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Singapore: miracle coming to an end?
The city-state was one of the great economic successes of the second half of the last century. But behind the splendor and opulence that characterize this important financial center and this major maritime hub, one of the busiest in the world, a more complex reality presents itself in the eyes of those who take the trouble to take a closer look…
Singapore is an exceptional case in the history of Humanity. A British colony since 1867, later attached to Malaysia in 1963, Singapore gained independence two years later, in 1965. Under the leadership of its then leader, Prime Minister Lee Kuan Yew [1] , the state Islander has since made a prodigious leap in just three decades, going from the status of a poor country to that of a rich country, as evidenced in particular by the gross domestic product per capita, which stands at almost $ 95,000, the seventh-largest on the globe.
Freedom versus prosperity
Singapore's proven economic success can be explained in a thousand and one ways. But if we want to try a synthetic explanation, as does Peter Guest in his analysis [2] published in the Nikkei Asian Review , we will sum it all up by saying that the meteoric economic growth of the country is mainly due to the 'important state presence in the daily life of the approximately six million Singaporeans. In fact, the People's Action Party , co-created in 1954 by Lee Kwan Yew, has held the majority of seats in the country's parliament since 1959 (!)which, in reality, makes Singapore an “authoritarian democracy”, the Lee family firmly holding the reins of power since the country's accession to independence [3] .
In addition, reports Peter Guest in his article , the state owns 90% of the approximately 720 square kilometers that constitute the total area of the country, and 80% of the population lives in one of the apartments or houses owned by Housing & Development Board, the government entity responsible for housing management on the island. And that, without counting on the fact that the State is the majority shareholder of many of the most important companies of the country, like the national airline Singapore Airlines, for example. An important state presence, we said…
A changing situation
But, as Peter Guest recounts in his paper , the global socioeconomic context, struck with the seal of rising nationalism and an uncertain economic situation, is gradually eroding social peace, firmly maintained by the People's Action Party since the very beginning. beginnings of the republic. GDP growth has been trending downward since the end of the global financial crisis of 2007-2008 , and the transition from this same GDP is now complete, the country having gradually moved from an industrial economy to a service economy (75% of GDP today).
The consequences of such a situation are significant. Over the past two to three decades, manufacturing employment has collapsed, says Peter Guest in his article, leaving behind a large cohort of generally older workers. At the same time, the new jobs, concentrated in services and finance, are occupied by young immigrant workers, obviously paid less. The result has been, in recent years, an impoverishment of a certain section of the population: around 250,000 people are living today in poverty described as functional, at a time when the cost of living is gradually increasing, and in a country where the social safety net is practically non-existent.
In addition, the tilting of the national GDP in the service economy generates, due to the influx of young foreign workers, certain social tensions, in a country accustomed to order and calm. The immigrant population almost doubled between 2000 and 2010, from 755,000 to 1.3 million people. Foreign workers and students are now estimated at 1.7 million people, or about 27% of the country's total population.
How will this Asian tiger react to the major economic and social challenges it faces? Story to follow!
Extracts from Peter Guest's article in Nikkei on 22 January 2020
Citing Yeoh Lam Keong, former Chief Economist of GIC, the author then makes a set of really interesting points which connects what is ailing Singapore to what is happening in the rest of the world: The roots of Singapore’s current problems, Yeoh believes, were planted in the 1990s, when its politics lurched rightward. In line with the prevailing neoliberal thinking, the government moved toward a more market-based approach to the pricing and ownership of HDB flats. Many citizens bought houses, taking advantage of a government scheme that allows citizens to use the savings in their Central Provident Fund — a compulsory pension scheme — to do so. Property prices were booming, so in theory this meant that they would have a valuable asset in retirement, which they could sell or borrow against.
However, HDB houses are sold as leaseholds, and the leases are ticking down. The value of many older homes has peaked, and their owners face a retirement with a depreciating asset and a diminished pension pot. That means the signature social policy has gone from one of the most successful public housing initiatives of the 20th century, to a liability for some elderly citizens, Yeoh said. “It’s a time bomb.”
Perhaps a more consequential policy decision was made in the belief — and up to that point, the experience — that growth would continue to drive social mobility and job creation. “They thought that they wanted to maximize welfare by maximizing growth. They had one huge policy lever, which was immigration,” Yeoh says. Between 2000 and 2010, Singapore’s immigrant population nearly doubled from 755,000 to 1.3 million, not counting foreign-born citizens given permanent residence status. As of June 2019, Singapore’s population was composed of 3.5 million citizens, 530,000 permanent residents and 1.7 million foreign workers, students and dependents. “Relative to the base population, you haven’t seen that anywhere else. It’s unimaginable. It depressed permanently the wages of all those at the bottom,” Yeoh says.
Singapore has no statutory minimum wages, and labor unions have little power, so there was nothing to cushion the blow. A generation whose incomes had loosely tracked the country’s growth suddenly found it accelerating away from them. “You’re earning your adult life in a middle-income country, and you end up having to retire … in one of the richest developed countries in the world,” Yeoh says. “It’s like working in the Philippines and retiring in London.”
The city-state was one of the great economic successes of the second half of the last century. But behind the splendor and opulence that characterize this important financial center and this major maritime hub, one of the busiest in the world, a more complex reality presents itself in the eyes of those who take the trouble to take a closer look…
Singapore is an exceptional case in the history of Humanity. A British colony since 1867, later attached to Malaysia in 1963, Singapore gained independence two years later, in 1965. Under the leadership of its then leader, Prime Minister Lee Kuan Yew [1] , the state Islander has since made a prodigious leap in just three decades, going from the status of a poor country to that of a rich country, as evidenced in particular by the gross domestic product per capita, which stands at almost $ 95,000, the seventh-largest on the globe.
