Singapore to cut politicians' pay by 30% from 21 May

04 Jan 2012

1

Singapore's politicians, the highest paid in the world would, will soon have to take a salary cut by at least a third, but they would still retain their top ranking as the highest paid politicians globally.

In another unkind cut, the move would be effective from 21 May 2011, when the new government assumed office.

The cuts were promised by new prime minister Lee Hsien Loong to quell public ire following a landmark election in 2011.

Though the global downturn has had little impact on the city state, public anger has been increasing for some time as the income gap between the rich and poor Singaporeans has widened in recent years.

With the deep cuts recommended by a government-appointed Review Committee, the prime minister himself would see his salary reduced 36 per cent and his perks would be pegged at $1.69 million.

Latest articles

The silicon-rich AI race: how Cisco’s G300 puts networking at the center of compute

The silicon-rich AI race: how Cisco’s G300 puts networking at the center of compute

Silver jumps nearly Rs 7,000/kg; gold rises Rs 1,600 as weak US retail data boosts rate-cut bets

Silver jumps nearly Rs 7,000/kg; gold rises Rs 1,600 as weak US retail data boosts rate-cut bets

Goldman Sachs doubles down on India, climbs Wall Street rankings in crowded deal market

Goldman Sachs doubles down on India, climbs Wall Street rankings in crowded deal market

Rahul Gandhi criticises India–US trade deal as tariffs on Indian goods rise to 18%

Rahul Gandhi criticises India–US trade deal as tariffs on Indian goods rise to 18%

MPS Board Member and Senior Treasury Official Resigns Amid Insider Trading Probe

MPS Board Member and Senior Treasury Official Resigns Amid Insider Trading Probe

Eutelsat Secures €1 Billion Financing for OneWeb Satellite Procurement

Eutelsat Secures €1 Billion Financing for OneWeb Satellite Procurement

Tencent, Tesla Team Up on WeChat-Linked In-Car Features in China

Tencent, Tesla Team Up on WeChat-Linked In-Car Features in China

Australia presses Roblox over child safety concerns, regulator signals possible fines

Australia presses Roblox over child safety concerns, regulator signals possible fines

Cisco Unveils AI Networking Chip to Strengthen Position in Data Centre Boom

Cisco Unveils AI Networking Chip to Strengthen Position in Data Centre Boom