Singapore
Singapore’s remarkable economic growth over the past 60 years is a testament to the power of pro-growth policies and stands in stark contrast to failed socialist policies implemented by numerous countries in the past. While some have characterized Singapore’s interventionist industrial policies as socialist-style, successive governments of the small city-state have prioritized growing the economy and raising living standards primarily using market forces rather than government control. In particular, Singapore’s system of personal savings accounts avoids heavy reliance on government transfer payments financed by high taxes on economically successful individuals and companies. In fact, Singapore has rejected the tax-and-spend model of western countries, with government spending and taxes being a relatively small share of its economy. In Singapore, the focus is on self-reliance rather than dependence on government.
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Podcast
Realities of Socialism: The Unique Case of Singapore
Steven Globerman, Senior Fellow and the Addington Chair in Measurement at the Fraser Institute, joins host Rosemarie Fike to discuss the unique case of Singapore' economic and social system, and how their particular economic circumstances and history leave many people wondering.
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Meritocracy, Personal Responsibility, and Encouraging Investment: Lessons from Singapore’s Economic Growth Miracle documents the stunning economic rise of the small city-state since gaining independence in 1965, and examines how it is able to provide many of the same social services that Westerners do—health care, retirement, housing, education, unemployment, for example—but with much smaller government and lower costs.
- Chapter 1: An Overview of Singapore’s Development and Public Policies
This chapter discusses the evolution and uniqueness of Singapore’s economic and social policies, from British colony to independent city-state. - Chapter 2: Singapore’s Economic Performance
Known as one of the four Asian Tigers, Singapore’s stunning economic success is documented here and compared to other Asia-Pacific countries, as well as the United States. - Chapter 3: The Singaporean Health Care System: Policy and Performance
Singapore’s approach to universal health care represents a departure from much of the developed world in terms of design and philosophy, which shares features of both tax-funded systems, where government is the primary insurer, and social health insurance systems with competitive insurance markets. - Chapter 4: Singapore’s Primary and Secondary Education System: The Use of Education Savings Accounts to Fuel Student Achievement
This chapter examines the unique features of Singapore’s education system: Its history, its focus on competition and academic rigour, the Edusave Accounts, and how it routinely evaluates not just students, but also teachers and schools for performance. - Chapter 5: Singapore’s Income-Support System: One of a Kind
The Singaporean social security system is quite different from those of most other industrialized countries, because it largely emphasizes individual responsibility rather than collective welfare. This chapter discusses Singapore’s unique forced saving model—the Central Provident Fund. - Chapter 6: Is Singapore a Free Market Economy?
This chapter explores the ways Singapore is and is not a market-based economy, where it falls short on liberal democratic values, and discusses what lessons western countries can learn from Singapore's experience.
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