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GST was implemented at a single rate of 3% on 1 April 1994, with an assurance that it would not be raised for at least five years. To cushion the impact of GST on Singaporean households, an offset package was also introduced. Simultaneously, corporate tax rate was cut by 3% to 27%, and the top marginal personal income tax rate was cut by 3% to 30%.
This is a list of the Official Singapore Chart (formerly Top Streaming Chart) number-one songs in 2025, according to the Recording Industry Association Singapore. Chart history [ edit ]
The first Popular Bookstore was set up in 1936 by Chou Sing Chu in North Bridge Road, Singapore, initially focusing on retailing Chinese books and stationery.In March 2006, Popular Holdings was the main organiser of BookFest@Singapore, the first Chinese-language book fair ever held outside of China.
Russell Lee is the pseudonym of the Singaporean authors of True Singapore Ghost Stories, a well-known book series of ghost stories in Singapore, Malaysia, other parts of Asia ever since the release of Book 1 in 1989.
Singaporean short story writers (1 C, 3 P) Singaporean crime fiction writers (3 P) Singaporean songwriters (4 C, 9 P) Pages in category "Singaporean writers"
Recording Industry Association Singapore (RIAS) is an organisation that represents the music industry in Singapore and national representative of the International Federation of the Phonographic Industry. The organisation was founded in 1976 as the Singapore Phonogram Videogram Association (SPVA) and renamed in 2001. [2]
Private car licence plate numbers began in the early 1900s when Singapore was one of the four Straits Settlements, with a single prefix S for denoting Singapore, then adding a suffix letter S 'B' to S 'Y' for cars, but skipping a few like S 'A' (reserved for motorcycles), S 'H' (reserved for taxis), S 'D' (reserved for municipal vehicles), and S 'G' for goods vehicles large and small.
Éva Janikovszky (1926–2003), also children's writer; Mór Jókai (1825–1904), foremost 19th-century novelist; Margit Kaffka (1880–1918) Frigyes Karinthy (1887–1938), author of science-fiction novels; József Kármán (1768–1795) Zsigmond Kemény (1814–1875) Rivka Keren (born 1946), writing also in Hebrew