Do Singaporeans Feel Rich? | Street Interview

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  • čas přidán 16. 06. 2024
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    DISCLAIMER: The views expressed in this video do not represent that of Asian Boss or the general Singaporean public.
    0:00 - What's your salary?
    2:18 - Do you feel rich?
    5:15 - What's considered rich in Singapore?
    7:28 - House prices in Singapore
    9:41 - Have you ever thought of living in a cheaper country?
    11:35 - How much would you need to earn to feel rich?
    14:31 - Message to people who think all Singaporeans are rich
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Komentáře • 686

  • @AsianBoss
    @AsianBoss  Před 3 měsíci +28

    For more authentic insights like this from Asia, you can watch some of our exclusive videos not available on CZcams for free here: asianboss.io/yt/123-exclusivevideos

    • @Redmi-xu1yo
      @Redmi-xu1yo Před 3 měsíci +1

      kolea is the rich no1 in the world 🌎

    • @fanlie1576
      @fanlie1576 Před 3 měsíci +4

      This is an interesting question, but the interviewees do not represent the majority of Singaporeans, and even includes non-Singaporeans.

    • @ericlee9199
      @ericlee9199 Před 3 měsíci +4

      How is this authentic insights. You're not asking the right people. You're asking foreign labour, retiree and blue collar workers? The only white collar worker is not even answering your first question. If you were to search, medical dosimetrist pays around 8.7k SGD a month. This make me doubt those old videos you posted on your channel.

    • @TheMetaldriger
      @TheMetaldriger Před 3 měsíci +2

      This isn't authentic insights at all. Please in the weekends, town areas + neighbourhood places to get a more indept insights.

  • @maypong2007
    @maypong2007 Před 2 měsíci +48

    I like the elderly lady being interviewed
    She is rich in her heart
    She has a heart of gold

  • @ianmaher4348
    @ianmaher4348 Před 3 měsíci +209

    From my experience as an Australian who spent a lot of time In Singapore in the 80s, I think there is a large difference between the rich and poorer people. The people interviewed were realistic about their situations.

    • @aero.l
      @aero.l Před 3 měsíci +3

      You think your experience in the 80s is relevant? From my experience, Australia was damn racist in the 80s.

    • @HangHangTwee
      @HangHangTwee Před 3 měsíci +1

      @@aero.l and what makes you think your 80s experience in aus would matter (based on what you are saying)

    • @Akj6zmdteuxze
      @Akj6zmdteuxze Před 3 měsíci +5

      Just one example. Think about the car prices . It is the world most expensive place to own a car but average people are still buying . Many Singaporeans are not stupid financially either. This gives an indication of the wealth in Singapore in the average middle class

  • @alui5362
    @alui5362 Před 3 měsíci +150

    3:14 makcik knows the answer. very wise.

    • @chrischris9718
      @chrischris9718 Před 3 měsíci +4

      Makcik probably pioneer gen so gets plenty of handouts from gahmen. No need to worry. Also got cheap flat from 40yrs ago. Lucky her.

    • @mohamedhafizh9201
      @mohamedhafizh9201 Před 3 měsíci

      @@chrischris9718 why so pessimistic. we're comparing back then with today ?
      backthen got so much to brag about meh?
      got people doing fast food delivery in case ur hungry at 3am? got internet access to do online business?
      got mrt to connect people? polyclinic easily available everywhere?
      they're the ones building the foundation to what is today.
      without people doing bechak,without the mamak selling kacang,without the aunty selling tauhuey,fishermen fishing.
      they lived a hard and brutal life back then, and today they're living hard as well. due to our economy,everything being expensive compared to back in their day.
      the makcik simply lowered her expectations on things,unlike we people today. everyone wants a car,everyone wants a beautifully renovated house,with luxury branded furnitures such as proofliving,everyone wants luxury bags,luxury clothing,luxury timepieces etc.
      you comparing our generation with them? we skipped the heavy hands on part,already good enough.
      everything is accessible these days..
      there's a malay saying ''baju ukur badan sendiri'' / ''wear clothes that fits your body''
      which means, spend according to your means. your expectation should be reasonable to what you can afford.

    • @Tonytayloring
      @Tonytayloring Před 3 měsíci +8

      Exactly. You can make a shat-tonne and still feel 'POOR' if you have lifestyle problem, gambling, spending LOL I know of a guy who slept out rough and homeless, digging supermart recycle bin for canned goods, showering in handicap washroom all while working, and manage to bounce back from homelessness, today being quite well established. 'Living within neccessity' as makcik put it, allows you to accumulate alot

    • @kaspertheroundghost
      @kaspertheroundghost Před 2 měsíci +6

      Macik ❤!

  • @_globalhawk
    @_globalhawk Před 3 měsíci +405

    The title should be 'Asking poor people wether they feel rich in Singapore"

    • @Exodianotforbidden
      @Exodianotforbidden Před 3 měsíci +8

      😂😂😂😂😂

    • @DanSurprise
      @DanSurprise Před 3 měsíci +4

      Exactly

    • @kakkay898
      @kakkay898 Před 3 měsíci +2

      Agree

    • @edd8460
      @edd8460 Před 3 měsíci +11

      I would say that the interviewer got people who were poor, and people who were 'middle-class'. For salaries above $7k/month is already upper-middle. Don't believe what media says, especially when they quote the average salary of Singaporean. Even one billionaire in a country will skew the average results and Singapore has a few dozen billionaires here.

    • @ericlee9199
      @ericlee9199 Před 3 měsíci

      @@edd8460 There's something called median salary, not average. Do check that out

  • @somerandomfella
    @somerandomfella Před 3 měsíci +209

    I don't think even a rich person anywhere would feel rich. They'd always want more.

