Singapore
Government Press Release
Media
Relations Division, Ministry of Information, Communications and the Arts,
MICA
Building, 140 Hill Street, 2nd Storey, Singapore 179369
Tel:
6837-9666
TRANSCRIPT
OF PRIME MINISTER LEE HSIEN LOONG�S NATIONAL DAY RALLY 2008 SPEECH
AT
NUS-UCC ON 17 AUGUST 2008
(PM�s
remarks on Women�s Table Tennis finals at Olympics in Beijing before start of
Malay speech)
PM: �Friends and fellow Singaporeans, good evening and welcome to the
National Day Rally 2008. This is my most challenging National Day Rally because
it coincides with the Women�s Table Tennis finals at the Olympics in Beijing.
Let us start by wishing all the best to Team Singapore.
I was here in this hall rehearsing for tonight on Friday night when I
got the news that we went into the finals. Good news. I knew that everybody
would want to watch the game and cheer for our team in Beijing. That left me
with a small problem. What to do with the National Day Rally? So after thinking
it over and consulting my colleagues, we decided on this solution. Rally
proceeds. For the home audience, we will delay the telecast of the English
speech till tomorrow night, 24 hours and the newspapers will carry on Tuesday
morning. For the Malay and the Chinese speeches, we carry on as normal. But the
English speech is embargoed, so please don�t tell your friends and families my
jokes and spoil their fun. The Chinese and the Malay speeches should finish by
around 7.30 pm when the ping-pong game starts. For the audience who are here
this evening, MediaCorp will be repeating the
highlights of the game later tonight at 11 o�clock. So when you go home, you
can see it.
We have some serious issues to discuss tonight but I have somebody on
duty checking the games and he will update me from time to time. I have a
display here on my screen and I will let you know if I hear anything.
Therefore, you don�t have to depend on your SMS. I hope we will hear some good
news before the night is out.��� ��
English speech
Tonight I�ll start by talking about the economy. �I haven�t done so in detail over the last few
years because the economy was doing well. So we were focusing on social issues,
the income gap, ageing population, and CPF.�
But it�s timely to pay some attention to the economy now because
conditions this year are more difficult.�
Over the last few years when conditions were good, we surged ahead.� We did the right thing, we planned, we pushed,
we built up our momentum, restructured and upgraded our economy and brought in
a pipeline of good projects � F1 Grand Prix, the IRs,
our financial services, banking doing well, major investments brought in by EDB
through very hard work.� Now these
projects will sustain our momentum and keep our economy going.� But dark clouds have gathered around us in
the external environment.� The US faces
very serious problems.� Their house
prices had a balloon, bubble, crash and are still
falling.� Unemployment is going up,
consumers are losing confidence, spending less and it�s affecting the rest of
the world as has to be expected.� In
Europe, the major economies have gone into negative growth and we must expect
impact on Asia also.� These global
economic problems will continue at least into next year and some experts think
it may last even longer.� We are starting
to feel the impact in Singapore.�
�In the second quarter, our growth has slowed down, our manufacturing
sector has been affected, our exports are weak this
year, tourist arrivals are down.� Even Asian
tourists are travelling less partly because airline fares have gone up with
fuel costs.� Retail stores say that
customers are more careful and restaurants have also fewer guests now in
Singapore.� Singaporeans are more careful
with their money.� This year I think we
can get four to five per cent growth.�
It�s not bad.� Next year we expect
slow growth and more uncertainties.� I�m not
predicting a crisis.� We are competitive,
investors still want to come to Singapore and we have a strong pipeline as I
explained.� But we have to be vigilant
and we have to be psychologically ready in case of trouble. �We also must be on our marks so when the
global economy recovers, we can bounce right back up.�
Right now, the hottest issue for Singaporeans is the rising cost of
living.� Inflation is not just a problem
for Singapore, it�s a worldwide problem because oil prices have gone up, food prices have gone up.�
I show you a graph of oil prices over the last few years and you can see
how in 2000, we were paying about US$20 a barrel.� Gradually it went up US$60 and in the last
one year it spiked all the way up, nearly US$140, now back
to about US$115 a barrel.�
Food is an even more dramatic story.�
I show you rice because that�s what affects Singaporeans and you can see
the price has been very stable for a very long time, gone up a bit, two years
ago and in the last one year, tremendous spike, now come down some to US$800
per ton.� Maybe it will stabilise there
or maybe it will come down a little bit and similarly with oil there are some
signs that maybe it will come down a little bit.� �But
even if it does, it�s still high and it�s quite understandable why people are
agitated all over the world and demonstrating, rioting, protesting, blaming their governments.�
I show you some slides from around the world.� This is Europe,
these are truckers in France protesting about diesel prices, so they�re
blocking the roads.� This is Spain, farmers put all their tomatoes on the road because
their fuel prices have gone up.�
Indonesia, the government raised prices for kerosene, demonstrations and
riots.� Pakistan, they are not having a
dance, they are showing their displeasure at the government because food prices
went up.� Philippines, they sell their
people subsidised rice, ran short of supply, there was a scramble, mad
scramble, the government had to scramble internationally to buy rice,
domestically long queues, big problem.�
Fortunately in Singapore we have plenty of rice.� So you don�t see riots.� All you see is Iswaran,
SMS( MTI), inspecting our rice stockpile but I know
that people are unhappy still about the price increases.� I have read a lot of the interesting things
on the Internet.� Some are quite good.� I don�t have time to show you all of them but
I�ll just show you one tonight.� This one
says �Wah Piang
Eh! the ERP has reached Pedra
Branca�.� I
sent this to Raymond Lim.� He says that�s
his favourite one too.�
I completely understand how Singaporeans feel and why Singaporeans feel
like this. But we have to react rationally to understand what�s happening to us
and what we can and cannot do about it.�
We can�t prevent prices from rising in Singapore.� We import all our food except for a few eggs and
Mah Bow Tan reminded me a few fish.� We import all our fuel and all our electricity
is produced from imported either fuel oil or natural gas.� When the world prices go up, how can we keep
our rice prices, our petrol prices, our diesel prices, our electricity prices
down?� It can�t be done.� In terms of dollars, your wages have not gone
down because most workers are earning more dollars this year than last
year.� Last year was a good year, people got good increases, got good bonuses, so you
have more dollars.� But when you spend
those dollars, you find that they have shrunk and with inflation, what that
means is some of your wage increase went to you, some
of that wage increase went to the people who sell us oil.� So, to put this in a very over-simplified
way, the oil producers of the world have got rich. The Russians, the Arabs, they�ve
got rich.� The oil consumers of the world
like Singapore, therefore, we have got a little bit poorer.� That�s what it is.� They are richer, we are poorer.� How has it happened?� Not by taking dollars away from you but by
shrinking each of your dollars a little bit smaller when you spend it.
