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View Full Version : No longer a tiger, Singapore’s new economy


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10-01-2016, 03:00 PM
An honorable member of the Coffee Shop Has Just Posted the Following:

Lower growth broadly means lower profits, and fewer, tougher opportunities for business expansion. This translates to lower bonuses, fewer jobs as well as potential layoffs.

For now a labour crunch and anti-immigration measures will cushion local jobs but for student job seekers and those outside of skilled brackets, breaking into the job market will not be easy. Dramatic increases in salaries and packages are also going to be hard to come by.

However, for many ordinary people there are more than a few silver linings to a slow growth economy. Interest rates are likely to remain low, easing pressure on home owners. Cooling in the housing market will favour young people looking to get on the property ladder.

Inflation is likely to stay low so while we won’t be seeing our salaries rise dramatically, we also shouldn’t have to contend with painful price increases.

The other day I was helping a friend look for office space in the much sought-after Club Street area and I was surprised by prices that according to real estate agents, had reduced substantially over the past two years. For entrepreneurs looking for start-up space, this is good news.

At the very least, this new normal allows us to catch our breath, take stock and consider what sort of an economy and therefore what sort of a society we want to be. The government itself has said the next few years will be a period of measured restructuring and rebalancing.

But this doesn’t quite account for the fact that growth is a defining feature of our nation. The ability to deliver higher and higher living standards, more opportunities and rising wages is part of Singapore’s essential social contact.

Now we find ourselves confronting a future as a small, mature developed economy with moderate growth; think Denmark, New Zealand or Ireland. So should we begin to expect the same sort of democracy and welfare protection? Or are going to fight for our growth? Given global constraints and an ageing population, that would be quite a fight.

Our geographic location, strong education base and cash reserves give us a chance to keep on a growth trajectory even in adverse circumstances. But for real growth, we would need to either rapidly develop an innovative and globally competitive private sector out of the shadow of state-linked corporates.

In the past influxes of new Singaporeans with their labour and capital have allowed us to beat a low population growth rate but politically this may no longer be an option.

In terms of fighting to maintain high growth, none of the options are easy and they would all entail a breach of the former status quo but will this bring change to another defining aspect of the Singapore story — our social and political systems?

An era of low growth and calculated rebalancing would be unprecedented for Singapore. Singapore’s nature, its core DNA is as an entrepot, a place of opportunity, a place to make fortunes.

Globally our country’s name is a synonym for growth and forward momentum so this isn’t something we can just give up. So if our GDP isn’t rising fast, that growth will have to come from elsewhere.

Somehow we need to grow. Or we wouldn’t be Singapore.

- See more at: http://www.themalaymailonline.com/op....1iyOvPl5.dpuf (http://www.themalaymailonline.com/opinion/surekha-a-yadav/article/no-longer-a-tiger-singapores-new-economy#sthash.1iyOvPl5.dpuf)


Click here to view the whole thread at www.sammyboy.com (http://www.singsupplies.com/showthread.php?223194-No-longer-a-tiger-Singapore’s-new-economy&goto=newpost).