    • @giantlabs
      @giantlabs Před 3 měsíci +4

      lifestyle creep, that's the crux.

    • @aero.l
      @aero.l Před 3 měsíci +4

      Asking people whether they feel rich is bloody silly.

    • @polster2
      @polster2 Před 3 měsíci +3

      @@aero.l Bob Marley had the best answer when asked if he was rich. "Money is numbers and numbers never end. If it takes money to be happy, your search for happiness will never end."

    • @user-ec8uy3qp8m
      @user-ec8uy3qp8m Před 3 měsíci +1

      In all honesty, I do feel rich. My net worth is more than 130 million. So if you think that a rich person would not feel rich. That is because you have not meet a truly rich one.

    • @MoneywithEumi
      @MoneywithEumi Před 3 měsíci

      #truth

  • @rocky509
    @rocky509 Před 3 měsíci +59

    As Singaporeans,I feel rich when going overseas.True hard facts bro.Nice video.Upz

  • @Razear
    @Razear Před 3 měsíci +185

    "Money, at the end of the day, is just a number." That makes for a good tagline, but is nothing more than an empty platitude for those living on or below the poverty line. It's a luxury belief to claim that money doesn't matter to people who can't afford basic necessities.
    The unemployed guy is a good dude. He's got the ability to think selflessly, even when he's financially struggling himself.

    • @andyzhang9110
      @andyzhang9110 Před 3 měsíci +9

      It just sound great, but not reasonable in actual life. Sometimes people forgot everything around them are there because of *money*. Clothes, shoes, phone, computer, foods, etc all require money. Money cannot buy time, health, happiness, etc is like an empty wise words.

    • @Humorousguy64
      @Humorousguy64 Před 3 měsíci +2

      Money is small nos? Without money you still want go live ovesea? Hahaha what a kid .....$5000 salary for him enough ? Unless he lives alone

    • @Humorousguy64
      @Humorousguy64 Před 3 měsíci +2

      No money you die fast without expensive medicines. Without money your mood stressful.. simple ..

    • @Robin-hv5tv
      @Robin-hv5tv Před 3 měsíci +4

      money is never just a number the guy watched too many movies and read too much philosophy.

    • @vat513
      @vat513 Před 3 měsíci

      Money at the end of the day, is just a paper. Is the correct term lol.

  • @neorenjie
    @neorenjie Před 3 měsíci +31

    All Singaporeans are rich enough to have security, clean streets, clean water and good education and transport. Things that are normalised here and taken for granted but are luxury elsewhere.
    A rich kid argues that the money belongs to his parents, but he's living in a big house and getting all the fancy stuff. A rich Singaporean argues that the money is not his, but he's getting all the stuff paid for by the government.
    Even if you ask condo and car owners, they will say they are not rich because they can't fly first class all the time.
    It's perspective.

    • @cho353
      @cho353 Před měsícem +3

      Very good comments. As a Singaporean , I agree with what u said.

    • @thepawsfulliving
      @thepawsfulliving Před 15 dny

      Wow, love that comment. Especially I just travelled here and I came from a poor country :)

  • @azraelfreyasimons5393
    @azraelfreyasimons5393 Před 3 měsíci +19

    Most interviewees gave a lot of realistic insights and that domestic helper lady is so gorgeous!

  • @yummycrepe
    @yummycrepe Před 3 měsíci +60

    Living inside Singapore, we don't feel rich. Living in some of our neighbor countries, we can feel a little bit rich.

  • @alexandral8913
    @alexandral8913 Před 3 měsíci +14

    I'm a regular office worker in Singapore working a 9-6. My partner and I are dual-income with no kids (right smack in the middle class).
    The cost of living day-to-day is actually manageable (hawker food is cheap, don't splurge on buying branded goods, don't take taxis/grab everywhere etc). However, car is pretty much a pipe dream if you want to have kids, and as middle class citizens (we earn slightly more than the average couple), we can barely afford a house (resale public housing in a convenient neighbourhood can cost 800k-1 mil).
    The rich are rich rich, but as a middle class person - no we don't feel rich haha. I'm already fairly well-off compared to my peers - there are plenty of families who are really struggling day-to-day. Singaporeans aren't rich by default 😂

  • @KeoNz
    @KeoNz Před 3 měsíci +548

    Your title is misleading. You interviewed foreign worker and domestic worker. Those are not Singaporeans. Singapore's median income in 2023 is $5,197 hence 50% of Singaporeans earn more than 5K per month.

    • @MrLoichin
      @MrLoichin Před 3 měsíci +38

      your $5k average income in singapore is considered close to minimum wage in all other developed countries inclucing OECD / G20

    • @FatassFromSingapore
      @FatassFromSingapore Před 3 měsíci +114

      They live in Singapore too and have to bear the same cost of living, why is this misleading?

    • @KeoNz
      @KeoNz Před 3 měsíci +60

      @FatassFromSingapore because the title said Singaporeans.

    • @cosmos5610
      @cosmos5610 Před 3 měsíci +24

      ​@@MrLoichinwestern countries have much higher tax rates. Australia's average pay is about 8k a month but after tax it's only 5-6k, comparable to SG's.

    • @cosmos5610
      @cosmos5610 Před 3 měsíci +42

      They should have interviewed some middle age people working in the financial and high tech industries too. Obviously the people interviewed are mostly around or below average pay. The title says to find out if Singaporeans feel rich, so they should interview people from different social economic backgrounds to have more balanced views. Actually in any country, there are rich and poor people depending on who you ask. Rich/poor is also relative. A person earning $5k a month may be considered rich in some countries but just average in Singapore.

  • @megatron6393
    @megatron6393 Před 3 měsíci +17

    Most Singkies feel rich only when they are in other countries. Singapore dollar is very strong.