Singaporeans wish that the government would do something to stop these
prices from going up, just order them to stand still, control them, don�t let
them go up.� Some governments try to do that
but the subsidies cost huge sums of money. All the governments which try to do
this have a very serious problem on their hands. And even those who produce oil
and gas find this very hard to sustain.�
You look at Malaysia, they subsidise oil but what happens?� Singaporeans go to Johor Baru
to top up. Thais go across from Thailand into Kedah to top up, not your petrol
tank but a huge special tank in a truck so as to get maximum benefit and they
are oil producers.� They�ve had to cut
their oil subsidies and push up prices recently.� Malaysia, Indonesia did that, also an oil
producer.� China produces some oil, India
also, no oil, but they were subsidising.�
It�s untenable.� We can�t do that
but we can help Singaporeans and the way we help Singaporeans is to let the
electricity price go up but to top up your SingPower
accounts with U-save and give more U-Save to the poorer households, three room
flats, two room flats and what that means is we are helping you directly
because U-save really is cash.� We are
putting it into your account, up to you to spend. If you use it for
electricity, it helps you to cover your bill.�
If you use less electricity it will last longer. But it�s a lot of money
because for the lower-income households, three rooms and below, it�s worth
three to six months� worth of your utility bills.� So that�s a lot of money.� We can help but we have to help in the right
way.� This year, we�ve done more to help
Singaporeans.�
We foresaw this spike in inflation last year, towards the end of the
year as prices started rising.� We knew
that Singaporeans would be worried.� We
started planning what we could do to help them, what we could do to reassure
people and when it came to the Budget, fortunately we
had a surplus last year.� We were able to
make a significant distribution in the Budget to help all Singaporeans but
especially for the middle-income groups and even more for the lower-income
groups, the needy.� So we have growth
dividends, Medisave top ups, U-save, so many
measures, such long lists but all to give help where the help is needed.�
Besides the Budget, we have many other measures to help the needy.� For the lower-income workers, we�ve got
Workfare to top up their income and savings. This year in the National Wages
Council deliberations, we made a special one-off payment to the low wage
workers.� We recommended it and many
employers have done it because we knew that they would be pressed this
year.� For the destitute, we have higher
public assistance rates which we have revised up this year.� I think it�s now $330 per person.� We�ve
got Comcare, we�ve got Medifund
and for retirees, we have pushed up the CPF interest rate which was one of the
things we discussed here last year at the rally.� One extra per cent interest on the first
$60,000 of your balances and it�s come into effect this year and it will help
to preserve the value of your CPF savings for your old age.� So it�s helpful to retirees, it�s helpful to
the young people and not so young but not yet old.� Overall, it�s $3 billion from the government
this year and I think that�s not a small sum of money.�
I know that many Singaporeans who are not so poor but also not so well
off feel that they are pressured. Middle-income Singaporeans and they feel that
they�re the sandwiched class, stuck in the middle.� But when you ask who is the sandwiched class,
all the way from quite low down to quite high up, it�s a very fat sandwich but
they feel sandwiched and we haven�t forgotten them.� We have got growth dividends extended to
them.� We�ve helped them with their education
costs, for example, polytechnic and university bursaries have been extended, so
a large proportion of students are now eligible for bursaries.� We�ve topped up the post secondary education
accounts for all school-age children and that includes all of the middle-income
groups and that�s a big sum of money.�
I know that the middle-income put a lot of emphasis on education and
this is one way to build up, so when your kids go to poly or university, that
little kitty, that nest egg is there.�
But overall, I think our most important strategy to help the middle-income
group is to keep our taxes low and therefore minimise your burden.� If you look at our personal income taxes,
actually they are already lower than most other countries and for middle-income
Singaporeans, in fact, our income tax is lower even
than Hong Kong by quite a lot.� On top of
that, this year we gave a generous 20 per cent personal income tax rebate in
the budget costing us nearly $400 million aimed at this middle-income
Singaporeans.� I think if you look at it
in perspective, we have done a great deal to try and help the middle-income
Singaporeans.�
I know there�s one item which middle-income Singaporeans worry a lot about and
that�s cars.� Car related taxes are
something which the government studies very carefully.� I would acknowledge that at one time the car-related
taxes were a significant burden on car owners, and many of them are middle-income.� Because our car ownership taxes had become so
high, we needed to control the number of cars, we pushed up the ARF, excise
duty, so many items and the amount per car was very high and was
disproportionate.� Hence, we discussed
this when we had the Economic Review Committee a few years ago which I chaired
and we decided to make a major policy shift to shift from ownership to usage so
that we could bring down the ownership taxes, ARF, excise duty and so on.� We could issue more COEs
so that they�ll be more affordable, then we could enable more people to afford
cars.� But to do all these good things,
we would have to push up ERP so that we can control traffic jams on the roads.�
In fact, we have moved decisively on that.� I put together some figures to show you. �It�s easiest if I show you on a graph. �But if you compare 2000 before we moved and
2008, where we are today, you will know how far we have come. In 2000, the
government collected S$6 billion in vehicle-related revenues. S$6 billion, it�s
a huge amount of money, it�s like two or three times the amount of GST we
collected in that year. �Because we have
changed policy by 2008, the amount has come down. �Halved � S$3 billion. So we have effectively
saved Singaporeans about S$3 billion of tax and this includes everything. But
to do this, we have had to push up the ERP. By how much?
