especially vital in Asia. MORE EXPOSED THAN BEFORE Indeed, the Asian Development Bank estimates that European banks fund about 9 per cent of total domestic credit in developing Asia - three times the share of financing provided by banks based in the United States. The role of European banks is especially significant in Singapore and Hong Kong - the region's two major financial centres. That means that Asia is far more exposed to an offshore banking crisis today than it was in the aftermath of Lehman Brothers' collapse in 2008, which led to a near-meltdown of the US banking system. The transmission effects through trade linkages are just as worrying. Historically, the US was modern Asia's largest source of external demand. But that appears to have changed over the past decade. Seduced by China's spectacular growth, the region shifted from US- to China-centric export growth. That seemed like a good move. Combined shipments to the US and Europe fell to 24 per cent of developing Asia's total exports in 2010 - down sharply from 34 per cent in 1998-99. PAINTING THE WRONG PICTURE Meanwhile, over the same period, Asia's dependence on intra-regional exports - trade flows within the region - expanded sharply, from 36 per cent of total exports in 1998 to 44 per cent in 2010. These numbers seem to paint a comforting picture of an increasingly autonomous Asia that can better withstand the blows from the West's recurring crises. But research by the International Monetary Fund shows that, beneath the veneer, 60-65 per cent of all trade flows in the region can be classified as "intermediate goods" - components that are made in countries like South Korea and Taiwan, assembled in China, and ultimately shipped out as finished goods to the West. With Europe and the US still accounting for the largest shares of China's end-market exports, there can be no escaping the tight linkages of Asia's China-centric supply chain to the ups and downs of demand in the major developed economies. Moreover, there is an important and worrisome twist to those linkages: China itself has tilted increasingly towards Europe as its major source of external demand. In 2007, the European Union surpassed the US as China's largest export market. By 2010, the EU accounted for 20 per cent of total Chinese exports, while the US share was just 18 per cent. MAKING THE WRONG BET In other words, a China-centric Asian supply chain has made a big bet on the grand European experiment - a bet that now appears to be backfiring. Indeed, in China, a now-familiar pattern is playing out yet again - another slowdown in domestic growth stemming from a crisis in the advanced economies of the West. And, as goes China, so will go the rest of an increasingly integrated Asia. The good news is that, so far, the downside has been much better contained than was the case in late 2008 and early 2009. Back then, China's exports went from boom to bust in just seven months - from a 26-per-cent annual growth in July 2008 to a 27-per-cent decline in February 2009. This time, the annual export gain has slowed from 20 per cent in last year to 5 per cent in last month - a significant deceleration, to be sure, but one that stops well short of the previous outright collapse. That could change in the event of a disorderly euro break-up, but, barring that outcome, there is reason to be more sanguine this time around. ASIAN FIREWALL MISSING The bad news is that Asia seems to be learning little from repeated external demand shocks. In the end, internal demand is the only effective defence against external vulnerability. Yet the region has failed to construct that firewall. On the contrary, private consumption fell to a record-low 45 per cent of developing Asia's GDP in 2010 - down 10 percentage points from 2002. In these circumstances, immunity from external shocks - or "decoupling", as it is often called - seems fanciful. As with most things in Asia nowadays, China holds the key to supplying Asia's missing consumer demand. The recently enacted 12th Five-Year Plan (2011-15) has all the right ingredients to produce the ultimate buffer between the dynamism of the East and the perils of a crisis-battered West. But, as the euro crisis causes China's economy to slow for the second time in three-and-a-half years, there can be little doubt that implementation of the plan's pro-consumption rebalancing is lagging. There are no oases of prosperity in a crisis-prone globalised world. That is equally true for Asia, the world's fastest-growing region. As Europe's crisis deepens, the twin channels of financial and trade linkages have placed Asia's economies in a vice. Rebalancing is the only way out for China and its partners in the Asian supply chain. Until that occurs, the vice now gripping Asia will only continue to tighten. PROJECT SYNDICATE Stephen S Roach URL http://www.todayonline.com/CommentaryandAn...ropean-exposure Copyright 2012 MediaCorp Pte Ltd | All Rights Reserved
  3. Just had a fun talk with one of my chinese turned singapore citizen colleague, this is his story, a bit long but worth a see: He come from Shanghai to Singapore to study at age of 18. Turned PR after finished his studies and working in Singapore, go back to Shanghai, get married as per his parents requirements and later his wife become PR too. They become Singapore Citizens (pink IC) 5 years ago and bore 2 childs, both Singapore Citizens. Nothing fanciful about his life and according to him, a lot of Chinese has turned Citizens in this way every year. What is different is that these new citizens has a whole lot of cash that can be spent in Singapore. As he said, his grand parents was already affected by the one child policy in China, and gave birth to his father, and again, his father and mother, both single childs, left their fortune to him alone. When he migrate to Singapore, he of course bring his bank account with him. He has bought a private apartment here, but he can proudly say that his children will have no problem in applying for HDB / Condo the next time, even if the prices raise up to the million dollar level. (sure is stuck up when he says this). Made me worry for my children all the same, how do our children fight against these children of the new citizens who has already inherited so much wealth? Just a pondering thought. and like he say, there are more and more of these new citizens that comes to Singapore every year........ hmmmmmmmm.
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