  • @user-rs3qn9vp3q
    @user-rs3qn9vp3q Před 3 měsíci +3

    I love this 😭 I hope every single person in this video reaches their dreams and lives happy lives and achieves their goals

  • @muaythaiforever7893
    @muaythaiforever7893 Před 3 měsíci +3

    This was a very interesting and informative video. It just goes to show that many people all over the world are having similar economic woes and have to find ways to meet their needs. It is also interesting to see the misinformation that we receive from media and/or entertainment. The grass isn't always greener

  • @vs2d40
    @vs2d40 Před 3 měsíci +101

    The pool you guys interviewed idt is representative of all ages. Probably missing out 30-45 years old Singaporean who are in the prime earning times

    • @ColouredPixels
      @ColouredPixels Před 3 měsíci +13

      the medical dosometrist is probably in that age group but just didn’t reveal her salary

  • @koalatheworld
    @koalatheworld Před 3 měsíci +31

    There are quite a number of Singaporean interviewees in this video, despite negative comments here stating that majority being interviewed are non singaporeans. Thank you for posting, Asian Boss!

    • @joesr31
      @joesr31 Před 3 měsíci +2

      With a title stating its singaporeans opinions, there shouldn't even be non- singaporeans interviewed

    • @Zehahahahahahahahahahahaha
      @Zehahahahahahahahahahahaha Před 11 dny

      Then what exactly is a Singaporean? what they look like?

  • @shijou2867
    @shijou2867 Před 3 měsíci +121

    As a Singaporean, I feel privilege, but thats not to say there isnt any issue in Singapore. Things are getting really expensive and it is hard for younger generation to live in. Could be said the same for other countries too.

    • @user-vf7cn3oy8g
      @user-vf7cn3oy8g Před 3 měsíci +7

      新加坡称得上富裕国家。该国的GDP(国民人均收入)远远超过我国日本了。贫富差距没有美国悬殊。街上看不到无家可归的游民、乞丐什么的。因此街头干净,治安良好。可是竞争社会里难免工作压力很大吧。这点跟韩国一样

    • @ckokloong
      @ckokloong Před 3 měsíci +2

      "Expensive" is relative. When I first came to SG to work 25 years ago, my salary was SGD1.2k. Cant afford car, phone, travel or eating at McD. But I thought I was doing well.

    • @riteshvs4949
      @riteshvs4949 Před 3 měsíci +1

      How much money is required to stay in Singapore

    • @siuyang-dx2pw
      @siuyang-dx2pw Před 3 měsíci +6

      我是韩国人住了新加坡10年多了 新加坡各个普通人的能力超级差 没有竞争力所以外国人有很多机会挣大钱 就是因为新加坡政府没有political corruption 所以新加坡有现在的发达 好幸亏的国家。 国家的位置又讲英文中文

    • @arex9000
      @arex9000 Před 3 měsíci

      ​@@riteshvs4949 they have boats for rent at 25,000 a month and they weren't yahts.

  • @ctwpoco-oy6wu
    @ctwpoco-oy6wu Před 24 dny +3

    Singapore is a very rich country. There are many rich people in Singapore. But not everyone in Singapore is rich.
    400,000 Malaysians travel daily to Singapore to work. And Malaysia is not a poor country.

  • @leeMleeM
    @leeMleeM Před 3 měsíci +14

    As expected, realistic thoughts from Singaporeans...lol. I hate how the media also portray Singapore as the city with all the wealthy people. The everyday struggles are real but we will just need to learn to manage and find simple pleasures in life within our means.

  • @ssvegeto1610
    @ssvegeto1610 Před 3 měsíci +19

    Macik has the best attitude

  • @nicochrisss
    @nicochrisss Před 3 měsíci

    Great video Asian Boss! Please do more of such video about Singapore

  • @DanSurprise
    @DanSurprise Před 3 měsíci +184

    Wrong place and wrong time! Not saying all Singaporeans are rich but you're interviewing elderly Singaporeans, and blue-collar foreign workers in one of the less 'rich' and old neighbourhoods. Moreover, you are doing this interview during what seems to be office hours during a weekday, if this is a weekend, it will be crowded, which means all the non 'jobless' people are all at work. Try interviewing Singaporeans in the CBD area to get a wider perspective. Come on Asian Boss do better.

    • @edd8460
      @edd8460 Před 3 měsíci +11

      I think CBD people too busy hustling to want to stop for interview xD

    • @BrandonLieu
      @BrandonLieu Před 3 měsíci +36

      "Go to the rich areas and there will be more rich people". The interviewed people live in Singapore, their voices are no less important when trying to find a consensus.

    • @limkimyaw8980
      @limkimyaw8980 Před 3 měsíci +25

      Nothing wrong with the video. You can't accept the reality of the real Singapore ?

    • @DanSurprise
      @DanSurprise Před 3 měsíci +6

      @@limkimyaw8980 Not sure if you are able to comprehend what I wrote. What’s the objective of asking jobless people, domestic helpers if they feel rich?

    • @limkimyaw8980
      @limkimyaw8980 Před 3 měsíci +9

      @@DanSurprise There is only one helper and one jobless guy in the video. The rest are working class people.

  • @TheJackimaru
    @TheJackimaru Před 3 měsíci +1

    Thanks for the video, it was interesting :) I think it would also be beneficial to gather varied viewpoints by visiting different areas of Singapore to pose the same inquiries. Consider venturing into the Central Business District to engage with the working population there. The timing of your question is also crucial-ideally, it should not coincide with weekday working hours, as it appears to have been the case during the interview.