In 2000, that�s all the ERP there was � S$80 million. �This tiny sliver at the top
of the whole stick. This year, after a lot of ERP adjustments, we have
doubled it. �It�s
S$160 million but still very small compared to the total amount of car-related taxes
which are collected. Despite this, we have still made this big reduction in the
taxes which we have collected, which is savings to Singaporeans. �And because of these savings, therefore, more
households have been able to own cars. �In 2000, there were about 320,000 households
owning cars. �Since then, in the last
eight years, the number has gone up. �Now
430,000 households have owned cars, which is about
one-third more, 100,000 households. I think this is something which is worth
trying to do because many Singaporean households want to own cars and we have
been able to enable more of them to do so. �How have we been able to do that? �By bringing down vehicle taxes and how have we
been able to do that? This little red sliver here by pushing up the ERP. �This is in terms of overall growth numbers,
billions. �But if you are buying an
individual car, one household, one car, you can see the difference. �So I have chosen as an example of 1.6 litre
car, typical Toyota Corolla, it was there in 2000, it is there this year. �In 2000, how much do you think it cost to buy
a Toyota Corolla all in? S$110,000. �This year, for the same car, in fact the
salesman will tell you it�s a better car, the price
has gone down to $64,000.� This is mainly
because the government taxes have come down because the OMV has remained about
the same. �It was about S$19,000 before,
now it�s $16,000. �So basically the Government taxes have made
the cars a lot more affordable. �So the
result of this is that there are more cars around us, you can see it HDB car
parks getting more crowded, you can see it on the roads. �Therefore, because of this, this year we have had
to increase ERP charges. �
I know many people are upset by these ERP charges. But we have to see
the bigger picture because in fact, the ERP charges are enabling us to benefit
Singaporeans so as to reduce the burden on you and to enable more Singaporeans
to own cars. �So when we had to make the
adjustment this year, we considered it very carefully, how should we do this
without increasing the burden on Singaporeans and we worked out an ERP package,
not just raising the ERP or putting more gantries, but reducing road tax at the
same time so as to offset it and overall, to bring down the costs. Let me show
you how this works. �Before the package, let�s
take the 1.6 liter car again, probably a Toyota but
could be another one. �Before the
package, the ERP was $122. �After the
package, it�s gone up nearly $200. �So it
looks very frightening but in fact, if you consider the road tax which you have
to pay and which we have adjusted � you used to pay $874 of the road tax, and
now it�s come down to $744. �So the net
effect is that you have a saving. �In
fact, you�re saving money rather than out of pocket because of the ERP changes.
�How much? Let�s do the sums. ERP
increase $76; road tax reduction $130; net savings $54. �So overall, there is a net saving from this
package. �So we have not increased the
burden on Singaporeans. We have actually reduced the burden on Singaporeans by
some. �The trouble is people may not
realise or remember how much road tax they are paying or even worse how much
road tax they paid last year. Sometimes they may not be the ones paying it. �I asked one driver how much road tax she paid
because she was complaining about the gantries she went through and the beeps
which she heard. ��So she thought for a
while and then she said to me, �I am not sure, I have to ask my husband�. �Because she didn�t pay the bill, her husband
paid the bill and I am not sure even when the husband paid the bill, he noticed
that it was smaller this year. Furthermore when the husband pays the bill,
there is no beep-beep but when the wife drives the car, each gantry, one beep. �So that is the problem and I think that�s part
of the reason why people are not happy. So we have to draw the connections and
get people to understand that actually the middle-income Singaporeans have
benefited from government policies. �
But we haven�t only thought about road tax and car drivers because the
point of all this is to have a system which will work for all Singaporeans and
that means improving our public transport. �So together with pushing up the ERP, we are
building more rail lines, we have more trains running, about 800 more trips
every week. �So the waiting times have
come down, the overcrowding during peak hours has come down. Bus services are
getting improved. �We are making the
transfers more convenient and cheaper because the transfer rebate will go up.
So we are doing many things. �We can�t in
the end have every household in Singapore own a car like in America, that�s not
possible. �But what we can do is to have
the roads free flowing and a first class public transport system for everybody.
