Edward Yee is the co-founder of Givfunds Social Ventures, a non-profit organisation which provides sustainable and low-cost capital to neglected social enterprises using data from local communities. The organisation has impacted over 45,000 lives directly, over 900,000 lives indirectly and has helped many social enterprises raise multimillion-dollar funding from a range of high-profile funds. But …
Tag: Singapore
Women who choose to present a poor attitude at the workplace should be prevented from holding back other women, writes 29-year-old Tan Peiying from Singapore. There has been lots of talk about the low fertility rate in Singapore and from the public’s point of view, the government is not doing enough to support them in …
Correspondence: I empathise with employers on women and fertility Read More »
Housing subsidies, though they are targeted at the less wealthy, are just “another camouflaged expenditure tool”, claims 29-year-old Tan Peiying from Singapore. Is it right for a government to decide on behalf of its people the kind of housing they should have? While it seem like a pro-poor policy, to ensure reasonably priced housing, I …
Correspondence: Housing subsidies are for whose good, exactly? Read More »
Following national elections last month, Singapore’s government should re-engage its citizens, particularly the increasing number of youths who may have different perspectives on the country’s development, writes Tan Pei Ying, a 29-year-old Commonwealth Correspondent. Singapore has done well economically since its independence in 1965. Led by the ruling People’s Action Party, our country has experienced tremendous …
“It is high time for Singapore to re-engage young citizens” Read More »
Following national elections last month, Singapore’s government should re-engage its citizens, particularly the increasing number of youths who may have different perspectives on the country’s development, writes Tan Pei Ying, a 29-year-old Commonwealth Correspondent. Singapore has done well economically since its independence in 1965. Led by the ruling People’s Action Party, our country has experienced tremendous …
"It is high time for Singapore to re-engage young citizens" Read More »
The world has the resources and capability to put the sufferings of children all over the globe to an end, writes Aristle Tay, 18, from Singapore. So enough of the hesitation. For the longest time possible, children from all over the world have been enmeshed in a cruel mire of misery and despair. Haunted by …
“Children have been enmeshed in a cruel mire of despair” Read More »
The world has the resources and capability to put the sufferings of children all over the globe to an end, writes Aristle Tay, 18, from Singapore. So enough of the hesitation. For the longest time possible, children from all over the world have been enmeshed in a cruel mire of misery and despair. Haunted by …
"Children have been enmeshed in a cruel mire of despair" Read More »
To conquer fear we must choose to accept the unknowns present in life and take a leap of faith, says Aristle Tay, 18, a Commonwealth Correspondent from Singapore. It is alright to be forever scared. That is what I had always chosen to foolishly accept. Until a few weeks ago, when I finally figured out …
“I wondered why people fear things. Then, it came to me” Read More »
To conquer fear we must choose to accept the unknowns present in life and take a leap of faith, says Aristle Tay, 18, a Commonwealth Correspondent from Singapore. It is alright to be forever scared. That is what I had always chosen to foolishly accept. Until a few weeks ago, when I finally figured out …
"I wondered why people fear things. Then, it came to me" Read More »
With queues for welfare centres all too often snaking around street corners, it is shocking that so many people still fail to help the poor and disadvantaged, according to Aristle Tay, 18, a Commonwealth Correspondent from Singapore. I saw it on a rather isolated corner of The Telegraph newspaper. But it struck me deeply. Apparently, …
“I am frustrated with those who have fortunes but turn a blind eye” Read More »