  • @Rahul_Ahlawat
    @Rahul_Ahlawat Před 3 měsíci +2

    Cool interactions ❤

  • @ienmIE
    @ienmIE Před měsícem +1

    omg please do more videos on singapore!! ^^

  • @Galaxnite
    @Galaxnite Před 3 měsíci +7

    Its refreshing to hear from people on the other side of the spectrum, cos too many times the mainstream media in SG interviews and glorifies office workers, ignoring those of the "lower" class. SG is an elitist society

  • @chee1935
    @chee1935 Před 3 měsíci +5

    Thank you for bringing the real voice to the world. A country with Press Freedom Index of 129 (in 2023), many of our voices are silenced.

  • @jaytoh4336
    @jaytoh4336 Před 3 měsíci +8

    I always love Asian Boss content but this video makes me doubt the authencity o Asian Boss interviews of other countries. Not sure what this is trying to achieve, most interviewees are either non Singaporeans or are people who doesnt reflect the regular Singaporeans. I thought it should have been even well thought through, felt like its really misleading, and as a Singaporean i really don't feel represented here, while the video title says otherwise. I think Asian Boss should be fair to Singaporeans and continue to be authentic to all its audiences. Simply interviewing anyone who accepts your interview within a poor neighbourhood is clearly lazy work...

  • @Star-008
    @Star-008 Před 3 měsíci +55

    The foreign domestic worker speaks better English than Singaporeans. She could surely get a higher paying job if she's local.

    • @sarrahjohnwinters1729
      @sarrahjohnwinters1729 Před 3 měsíci +11

      Much agree, her spoken English is so fluent could land her a good job. On a side note, she is pretty looking too

    • @unnecessary982
      @unnecessary982 Před 3 měsíci +2

      i wonder where she is from

    • @annieteo7169
      @annieteo7169 Před 3 měsíci +6

      That domestic helper could be university graduate. Yes, she is pretty and well dressed too.

    • @simplyme3306
      @simplyme3306 Před 3 měsíci +1

      those who speaks English well are from Philippines. Most of them hold a degree@@unnecessary982

    • @Manofthehour1002
      @Manofthehour1002 Před 3 měsíci +1

      I would like to hire her for sure :)

  • @GingerOreo
    @GingerOreo Před 3 měsíci +3

    0:53 I can’t believe this woman is domestic worker. She speaks so well, I would have thought she’s in some management level at a big company.

  • @Searth63
    @Searth63 Před 3 měsíci +9

    Would @Asian Boss do a feature about the massive numbers of self-professed "Property Gurus" who speculate in Properties under the guise of 'Investment" ?,...
    The Whole Society here seems to be drunk on Properties, prices pushed up to the extent that everyone in Society pays for the Profits of Land Lords,...
    Thank You

  • @coreana.aesthetics
    @coreana.aesthetics Před 3 měsíci +15

    Why Singapore salary is so low, and everything is too expensive?

    • @Johnne009
      @Johnne009 Před 3 měsíci +5

      Modern day slavery

    • @coreana.aesthetics
      @coreana.aesthetics Před 3 měsíci +2

      @@Johnne009 capitalism is at its highest.

    • @cosmos5610
      @cosmos5610 Před 3 měsíci +1

      They didn't interview people working in financial and high tech industries, or those who live in condos driving BMW/Porsche. The people interviewed are mostly on below average pay.

    • @busybee5156
      @busybee5156 Před 3 měsíci +3

      ⁠@@cosmos5610can you please share the percentage of Singaporean who can afford to drive Porsche and BMW etc ?

    • @cosmos5610
      @cosmos5610 Před 3 měsíci +9

      @@busybee5156 not many but Singapore’s typical salary is not as low as this video portrayed to be. What I meant is that any society has low and high income earners but those may not be typical. This video’s title says they were there to find out if Singaporeans feel rich, yet they interviewed mostly low income groups. They should have interviewed people from diverse socioeconomic backgrounds to have more balanced view. In my opinion, most Singapores are neither rich nor poor. They have a relatively good living standard but not luxurious lifestyle.

  • @martinsantoso4272
    @martinsantoso4272 Před 3 měsíci +19

    Asian Boss, if you interviewed people in Orchard rd (mostly tourists or youngsters), heartlands (mostly retirees, domestic helpers, construction workers), CBD (mostly PMET). Why not try interviewing at supermarkets/cafes in River Valley/Bukit Timah/Grange/Cairnhill, as well as Country clubs, I believe it will be interesting.

    • @graciashola123
      @graciashola123 Před 3 měsíci +3

      I totally agree. Someone would say 10K is their monthly expenditure on food and spa.

  • @tomasboba8327
    @tomasboba8327 Před 3 měsíci +2

    Macik's words are simple yet enlightening

  • @mpc5584
    @mpc5584 Před 3 měsíci +48

    The irony when the domestic helper is the best dressed of the lot....

    • @mohamedhafizh9201
      @mohamedhafizh9201 Před 3 měsíci +12

      once a week can go out, dont tell me you also wanna wear ur tshirt . as if wearing tshirt 6 days a week is not enough

    • @yqweqwun7390
      @yqweqwun7390 Před 3 měsíci +4

      maybe her family lives in another country...
      so cheaper expenses.
      If she lives with employers....0 rent i suppose.

    • @user-om5lk9hj6j
      @user-om5lk9hj6j Před 3 měsíci

      Why is it ironic? They were all fairly low paid.

    • @supaweeb4076
      @supaweeb4076 Před 3 měsíci

      To get PR la...

    • @hafizkamaruddin7843
      @hafizkamaruddin7843 Před měsícem

      philipine wat

  • @Rachelrock11
    @Rachelrock11 Před 3 měsíci +8

    I feel like the individuals that were interviewed are mostly not Sporeans, or are seniors who are obviously not working anymore.
    Maybe to get a better picture of the situation, you should interview a more diverse group of people?