�
Besides cars and public transport, we also have to pay attention to the
wider needs of the public and you can get a good sense of what the public is
worried about by looking at the mix of the Meet-the-People session cases which
the MPs hold. �I do my own MPS from time
to time, the MPs do regularly and I can tell you what we find. �Not many job-seekers unlike during the last
recession because there are a lot of jobs to go around. �There are some hardship cases but we have a
lot of schemes to help them � you have got vouchers, you have got ComCare, you have got CCC schemes, CDC programmes and so
on. I talked about some just now. �But
there is one worrying trend in the MPS cases and that is, there are more and
more people looking for HDB rental flats. �And in one year, the number of applications
has gone up, tripled and now they form the bulk of our MPS cases � the biggest
group is people looking for rental flats. �Many, many reasons. �HDB is building more rental flats but if you
look into the applications, not all of those who apply for rental flats are
truly needy. �And HDB gave me some
examples. �I show you one where a woman
aged 60 was applying for rental flat and she had three children. Two of them
live in private property and the children wrote down don�t worry,
we will jointly hire a maid to look after our mother. �Please, can she have a rental flat. �I think
families must have their problems otherwise they would not go and look for MPs
or HDB for help but I think that for this group of people, rental flats are not
the right solution. �Instead, they should
look for other viable alternatives. �They
can rent out a room, they can even rent out the whole
flat, move in with their children. We are going to have the lease-buy back
scheme for the two-room and three-room flats which is going to be implemented
next year. �Or they could sell their flat
and move into a smaller flat or move into a studio apartment, also with a short
lease and therefore, free up some money. �So there are various ways they can solve their
problems but I think we have to manage this rental flat problem. MND and HDB will
be reviewing the scheme for rental flats so that we can keep an effective
safety net for the people who need this, the minority of genuinely needy
families who have not only no income but also no assets and also no family
support. �
So I have talked about the poor, I�ve talked about the middle-income, I�ve talked about those who need housing rentals. �I think for the vast majority of Singaporeans,
we have provided comprehensive measures in the budget. �Most people do not realise how much they are
getting and as I said in the Chinese speech just now, if you take a three-room
flat, a low-income household, say an elderly couple with one child working. �They are getting from the government $5,000 this
year, all in which is much more than any increase in their cost of living and
if you take a middle-income household, five-room, let�s say middle age working
parents two children which is a typical profile, they get not a small sum
either about $3,400 and that�s not counting any personal income tax rebates
which they may be getting. �So I think we
have done a fair amount to help Singaporeans but inflation has turned out
higher than expected, especially electricity and fuel prices and the economy is
a bit more uncertain than the outlook at the beginning of the year. �So I think after looking at the budget
position, we can do a little bit more. �
There is a second instalment of the Growth Dividends coming on 1st
October. �We will increase this by 50 per
cent. �And because energy electricity is
such a heavy bill now, and some people�s bills have gone up by 100 per cent
even more. �So this year�s U-save
rebates, we will also push it up by 50 per cent. �Which means for a three-room household like
the one I mentioned earlier, they get about $500 more all in and a five-room
household will get about $200 more. Overall this is going to cost us $250
million to the Government, a quarter billion dollars. �If you add it to all the other things we are
doing, I think it will help Singaporeans see us through this period. �But I would say please don�t think that hong baos are
going to solve this problem. �We can�t give
hong baos all the
time and giving ourselves hong baos does not help address the problem of the oil
producers becoming richer and Singaporeans becoming poorer. �To address that problem, we have got to keep
our economy competitive, we have got to produce more, be more productive, therefore,
earn more for ourselves. Then we can raise our
standard of living despite increases in oil and food prices. �
The well-being of Singaporeans depends not just on bread and butter
issues but also on our human and social environment which means on how we
behave, how we relate to one another as Singaporeans. �How can we make Singapore a more gracious
society? �We have done many things over
the years to improve ourselves. We have got all sorts of campaigns and
initiatives. �Queue up, be courteous, no
spitting, please flush toilets.� Most
recently service excellence, go the extra mile for Singapore. �Sometimes people laugh at us but actually
these are things which we can work on and improve and if we make people aware
of their behaviour and conscious of the impact on others, we can educate them
and gradually they can learn new habits and they will respond and our social
norms will upgrade and we have made progress. �For us living in Singapore, seeing one another
day by day, you don�t notice. �For people
who come here once in a while and see us at long intervals, it is like a one of
these speeded-up movies. �They can see
the difference.
There was a letter in the Straits Times forum page recently which was
very interesting and I was very moved reading it. �It was from a Sri Lankan lady who had visited
Singapore 40 years ago when she came here on her way to America to be a
postgraduate student and she came back again recently. �Now much older and she needed a wheelchair at
the airport and she spent a few days in Singapore and she was sufficiently moved
to write this letter which the Straits Times published. Let me read a little
bit of it. ��From the moment I landed until I left, the
city impressed me. �Everywhere I met only
kindness. I was in a shopping centre and asked a young girl the way to the MRT
station. She offered to show me the way and taking my shopping bags, led me to
the station. Shopkeepers gave me water to drink. People waiting for a bus
walked with me to the correct bus stop and people helped me cross the street. I
have never experienced this sort of kindness anywhere else in the world.