Freedom versus prosperity
Singapore's proven economic success can be explained in a thousand and one ways. But if we want to try a synthetic explanation, as does Peter Guest in his analysis [2] published in the Nikkei Asian Review , we will sum it all up by saying that the meteoric economic growth of the country is mainly due to the 'important state presence in the daily life of the approximately six million Singaporeans. In fact, the People's Action Party , co-created in 1954 by Lee Kwan Yew, has held the majority of seats in the country's parliament since 1959 (!)which, in reality, makes Singapore an “authoritarian democracy”, the Lee family firmly holding the reins of power since the country's accession to independence [3] .
In addition, reports Peter Guest in his article , the state owns 90% of the approximately 720 square kilometers that constitute the total area of the country, and 80% of the population lives in one of the apartments or houses owned by Housing & Development Board, the government entity responsible for housing management on the island. And that, without counting on the fact that the State is the majority shareholder of many of the most important companies of the country, like the national airline Singapore Airlines, for example. An important state presence, we said…
A changing situation
But, as Peter Guest recounts in his paper , the global socioeconomic context, struck with the seal of rising nationalism and an uncertain economic situation, is gradually eroding social peace, firmly maintained by the People's Action Party since the very beginning. beginnings of the republic. GDP growth has been trending downward since the end of the global financial crisis of 2007-2008 , and the transition from this same GDP is now complete, the country having gradually moved from an industrial economy to a service economy (75% of GDP today).
The consequences of such a situation are significant. Over the past two to three decades, manufacturing employment has collapsed, says Peter Guest in his article, leaving behind a large cohort of generally older workers. At the same time, the new jobs, concentrated in services and finance, are occupied by young immigrant workers, obviously paid less. The result has been, in recent years, an impoverishment of a certain section of the population: around 250,000 people are living today in poverty described as functional, at a time when the cost of living is gradually increasing, and in a country where the social safety net is practically non-existent.
In addition, the tilting of the national GDP in the service economy generates, due to the influx of young foreign workers, certain social tensions, in a country accustomed to order and calm. The immigrant population almost doubled between 2000 and 2010, from 755,000 to 1.3 million people. Foreign workers and students are now estimated at 1.7 million people, or about 27% of the country's total population.
How will this Asian tiger react to the major economic and social challenges it faces? Story to follow!
Extracts from Peter Guest's article in Nikkei on 22 January 2020
- The first problem is the familiar challenge of blue-collar manufacturing jobs disappearing: “Midlevel jobs in manufacturing and multinational companies are disappearing, and being replaced by technology and financial services roles, which are easier to fill with younger, more affordable migrants. Singaporeans like Aziz struggle to get back into the workforce. Only half of retrenched over-50s are reemployed full time within six months. Nearly three-quarters of people laid off in Singapore last quarter were what the country classifies as professionals, managers, executives and technicians, or PMETs.
- However, because of white collar part of the Singapore (tech companies, Financial Services companies) continuing to flourish, the cost of living continues to rise. “The bottom 20% of Singaporean households have an average monthly shortfall of S$335 between their incomes and outgoings, according to the government’s latest economic survey. Living costs have risen. Water bills are up 30% since 2017; medical costs have increased 10% in just over five years, an acute problem in a population that is aging rapidly.”
- Challenge #3 is slowing GDP growth: “Technological disruption is breaking the link between economic growth and earnings. Growth has slowed to its lowest level since the 2009 financial crisis tipped the island into recession.”
Citing Yeoh Lam Keong, former Chief Economist of GIC, the author then makes a set of really interesting points which connects what is ailing Singapore to what is happening in the rest of the world: The roots of Singapore’s current problems, Yeoh believes, were planted in the 1990s, when its politics lurched rightward. In line with the prevailing neoliberal thinking, the government moved toward a more market-based approach to the pricing and ownership of HDB flats. Many citizens bought houses, taking advantage of a government scheme that allows citizens to use the savings in their Central Provident Fund — a compulsory pension scheme — to do so. Property prices were booming, so in theory this meant that they would have a valuable asset in retirement, which they could sell or borrow against.
However, HDB houses are sold as leaseholds, and the leases are ticking down. The value of many older homes has peaked, and their owners face a retirement with a depreciating asset and a diminished pension pot. That means the signature social policy has gone from one of the most successful public housing initiatives of the 20th century, to a liability for some elderly citizens, Yeoh said. “It’s a time bomb.”
Perhaps a more consequential policy decision was made in the belief — and up to that point, the experience — that growth would continue to drive social mobility and job creation. “They thought that they wanted to maximize welfare by maximizing growth. They had one huge policy lever, which was immigration,” Yeoh says. Between 2000 and 2010, Singapore’s immigrant population nearly doubled from 755,000 to 1.3 million, not counting foreign-born citizens given permanent residence status. As of June 2019, Singapore’s population was composed of 3.5 million citizens, 530,000 permanent residents and 1.7 million foreign workers, students and dependents. “Relative to the base population, you haven’t seen that anywhere else. It’s unimaginable. It depressed permanently the wages of all those at the bottom,” Yeoh says.
Singapore has no statutory minimum wages, and labor unions have little power, so there was nothing to cushion the blow. A generation whose incomes had loosely tracked the country’s growth suddenly found it accelerating away from them. “You’re earning your adult life in a middle-income country, and you end up having to retire … in one of the richest developed countries in the world,” Yeoh says. “It’s like working in the Philippines and retiring in London.”
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