    • @user-xs4mu8xm7d
      @user-xs4mu8xm7d Před 3 měsíci

      They chose a very heartland neighbourhood area, which tend to be mostly service staff in F&B and retail which have compartively lower income; students or retirees. If they chose places closer in town, the demographics would be different. Ideally they should interview people from different regions, to get a more balanced view of things.

  • @surasakda5407
    @surasakda5407 Před měsícem +1

    I’m Thai , earning 200K THB a month from working in Japanese based company in Thailand.
    A bit surprise because as far as I know Singaporean people get at least 100K THB to cover monthly cost of living in Singapore.

  • @davidlee3806
    @davidlee3806 Před měsícem +3

    A truly rich person is one who is helping the poor and needy even though that person is not financially impressive.

  • @choonhockong8215
    @choonhockong8215 Před 3 měsíci +13

    I am saddened to see so many Singaporeans and foreign workers could not cope with the high cost of living here. I like this video, interviewed, and obtained direct feedback from ordinary citizens. I hope our Grassroots people and MPs go to the ground and get direct feedback from the hdb residents and others. I hope they can get feedback from retirees and those who are unable to work due to unforeseen circumstances, etc.

  • @stefanomaurino8201
    @stefanomaurino8201 Před 3 měsíci +12

    Beyond per capita income = 1) Purchasing power parity is a really important concept that most people need to understand. 2) Infrastructure is important such as good quality of road, public transport, good hospitals, etc. 3) Effective and efficient government. 4) Social order, ethnic harmony, safety, low crime rate, society free from drugs, etc. 5) Negative externalities such as pollution, noise, traffic congestion, trash in public places, etc are minimized.

    • @josephinejosephine8776
      @josephinejosephine8776 Před 3 měsíci

      You are describing Singapore in the 1980s.

    • @yqweqwun7390
      @yqweqwun7390 Před 3 měsíci

      interesting...I agree w/social order.
      Freedom,rights are important. We arent subjects of gov to hav 1 law 4 us,1 for gov.
      But Everyday protest unrest imo wud wreck havoc on the economy. Since uncertainty due to protests and opposition to gov wud make investors scared,so ppl will flee the country and soon whole cycle of flow of money cud collapse.

  • @myKunKhmer-mkk
    @myKunKhmer-mkk Před měsícem

    One of the best interviews.

  • @user-fm5lt3hz9x
    @user-fm5lt3hz9x Před 3 měsíci +4

    U got to ask at night... or the weekends when ppl are off work😅

  • @loudcatcher13A
    @loudcatcher13A Před 3 měsíci +12

    Singapore as a country is definitely rich there is no doubt about that. Even though you are not rich in sg, you still have a roof over your head and affordable hawker food so that you wont starve to death. Other asian countries you see homeless people more than in sg and people still want to complain?

    • @KeoNz
      @KeoNz Před 3 měsíci +3

      You're right. Its all about being content. I think the average Singaporean is definitely "richer" than most already(especially within SEA region). At least there's a roof above their heads and no need to starve. Most people can even afford travelling overseas for holiday once a year.

  • @nerd26373
    @nerd26373 Před 3 měsíci +15

    Singaporeans have financial troubles of their own. Much like any other person from an Asian country. It's fascinating to hear their insights. They're somehow informative.

    • @arex9000
      @arex9000 Před 3 měsíci +1

      It's worse in Singapore.

  • @chottobit8148
    @chottobit8148 Před 3 měsíci +3

    Huge disparity between the rich who earns over $10K a month to those who only earn $800 to $1500 per month!. It is a struggle for them.

  • @spurgearsbacklash8453
    @spurgearsbacklash8453 Před 3 měsíci +27

    In the first place, no locals or even the government said Singaporean are very rich. It is the foreign media who labeled us that, due to the high GDP and strong currency.

    • @person880
      @person880 Před 3 měsíci +3

      High GPD per capita is the measure used to indicate whether a country is rich or not. It is not a measure of any individual. It is a measure of the whole country. High GDP per capita means the country is rich. This statistic doesn't tell you how inequality there is, or how poor the poorest people are in the given country.

  • @spurgearsbacklash8453
    @spurgearsbacklash8453 Před 3 měsíci +10

    I was middle management 20 years ago getting $4K /mth went to UK for meeting, exchange rate was 1 GBP to 3 SGD. The office clerk is getting £2K per month and was higher paid than me. At that time I also thought everyone in UK is very rich.

    • @slaychildhoodmoneyscripts
      @slaychildhoodmoneyscripts Před 22 dny

      Oh yeah, it's surreal for me to earn in SG dollars then in US dollars, I'm so rich if I spend here but not rich is I spend there.

  • @wz758
    @wz758 Před 3 měsíci +10

    Wear nice clothes, drive sports car, going to nice restaurants DOESNT mean that the person is rich. People really need to get educated. On the contrary, wearing simple clothes, taking bus, eating at hawker doesn’t mean that the person is poor. People who think this way tend to chase material wealth which is the reason why they remain poor! Maximize your income, save diligently, learn to invest for the long term will make anyone wealthy in the long run!

    • @esoekidjo
      @esoekidjo Před 3 měsíci

      Maybe not rich rich. But having a sports car, nice clothes, big home means you have acces to disposable income that goes towards luxuries that poor people don't have. Like that one guy said. Money is just numbers. You can be poor because you lack money but you can be rich if you have good health, a family that takes care of you and not to worry about starving to death. It's all relative.

    • @rusticbaguette
      @rusticbaguette Před 3 měsíci

      Wah you are so wise.

  • @JL..
    @JL.. Před 3 měsíci +5

    Sorry but... half the people you interviewed seems to be immigrant workers rather than Singaporeans...
    I understand its hard to find people to interview, but the context is changed
    So it would be more accurate to rename this to "Do people living in Singapore Feel Rich?"