� �
I think she must have been a very nice lady but the people who behaved
so well to her flew the flag for Singapore. �We don�t know who they are but we should thank
them. �We can do even better, of course. �We have a Singapore Kindness Movement and it
conducts surveys of social behaviours that Singaporeans consider important and
not important and they showed me a list of the different things. Quite
interesting � not important, or considered not important doesn�t mean really
not important but considered important at least shows me where some of the problems
are. �So some of the things we are good
at are sitting properly at the cinema. �Don�t
put your feet on the chair in front of you. �Very difficult for tall
people like me. �Say thank you
after being served � that people remember, But other things we are not so good.
�Say please is not so common. �Clear tables and return food trays � we need
to improve. �We are trying to inculcate
this habit. �I don�t understand. �Every national service man knows exactly what
to do in his cookhouse. �Maybe we need
more reservists training. �But at Suntec City, no reservists, no NSmen,
it�s going to take time to change the mindset because the mindset is I go to
the food courts to eat and not to clean tables. So I got a letter recently from
somebody, a lady, an email, talking exactly about this, about how we should
make Singapore a more happy place to live. And she
mentioned this.� She said �Actually we
should feel quite embarrassed to leave our dirty plates and dirty tables for
the next diner. �In my Mum�s house, after
eating we will clear our plates and clean the table. �This is a good habit we should adopt outside
the home�. �Then she went on to add, �Oh yes, most importantly, no fines, no
fines. Dishing out fines hurts relationships and no good image for PAP
Government.� So I thank her for her good wishes. We shall try and find
some ways before thinking about fines.
One of the ways we�ve thought about, which MediaCorp
thought about was to hold a contest on Morning Express, Class 95FM. �And we have the deejays, famous people, Glenn Ong and the Flying Dutchman, who are here tonight. They
invited listeners to send in their videos of the best and the worst Singaporean
habits.� Tremendous
response. So I asked Mediacorp to compile some
highlights.� Good and ugly, to share with
you.
(Video clip)�
So there you are.� I think the
filmmaking is outstanding, the conduct can be improved.� I think the best way to focus our efforts is
when there�s a major event and we are put to the test.� And we have done well before.� The International Olympic Council meeting in
2005, the IMF/ World Bank meetings in 2006 and we put on a really good show,
not just to impress people, but because that is the way we want to be.� And now we have to prepare for other major
events.� F1 next month,
APEC next year, Youth Olympic Games in 2010.� Let�s use these opportunities to improve our
social graces.� This is how other
countries have done it.� The Olympic Games, Sydney 2000. It set a very high
benchmark.� The show was very good, but
what really impressed visitors was the genuine warmth and sincerity of the
Australians.� There were 47,000
volunteers.� They cheered, they drove
buses, they manned checkpoints, they greeted visitors, they were friendly,
effective, polite. They said �Good day mate� and after
a while you know what that means and you feel welcomed, created a whole
atmosphere of friendliness and hospitality.�
China is now hosting the Olympic Games.�
They�ve made a huge effort to welcome the athletes and the
visitors.� And you watched the opening ceremony,
that�s spectacular, but you may not have noticed that they had launched large
scale civility campaigns to educate people and they designated special days of
the month for special movements.� So the
11th of the month is queuing up day - 排队日, because 11, one one.� The 22nd of every month is �Give
your seat to others day� (让位日) because 22 look like two chairs side by side.� For the Games, they mobilised 100,000
volunteers, mostly young men and women, university students, and others. Tremendous pride in their country.� Every willingness to
go the extra mile, to impress the visitors.�
That here is a people who are proud of their
country and who want to make visitors feel welcomed.�
So we too should mobilise ourselves for the YOG.� It�s the first time ever the Games are being
held.� So let�s make a special effort to
make sure that it is an outstanding YOG.�
We mobilised very successfully to support the bid when Teo Ser Luck went around. He�s not here, he�s in Beijing
tonight.� And Singaporeans from all walks
of life spontaneously organised themselves to participate, schools, youth
groups, companies, taxi drivers and I think this grassroots participation
impressed the IOC and so we won the bid.�
So let us rally together again.�
Show what Singapore is about and welcome the world with our spirit and
our warmth.� But we mustn�t just stop at
the YOG.� We�ve got to work consistently
at this, patiently over many years, strive for higher standards and a permanent
improvement in our behaviour, not for other people, but for ourselves. So that we can be proud of ourselves and make Singapore a better
place for all of us.�
I�ve just got an update on the game.�
Singapore 0, China 2.� Game is
still progressing.�
We are creating a better Singapore for future generations to enjoy. �So my next topic is babies.� This is a very long story.� So I�ve prepared a special slide which
captures the story.� Let me show you.� This is a slide which shows our total
fertility rate (TFR), which means the average number of children born per woman
over her lifetime. �This shows the TFR
from 1960 all the way to right now, 2007 last year, coming down like this and
this single slide tells us about our history, about our economy, about our
culture and about our policies.�
Let me show you.� The history is
this graph.� From six children per woman
in 1960 coming down to the mid-70s to 2.1, which is the
replacement level, because you need about two children per woman to replace
herself and her husband. And then continuing to go
down till it�s about 1.3 today.�
It�s the same story which we see in Korea, in Taiwan, in China, all over
Asia.� As the economy developed, as we
