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Govt to study ideal population size

hurley

Alfrescian
Loyal
what took them so long? :oIo:

20120302.085544_population.jpg


THE Government will be reviewing its plans for developing a sustainable population, Deputy Prime Minister Teo Chee Hean said yesterday.

To be conducted by the National Population and Talent Division of the Prime Minister's Office, the review will examine current population goals and policies.

The division will work with other agencies, stakeholders and members of the public to discuss issues, such as the size and composition of the population, through dialogues and online channels.

Inputs from these discussions will be incorporated into a White Paper that will be released by the end of the year.

Mr Teo was responding to queries by several Members of Parliament about Singapore's ideal population size, given the country's limited land and the rapid population growth from immigration.

Mr Teo said the most critical long-term issue is to "develop a sustainable population strategy that will maintain the vitality of Singapore, strengthen our harmonious multi-ethnic society, and enable Singaporeans to achieve their life aspirations".

He hopes to develop "a shared understanding of our strategies to build a sustainable population that secures Singapore's future".

He added that one of the Government's procreation initiatives - the Child Development Account - will be enhanced.

Set up in 2001, this is a special account for each child in which parents' savings will be matched dollar for dollar by the Government, up to a cap of $6,000 to $18,000, depending on the birth order of the child.

The money can be used to pay the fees at approved institutions registered with the Ministry of Community Development, Youth and Sports. They include childcare centres, kindergartens, early-intervention and special-education institutions.

Currently, the account will stay open till the end of the child's sixth year. From Jan 1 next year, this duration will be extended till the end of the child's 12th year.

From July 1 this year, the money can also be used for a broader range of approved institutions, such as licensed pharmacies, optical shops and providers of devices like hearing or visual aids.

Mr Seah Kian Peng (Marine Parade GRC) also proposed yesterday to make paternity leave mandatory so as to encourage marriage and parenthood.

Mr Teo said the proposal will be studied, but "perhaps not this year but in the future".

He also touched on the "twin effects" of low fertility and an ageing population.

There are now about seven working citizens, aged 15 to 64, to each citizen aged 65 and above. In contrast, there will be only 2.3 working-age citizens to each senior citizen by 2030.

Singapore will also experience "an unprecedented age shift" from now to 2030, as over 900,000 baby boomers born between 1947 and 1965 retire and become senior citizens, Mr Teo added.

Without immigration, Singapore will face the prospect of a shrinking workforce and economy, he said.
 

johnny333

Alfrescian (Inf)
Asset
More wayang from the PAP.

If they were really interested in this topic they should have done the study before letting in those millions of people:rolleyes:
 

tonychat

Alfrescian (InfP)
Generous Asset
how about Population Size : 0

exterminate the whole of the sinkie coward population
 

po2wq

Alfrescian (Inf)
Asset
More wayang from the PAP.

If they were really interested in this topic they should have done the study before letting in those millions of people:rolleyes:
now iz trying 2 show justifications 4 letting in dose millions of ppl ...
 

callmebad

Alfrescian
Loyal
It is tough to attach an ideal figure. Their ideal figure may not be the people's ideal figure. Right now, a lot of people are already screaming and cursing out there about things getting crowded and cramped. Build up the capacity, build up the foundation and strength of the economy 1st, otherwise this can only cause more social friction
 

Narong Wongwan

Alfrescian (Inf)
Asset
LKY has great foresight indeed..........LONG LIVE LKY!

You sheep please stop kpkb!



Population: A redirection
As Singaporeans feel the over-crowdedness, Lee Kuan Yew reduces the optimum size in future to 5.5m. By Seah Chiang Nee.
Feb 13, 2008


SIGNALLING a major redirection, Singapore’s political icon has reduced his own population projection for the future by up to 1.5 million people.
Minister Mentor Lee Kuan Yew has scaled down a projected 6.5 million population – mainly through immigration – by some 20% “to preserve a sense of comfort”.

He now prefers an optimum size of 5 million to 5.5 million, down from the 6 million to 7 million that he wanted two years ago. Currently the population stands at 4.6 million, so expansion has only a little way to go.

In 2005, he told a surprised nation that he foresaw a thriving global Singapore of 6 million to 7 million people by 2030.


That would place Singapore’s size just behind major cities like New York (8.2 million) and London (7.6 million). The time span for achieving this was revised from 30 years to 40-50 years.

Lee’s climb-down is as abrupt as his idea was two years ago; none received prior discussion in Parliament. He is now obviously convinced that there is not enough space in Singapore for such large numbers.

The Minister Mentor said last Tuesday: “I have not quite been sold on the idea that we should have 6.5 million. I think there’s an optimum size for the land that we have, to preserve the open spaces and the sense of comfort.”

Lee told a think tank seminar that he did not want to see Singapore going the way of Hong Kong – “just solid buildings, one blocking the sunlight of the other”.

The revision is more than to keep aesthetic values; it follows the adverse impact of the rapid demographic change in the past few years.

In some areas, there is serious over-crowding, especially on the roads and in public transport, as well as universities and hospitals (a fourth is being planned), which are straining public tolerance.

(Senior Minister Goh Chok Tong recently warned of potential friction between newcomers and locals.)

Singaporeans are fearful of being muscled out by foreigners in their own country. Critics have accused the government of treating them better than citizens on issues such as jobs, national service and education.

Others are worried about the future of this small city-state, which has the fourth densest population in the world.

Concerned at being pushed out of their comfort zone, more Singaporeans now opt to work or settle down abroad.

The brain drain is even hitting close to his family, Lee recently said.

His grandson Li Hongyi, who is studying economics in America on a government scholarship, recently advised his younger brother not to accept a scholarship.

The advice was apparently aimed at telling brother Hao Yi not to tie himself down by a bond to work for six years in Singapore, which is a condition of the financing.

It implies that the son of Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong may be planning to work abroad after graduation.

The economy is also declining.

Job creation, which has always determined the rate of immigration here, is expected to slow significantly from almost 200,000 in 2007 to 60,000, a Citigroup research says.

The expected drop in employment this year is bound to slow down the number of foreign arrivals, irrespective of what the government wants.

Meanwhile, the authorities are tackling some of the public woes – packed trains and crowded roads during peak hours.

From 7.30am-9am and 5.30pm-7.30pm some stations are so packed that commuters are left standing to wait for the second or third train before they can get on board.

“Going to work every morning is a nightmare. It’s virtually impossible to be able to catch the first train that comes along. There are so many people in it,” said a clerical assistant, who has to start her day half an hour earlier.

Sometimes she would have to join others to make an extra trip upstream in order to make it.

A S$20bil plan has been announced to double the length of MRT tracks from 138km to 278km by 2020 by building two more lines, one of which will run underground.

Buses are also feeling the strain of the increase in population and a major revamp is under way.

The roads are getting clogged as people withstand some hefty costs (the most expensive in the world) to buy and operate a car.

To get motorists to use public transport, cars are taxed electronically every time they pass under some 71 gantries built across the island, the costs depending on location and time.

Recently, as the number of cars increased, more and more gantries were built and they moved from crowded highways to some residential neighbours.

One motorist who lives in non-congested Upper Bukit Timah Road complained that one was erected not far from his house. “This means that every time I drive out of my gate I pay a fee.”

(This article was published in The Star, Malaysia on Feb 13, 2007).
 

jw5

Moderator
Moderator
Loyal
I still think LWL should do her part for the nation.
Doesn't seem right that the brilliant genes will not be passed on.
 
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