  • @dil173
    @dil173 Před 3 měsíci +1

    Appreciate the interviews were done at local neighbourhoods instead of CBD areas...

  • @reborn2020
    @reborn2020 Před 3 měsíci +2

    Each time I visit Singapore, it gets 20% more expensive. The middle class is shrinking, definitely.

  • @_eleyya
    @_eleyya Před 3 měsíci

    This is the neighborhood I grew up in, generally I think we’re all regular people. If you are just talking about Serangoon and decided to go to Serangoon Garden Circus, that is where you will find the rich people for this area.

  • @bpcgos
    @bpcgos Před 3 měsíci

    90k SGD of house in Indonesia, in an area that less crowded City like Jakarta, Surabaya or Denpasar, considered as Luxury house.

  • @henrylau116
    @henrylau116 Před 3 měsíci +2

    I think there are alots of Singaporeans that are rich. Look at the TS concerts, yes, there are fans from overseas, there are also lots Singaporean fans. Next, did you visit the Natas event in last weekend held at Expo? The Northern Light packages were being snap up in minutes with pricing increasing on the spot. The cost per pax is 5.5K ~ 8K depending on which agencies you sign with. Just these 2 events, we can see that Singaporean are rich.....

  • @karaalan2678
    @karaalan2678 Před 8 dny +1

    Wow !
    Singapore is not flashy as it appears to be .
    Earning below 2k a month
    That’s just pocket money
    That’s harsh life to live.
    Thanks for sharing!
    Good information video .
    Liked n subscribed

  • @LifeHacksProducts
    @LifeHacksProducts Před 3 měsíci +2

    I am rich, I stay in my own house, eat what I want, where I want and never suffer under the sun.
    I am blessed.
    But in terms of number I am not rich.

  • @camplord3509
    @camplord3509 Před 3 měsíci +36

    As someone that has lived in multiple countries, Singapore has been by far the easiest to live in in terms of affordability.
    Tax is low, food can be very cheap, and wages are high compared to the other places I've lived. Singapore is expensive if you want to buy a car and send your kids to international schools. Neither of those is needed though.

    • @squishypillow3162
      @squishypillow3162 Před 3 měsíci +6

      The very fact that you’ve lived in multiple countries show you’re at the very least from the upper middle class…
      I wonder if your view is representative of the average s’porean.

    • @camplord3509
      @camplord3509 Před 3 měsíci +11

      @@squishypillow3162 I'm from your average background. Originally from New Zealand where salaries are lower, taxes are higher, and costs are higher than SG.
      Spent a couple of years after university working on a graduate salary in the UK (again, cost of living was far higher there).
      Spent a year in Australia (again, cost of living was higher there).
      Later moved to Singapore - food costs are lower, salaries are higher than those places (maybe with the exception of AU), and tax is low.
      Most studies literally state that Singapore is expensive if you send your kids to international schools, want to buy a car, and live a life of luxury. Most Singaporeans don't send their kids to international schools, and a car isn't needed here. Furthermore there are a lot of deductions on costs and other benefits for locals.
      Singapore is a great place.

    • @camplord3509
      @camplord3509 Před 3 měsíci +2

      I would also add that housing is not as expensive as some like think (especially with the benefits of CPF).
      To put things into perspective, one of my friends back home took a $1 million mortgage for a first home (essentially the bare minimum on what you need to take out since there is no BTO option). Due to interest rate changes, the interest payments alone are $60,000 per year. Essentially his wife's salary can only pay the interest, and doesn't even hit the principal.

    • @josephinejosephine8776
      @josephinejosephine8776 Před 3 měsíci +1

      @@camplord3509 started as average, ended up as lower upper class right? With your salary, of course you will find everything cheaper.

  • @kitlee4486
    @kitlee4486 Před 3 měsíci +19

    SG is expensive in house, food and transportation. If you are migrant workers. It is pay to pay check. No much you can save. But if you are in bank, finance, accounting, tech, Ai etc, you can get 10k and above. You need average of 5-6k for easy life. SG government are very smart people that can tied you down by asking you to get married and settle down policy, so you are grounded . Btw, SG is like a big steel cage that housed the people to work non stop.

    • @EVL-xj5vc
      @EVL-xj5vc Před 3 měsíci +3

      yeah and unfortunately our country has no natural resources, only human capital so we must work and work.

  • @uwet.8826
    @uwet.8826 Před 3 měsíci

    Serangoon is not small, but Asian Boss chose the area with the most 3- and 4-room flats. Why not around my area where there are more executive flats and condos?

  • @TubeRobRoy
    @TubeRobRoy Před 3 měsíci +7

    Extremely well spoken domestic helper, very impressed. The family that employs her is lucky.

    • @raymonde4272
      @raymonde4272 Před 3 měsíci

      Yes and despite earning at the lower end in Singapore she can still dress well and send half of her income home to support her family.

    • @maducayangirl
      @maducayangirl Před 3 měsíci

      Thank you ❤

  • @evanlimcs
    @evanlimcs Před 3 měsíci

    Inflation is a huge factor that is affecting not just Singapore but globally. Singapore has always been a global business hub for multinational companies and it is not surprising that we are in a global recession, even companies in Singapore is not creating jobs like they used to. However, there are still a few sectors that would create more jobs and provide more stability and those are in AI and renewable energy sector. In Singapore, you don't only just need to be lucky, but you need to work really hard to make a comfortable living. Rich is determine by one's mindset, you can be really happy being poor and you can also being happy being in the middle income. Live the life where you can sustain, don't chase for meaningless stuff that are liabilities in life rather than having an asset. Continue to upskill yourself, be creative, be bold in your dreams and fight hard. We are going to be the next Hong Kong where property prices starts rising and we have to constantly remind ourselves we are a land with no natural resources and the only driving force are the citizens.