educated our people, as women got jobs and they were liberated, they stopped
just having one baby after another at home and the numbers came down.� That is our history.�
But if you zoom in to the last 30 years, you will see more interesting
details, starting with the way our economy is, because actually people have
control over when they want their kids.�
So when the economy goes down and times are uncertain and people worry
about where they�re going to get their next meal, they put off having
children.� So we look at the graph coming
down, but the times when it comes down sharply, like here in the mid-1980s,
it�s usually because the economy is not doing well.� There was a recession in 1985 where there was
quite a problem.� In the late 90s, it�s
gone down again and that was the Asian crisis. Then if you look down here,
comes down again, 9/11 and SARS.� So each
time there�s a crisis, people put off having babies.� Crisis passes, numbers bounce back up, but
never quite go back to where it used to be.�
But you can see something else very interesting in this graph.� Look at the peaks rather than the low
points.� Take this one. 1976. Why is
that?� You take this one, another peak, 1988.� When you look at the next one, 2000.� Dragon years.� But each dragon smaller
than the next dragon.� So 2012, I
worry for the little dragon.�
You can also see our policies in this chart.� Family policies.� In the 1960s, the policy was two is
enough.� Fabulously
successful. In fact, over successful.� We had a poster, you remember this girl or
boy, two is enough.�
Two little girls. �We achieved the target, we over-fulfilled our
plan.� Went down, late 80s we had to
change our message.� Three if you can
afford it.� So this was after the dip
here.� We got alarmed, we changed, three
kids.� And it worked.� There was some effect, quite successful, went
up, the dragon helped, but it stayed up for quite long and then unfortunately
it came down again and then we decided we needed some more policies so we had
baby bonus in 2001 and child development co-saving scheme.� That�s the proper name, but actually we call
it baby bonus.� And that unfortunately
didn�t work because we were hit by 9/11 and SARS and come here, 2004, this was
my little contribution, my first Rally.� Marriage and Procreation Package.� You see, we�ve given up having a lot of
pictures, just one little infant.� And if
you study the graph very carefully, you can see that in fact there were some
improvements, just a little bit, but you really can�t see it very well, we need
a magnifying glass.� So we zoom in with a
magnifying glass.� 2004,
1.26, 2007, 1.29.� So,
improvement, but the target is 2.1.� So
1.5 is here, 2.1 is here.� We�re going to have a problem.�
So the question is, what more should we do?� I think, first, we should encourage people to
get married.� And second, we should
encourage couples to have children.� The
first step is to get the right partner and get married.� I�m not an expert in this.� So I consulted the experts, those with
experience and I talked to some of the matchmakers.�
We have SDU, we have SDS, we have quite a
number of private dating agencies now which have come along.� So I talked to several of them and we had a
very lively lunch exchange.� I learnt a
lot from them and it�s fabulous material for a TV
studio discussion, which one day they will do.�
They told me so many interesting stories which put it graphically in
real people�s lives, the practical problems and how it works and what the
difficulties are.�
So let me just summarise the main learning points. First of all, and
encouragingly, many singles want to get married.� They�re not happy to be single, they want to
get married, they�re serious, they�re not just out to have a good time, but
they face difficulties.� What are these
difficulties?� Some have never
dated.� They didn�t date in school. �They started work, once they settled into a
routine, they�re older, no chance, no social circle at all, no opportunities to
meet new people.� So one matchmaker told
me one conversation he had.� He talked to
this lady.� What do you do after
work?� First of all, what do you do?� She says I work.� After work what do you do?� I go to the gym.� Weekends?� I stay at home with my parents.� You go out?�
Yes, I bring out my nephews and nieces.�
So he says oh dear, everybody will think that these are her children and
will not chat her up.� So have you met
any new friends last week?� Dead silence.� How about last month?� Again, dead silence.�
So they have a problem.� How do
you break out of this?� Some people date,
but they start too late and the dating agencies tell me that the women in their
30s have a big problem.� They join up,
they sign up and there are men in their 30s too who sign up. But the men in
their 30s want to look for women in their 20s.�
Why?� They make a very practical
calculation. You see, I�m 30 something, supposing I marry a woman who�s 30
something, takes me a year to get to know her, we get married, we want to enjoy
ourselves for a couple of years before we think about having babies, then we
think about having babies, you add it up, I�ll be 40 something, my wife will be
40 something. �How?� So therefore the 30-something-year-old looks
for the 20-something-year-old girl. And the 30-something year old girl has a
big problem and I feel for her because I had a dialogue with some women. The
women�s wing organised it for me and one such lady stood up.� She had great courage and she stood up and
she spoke and she explained her problem. That she started off putting her
career first. She worked, she built up her career.� After she got her career sorted out in her
30s, she started thinking about looking for a partner.� She joined, signed up dating agencies, tried, no joy.� And
she was sharing her experience with us and with the room.� She still hopes to find someone, but it will
be quite hard.�
So that�s a real problem.� The
good news is that more people are prepared to seek help from the dating
agencies and the women are more willing to look for help than the men.� The men are macho, sensitive about their ego,
they don�t want to be seen going for help.�
The women are more prepared to go.�
So most dating agencies have more women than men, 60-40.� That�s an encouragement to the men to sign up.
But unfortunately, sometimes their social graces are not up to scratch.� So the dating agency told me another story. They
arranged for a guy to meet a date and the setting was a romantic dinner in a
nice restaurant. The guy turned up in slippers.�
So he counselled the guy.� The guy
says, that is me, I work in slippers, I walk in slippers, I come in
slippers.� So they talked to him, finally
persuaded him to buy a pair of shoes, keep the shoes in his car.� So before getting down at the date, he puts
on his shoes, he meets, he goes for the date.�
And it worked.�
So it went a little further.� Next
thing he knew, the man gave him a call.�
He says, what�s happening.� He
says �I�m outside my girlfriend�s house�.�
So he said, �Are you stalking her?�
Why are you there?�� He says �No,
no, no, she has invited me to meet her parents�.� That�s good.�
So he asked him, �Did you bring a present?� He said, no.�
So he was directed, ran around, bought a present, came back, knocked on
the door, went in, eventually it worked, got married and then the lady said to
him, �Quite interesting, very unlike you to have brought a present�.� So I thought to myself, �Wow, I was lucky,
when I was invited to meet my girlfriend�s parents, I didn�t bring a present
either�.� Fortunately we got
married.�
But you also need to have realistic expectations.� You have to make an effort for the
relationship to work.� You mustn�t be
carried away by what you see, romantic images on the movies. Boy meets girl. Boy
falls in love with girl instantly, madly, married, lives happily ever after,
maybe have twin babies.� But we are real
people, ordinary people in real life.� You
may not have instant sparks the first time, but you take your time, discover
the person for who he or she is.� Nurture
the relationship and then maybe love may blossom.� That�s how many Indian couples do it.� They�re match made, they don�t know each
other very well before they marry, but they develop the relationship and it
works.� So when I told this story to the
women�s group, there were two Indian women sitting in the front row, nodding
vigorously. I talked to them afterwards, they turned
out to be immigrants. Both had lived here quite some time.� Both had been match made to their husbands,
both happily married.� And they said yes,
this is the way, this is one good way to do it.�
I think that we have to take a practical approach to this.� We�ll do more to help singles get married to
the extent that we can.� We have the SDU, we have the SDS � Social Development Unit, Social
Development Service in the PA.� They�re
working on this, they�re doing a very good job.� Now they�re catering to different markets,
graduates, non-graduates.� SDU graduates,
SDS non-graduates.� I think we shouldn�t
be so rigid.� We should merge the two.
Have one, more critical mass, more activities and hopefully more pairing ups, more
weddings and more children. �
A lot of people want the SDU, SDS because they are government. �So they know this is real. They know this is
serious. They know this is not some escort agency. It is respectable. But there
are also young people who don�t want the government to know that they are
dating and would like to use private agencies but want quality assurance
because just in case, the private agency is not respectable, they don�t want to
be trapped. So we are going to try to give them the best of both worlds. �SDU will go into a new business to certify
private agencies that meet quality standards. �We have Case Trust. �We will have SDU Trust. Put a logo down there
(referring to slide).
Young people themselves should take the first step. Don�t leave it to
too late. Make time, go out, meet new friends, join a dating agency, doesn�t
matter whether it�s SDU or whether it's a private one. �You may find someone you are attracted to,
then you can marry the person you love and then you can love the person you
marry.
Once couples are married, we like them to have children. �We used to think this would follow naturally
but this is no longer always the case because couples are having fewer
children, having them later. Some prefer not to have any children at all. Why?
We look at other countries, we see it happening
all over East Asia. �I told you just now
earlier. �Confucian
societies with similar cultural values undergoing very rapid transformation,
social and economic change. �So
there are powerful social and cultural forces at work which are pushing us in
the wrong direction. �But it's not just
happening in the east, Asian societies. It is happening in western societies
too.� In Australia, the government is
working hard to encourage couples to have more kids. They have had the baby
bonus, they've had tax incentives. �They
are introducing them now. �They have
quite a good slogan, �One for dad, one for mom, one
for Australia�. �Europe has this problem.
�Many countries facing a dearth of babies
but there is something interesting in their experience. �If you look at southern
Europe, Portugal, Italy, Greece, Spain, the countries with more macho culture.
�The women are less liberated. They are
more likely to stay at home, less chance to work, fewer babies. �But in northern Europe, Netherlands,
Scandinavia, where the gender roles are more equal, the women are more likely
to work and yet there are more babies. This is very interesting. �Gender roles and working are something which
modern women put a lot of emphasis on.
So what's happening in Singapore? I discussed this when I met the women,
married, single, young and not so young. They agreed that gender roles and
helping mothers to work are important and they gave me many ideas on what we
could do to facilitate this. �So let me
share some with you. �
First of all, we have to share responsibilities for child-raising.