  • @remidis
    @remidis Před 3 měsíci +1

    i feel like the interview varies in different district in singapore, try interviewing people walking around marina bay sands. Perhaps you get a different view.

  • @chickcreations
    @chickcreations Před měsícem

    I applaud their answers ❤

  • @MKiurinuRigold
    @MKiurinuRigold Před 3 měsíci

    I think it is a blessing to buy what one wants without worrying about

  • @bananaapplelettuce
    @bananaapplelettuce Před 7 dny +1

    It's indeed very expensive for single foreigners (regardless PR or not) because the rental can easily exceeds 30% of your salary....

  • @rching7700
    @rching7700 Před 3 měsíci +2

    There's a difference between the country being rich and the people being rich... But personally i feel locals aren't that poor as compared to other counter parts in the region. Definitely stressful living in an expensive city

  • @Whatexactlyispeace
    @Whatexactlyispeace Před 3 měsíci +4

    Actually , I would say this interview doesn’t paint the full correct picture of Singapore. Likewise, crazy rich Asians don’t paint an accurate picture as well.

  • @obrin1983ify
    @obrin1983ify Před 2 měsíci +1

    For Singaporeans if you have a fully paid HDB that you can rent out for 3k-4k a month husband and wife can retire in bali comfortably, rent a nice villa in canggu for 15-20k a year only come back to SG for medical checkup and make full use of your medisave, the question is how many of Singaporeans have a fully paid HDB before the government enblock your flat need to relocate to a smaller unit plus can't rent out for the first few years.😅

  • @KeanLeo
    @KeanLeo Před 3 měsíci +3

    if you conduct your interview at CBD area, you will get a very different answer sets

  • @somedude8332
    @somedude8332 Před 3 měsíci +2

    I feel rich when I cross the border to jb but when I’m back in Singapore I am poor I am destitute

  • @marg8315
    @marg8315 Před 2 měsíci

    When I think of Singapore, I think of a well maintained and safe country with a very high gdp per capital number but a much lower median income. As a matter of fact, if you’re in finance, salary or total comp in Singapore is still 1/3 less than salary in Hong Kong.

  • @BelajarEksporImpor
    @BelajarEksporImpor Před měsícem

    ayya, you guys did the interview in serangoon area - heartland lah. of course the answers are like these. if you do the interview in the CBD area, then the answers about income etc will be so much different

  • @Wannatoberich
    @Wannatoberich Před 3 měsíci

    This interview took place at Serangoon area, just beside Nex

  • @haleyw6659
    @haleyw6659 Před 3 měsíci +2

    I'm surprised that these blue collar workers are definitely underpaid. 1000 sgd is like 700ish usd. And living in Singapore is crazy expensive.

  • @SuzushimaChin
    @SuzushimaChin Před 3 měsíci +1

    If you conduct the interview and survey at Raffles Place or downtown the result would be different

  • @OUR01
    @OUR01 Před měsícem

    old man and old women took my heart.....they are so mature even though they earn less or retired...old women is saying i'm rich bcoz i'm not taking from others...and retired old man is saying we should donate to needy peoples like in gaza...salute to them.

  • @newj-ib1bn
    @newj-ib1bn Před 3 měsíci +13

    Inequality is a massive issue in Singapore

  • @tajabdullah.malaysia
    @tajabdullah.malaysia Před 29 dny +1

    Acknowledged as super Rich super cleverest and super modern society in the World 🌎 🎉 🎉🎉🎉🎉❤❤❤

  • @kcchiew4247
    @kcchiew4247 Před 3 měsíci

    Should interview those who earn around median income in Singapore.

  • @philipw8911
    @philipw8911 Před 2 měsíci +1

    Thank you. This video made me know that Singapore is not as wealthy as I imagined, or that not everyone is as wealthy. Before this, because I saw the per capita GDP data, I always thought that the annual salary of Singaporeans could reach US$50,000, so the monthly should be 4000 and above.

    • @KeoNz
      @KeoNz Před měsícem +2

      You're not wrong though. The median income of Singapore is 5k. All these being interviewed are in the lower bracket and doesn't reflect the majority

  • @wendyshoowaiching4161
    @wendyshoowaiching4161 Před 3 měsíci

    In big cities (capital) you need $6.5m to feel comfortable living off low fix interest 3.1%. In state cities, you need at least $3.5m (low cost living at 3.1% interest). Anything $1,800 is very low income, no or low pension savings. You need to save pension money $2000 to $3000 monthly x 480 months (40 years) to live off your principles and compounding interest to retire at 3.1% FD annual income for the entire year.

  • @m0t3ki
    @m0t3ki Před 3 měsíci +1

    As a singaporean, i would say most of us are not "rich". but rich is a varied concept amongst people.
    Some pple may think pple who can afford to drink milo every day are rich
    Some may think that pple who can afford a luxury watch/bag are rich
    Some may think that pple who can afford a car are rich
    Some may think that pple who can affford a private jet are rich
    While some just want to live normally. Really depends on the concept of your "rich"
    This cannot be easily quantified as some pple like to live in their own means / simpler life (as long as u dont get a critical illness, of cos)
    Some like to be "rich" in experiences (but that usually takes $ also, tbh)
    Singapore in general is not a super expensive place to live in as long as you dont aspire to own a big/fast/expensive car and a big/expensive house.
    That said, costs are generally rising , esp. with housing prices. and salaries rates dont go up as fast as inflation.
    There is always a balance with things and how you would like to live your life. if u want something, you will just have to work hard for it, its as simple as that.

  • @MrBoliao98
    @MrBoliao98 Před 3 měsíci +9

    I feel so attacked Asian Boss comes to Serangoon Central.

  • @Dandelion-nt5ov
    @Dandelion-nt5ov Před 3 měsíci

    If singaporeans want to retire in indonesia or other SEA countries because the exchange rate is lower than the SGD, then where should the local people live???Indonesians also struggle to buy houses. There are some people who have monthly salary

  • @MDroid-bn6eb
    @MDroid-bn6eb Před 3 měsíci +15

    I earn a median Singaporean salary, which is easily top 20% income in neighbouring countries like Malaysia, Indonesia or Thailand.
    I own an apartment which could have bought me a bungalow in those countries I mentioned.
    But I am constantly stressed out due to high expenses and work competition. I travel in crowded bus/train because a car is too expensive.
    That is the price of living in Singapore I guess; you are not dead but not rich either.

  • @jon8697
    @jon8697 Před 3 měsíci +3

    I earn 9k driving grab and do part time job a month. I have 200k CPF . I am rich.

  • @ixactan69
    @ixactan69 Před 3 měsíci

    The retiree in white tee, he speaks pretty well with clear thoughts. Cool dude.

  • @kakkay898
    @kakkay898 Před 3 měsíci +2

    You need to interview those car owners for the set who earn much more than this group. Cars are extremely expansive here, usually they earn a lot more.

    • @gongkia2000
      @gongkia2000 Před 3 měsíci

      I wouldn’t say that cars are expansive here. In fact, smaller vehicles like hatchbacks are very popular. I have hardly seen expansive vehicles like monster trucks or limousines.

  • @skeet0000
    @skeet0000 Před 3 měsíci +3

    Half of the interviewees are not singaporeans, another 3 are elderly (retirees). And a 3 bdrm public housing flat (HDB) only cost less than 400k, only the rich ones will buy a private housing flat (condo) that cost more than 1mil. The channel does not do fact checks properly and their selection of interviewees has dropped so much in standard that street interviews are no longer reliable source of info.

  • @yadayadayehayeha
    @yadayadayehayeha Před 3 měsíci

    The dude in the maroon tee is insightful, you gotta navigate through to earn great knowledge and perhaps good incomes to live in singapore. Finding the meaning of life is far better than getting rich. If you are that hard work and dedicated if not it's okay to live and help others if you can

  • @break_8260
    @break_8260 Před 3 měsíci +8

    Why you want to travel the world?
    - What a great question to ask

  • @dralakbarov
    @dralakbarov Před měsícem

    I like how older folks in this video are caring about community.

  • @MED-fe1qt
    @MED-fe1qt Před 3 měsíci +12

    Domestic helpers -let’s be clear. They do not have to pay for housing, utility bills, medical checkups, or their meals. Even thought their cash salaries can be low, it’s not taxed.

  • @thygod4920
    @thygod4920 Před 3 měsíci +1

    I come from a wealthy family and always assumed Singaporeans were rich, this is definitely not the case. We're "rich" relative to our peer countries, I mean we all have housing, proper education, healthcare etc compared to them. (I studied at Indonesia and their healthcare is horrible compared to Singapore's).
    But the problem is that within Singapore itself, not alot of us actually make that much, with everything being expensive as well as the general culture of wanting luxury goods (When i studied at Indonesia, none of the rich kids there actually bought luxury goods, but here in Singapore alot of people disregarding their status like to spend on luxuries.)
    It rlly makes it seem like we want to be rich (or at least feel like it) rather than we're actually rich.

    • @josephinejosephine8776
      @josephinejosephine8776 Před 3 měsíci +1

      To be rich in Singapore means you no longer live in government-subsidised public housing. You live in your own private property and can afford many choices - one day you can choose to eat at hawker centres and another day you can choose to eat at a Michelin restaurant or have meals whipped up by private chefs in your equally rich friends’ homes in Nassim or Ridout. You can also travel to far away places on business class and ski at the best resorts. Remember, 80% of Singaporeans are not like that.

    • @slaychildhoodmoneyscripts
      @slaychildhoodmoneyscripts Před 22 dny

      @@josephinejosephine8776 Actually, a lot of people living in Ridout or Nassim, will cook themselves, it's the intimacy and strong work ethic they prioritise. They fly business class and do go skiing is true.

    • @slaychildhoodmoneyscripts
      @slaychildhoodmoneyscripts Před 22 dny

      Some rich people want to stay low key, don't draw unnecessary attention to themselves. Dress simple and neat, fly under the radar, only have sincere pple around. Some people like nice cars, some nice clothes or jewellery, all that. Some like to grow money so make sense to multiply it more, they feel accomplished.

  • @Kai-en2xs
    @Kai-en2xs Před 2 měsíci +1

    3:33 btw, your medisave can be used in malaysia private hospitals

  • @peterang3952
    @peterang3952 Před 2 měsíci +2

    Interview those uncle at HDB better ...that malay man is telling the true facts for many like him

  • @nanyate
    @nanyate Před 3 měsíci +11

    Not a balanced interview, Asian Boss. I assume you went to a housing estate during a weekday so you only find people on shift work or are retired. Some of these people like the lady in the thumbnail aren't even Singaporean.
    It would have been a more robust interview if you included a place like Raffles Place to show those in the middle and higher tax bracket. Then you'll be showing the complexity of the situation.
    Disappointing.

    • @nanyate
      @nanyate Před 3 měsíci

      Thank you for updating the thumbnail after my comment.

  • @Khairulzaman96
    @Khairulzaman96 Před 3 měsíci +2

    no matter how rich they are but stressfull & hardworking make earn money,salary payment/wages,pension & money won't buy happines but beside bring others happines