Traditionally the husbands go to work, wear the pants, the wives stay at home,
have the babies, take care of the babies. And it's
true that the women have a better touch with children. �But the situation today is different and the
men can make the effort. �If husbands
leave everything to the wives, or the women are forced to choose between
working or having babies, they are going to go on baby
strike. So the husband has to share duties at home. �I was discussing this with some MPs, including
a lady MP and I said, you know, nowadays, I see men carrying babies in the
markets when they go out. �So she says
you think carrying babies is enough? You have got to wake up at night, feed the
baby, change the nappies. �I used to change nappies. �In the days before pampers, you�ve actually got
to fold the cloth, you got to put it on, you got to put the safety pin and I
haven�t pricked any baby yet. �If I can
do it, it means everybody can do it and I think that you have to change these
attitudes. �
We can't change these mindsets by making speeches but I think we can
shift the ethos and spread it, maybe in schools, when it comes to domestic
science, we must teach the boys also some of these skills. Try to influence
them to have the right expectations. And share the responsibility. �But in terms of things we can do and in terms
of incentives, I think there are couple of small things. �
We introduced childcare leave a few years ago which can be claimed by
either parent. �It's now only two days a
year, I think we can push this to six days a year. �I see that women are cheering. The men ought
to cheer too. �We will introduce one new
thing. �One week unpaid infant care leave per year, either parent until the child turns two
years old. �So first two years, if some
things you need your infant to go for inoculation or some emergency, well, you
can take some time off. �
This is the first thing I learnt from the ladies. �The second thing is that we must have a good
work-life balance. �You must have
flexible work arrangements so that it's easier for women to have both, to work
and to have children. �And you must have
family-friendly employers who will make this happen. �So they make the practical arrangements and
their attitudes when you go � they don�t make a sour face and they don�t make
you feel like there is a little black mark recorded in your annual confidential
report. �It makes a big difference and
with a bit of effort and imagination, you can do a lot. �You can provide nursing rooms so that mothers
who are lactating can express their milk and store their bottles. �You can allow telecommuting and be flexible
about it so long as the work is done. �In
fact, one company I know of actually allowed one employee to go all the way to
Australia with her husband and telecommute from Australia and continue to be
paid and do the work and then she came back and she resumed her job. �You can find ways around having them
physically present. So one catering company which has a lot of outdoor catering
over weekends, outside catering, supplied their staff with walkie-talkies and
with Blackberries so that they don�t have to be physically there, they can be
with their family, they can go out but they can keep an eye on the catering
arrangements, make sure things don�t go wrong. �I think such employers we should recognise and
thank publicly and MOM and MCYS will make a special effort to do that. �
The government will help to share some of this burden of the employers. �For example, maternity
leave. �It used to be eight weeks,
we extended it by four weeks, now it's 12 and the extra four weeks, the government
pays. I think it�s been very much welcomed by people so now about three
quarters of women actually take 12 weeks maternity leave. But if you ever
manage a baby, you'll know that actually 12 weeks is not very long. So I think
what we should do is to increase it to 16 weeks. �And this last four weeks, I think we give some
flexibility. �Don�t make it necessarily
all at the beginning, it can be any time in the first year and the government
pays for this four weeks also. �
But I would say whatever the leave arrangements and whatever the
government carries, ultimately the woman or the man must make a personal
choice. �Do you work 110 per cent on your
career or do you set aside time for other activities for a balanced life? �I think each person has to decide his or her
own point of balance. �
I remember my own experience. �I
am a beneficiary of this. My mother was a lawyer but everyday, she came home to
have lunch with us. �So everyday we come
home from school, three of us, my mother is there. We
have lunch. Nowadays you would call it quality time. ��This was before people invented such big
words. All it meant was she had time for us. We had time to talk to her and it
was a tremendous help. She avoided going out at night for functions. She had to
go to accompany my father but business functions very seldom. �What it meant is less takings as a lawyer,
less work, less conveyancing but she decided that her
children were more important to her and she acted on that. And I think she was
happy with that and we are definitely very grateful for that. �Today, it's harder to do this. �The office hours are longer, the pace is more
intense, people call them �office hours�, you must put quotes there because it
starts in the morning but it doesn�t finish after dinner. And at home, you are
working. On holidays you are working too on email or Blackberry or whatever. �
Despite this, I think you have to maintain a balanced fulfilling life
and you have to keep a pace which is sustainable not just for one or two years
and you burn out, but for a lifetime and you are in balance, equilibrium and at
the end of your life or when you retire, you say I'm satisfied, I've had a good
career, I've taken care of my family, I've brought up children. This is what
life is about. �
Work-life balance also applies to the children. I know a lot of parents
complain about stress on their children and especially complain because they
say the education system causes the stress. We have trimmed the school syllabi
� teach less, learn more.� But parents
still want their children to do that extra little bit more. So enrichment
classes, tuition classes, all sorts of programmes and before exams, they feed
the children chicken essence. �So I see
advertisements for chicken essence with kids in school uniforms, prominently
displayed outside schools. �I think some
pressure is inevitable. �It's part of
Singapore's competitive spirit. Other East Asian societies are even more
ruthlessly competitive. �You look at the
Koreans with their crammed schools or the Japanese, they have jukus I think they call them, the Hong Kongers, I just read one article
about the Koreans. They go there, they inspect your
bags, no frivolous magazines, no handphones, no
lipstick. You go in, no making friends with boys and girls, it's like a prison.
�And everyday they have one hour of rest,
every week they have two hours on the weekend to get into the right university.
We are not like that. �We have
some stress but we should manage it, we should take it in our stride. �It's natural for parents to worry about
children and to encourage them to work hard and do better. �But we also need to understand them, to know
that every child has different aptitudes, different talents, to give them space
to grow up, to let them learn and mature in their own time. �Press them to do better but also know them and
let them develop the way their nature inclines them to develop. �In many directions, may not be academic, may be
sports, may be arts, may be music but let them go with their nature. �
Third thing which I learnt from the women is about the financial cost of
having kids. Actually I didn�t need to learn this from women, I knew about this.
It is a significant expense to bring up children. �First the direct child-raising expenses, the milk
powder, the pram, the paediatrician, all those things cost money. �But on top of the direct cost, you also have to
think about the opportunity costs for working mothers particularly and for
professional mothers especially. �What do
I mean by opportunity costs? When the mother is working, she's earning money.
When she is looking after the child and she has to work less or less
intensively, she has to forgo some income there to look after the child. �So her income has come down some so that's
called opportunity cost.� Less work,
sacrifice their careers. �And that is why
often it is the professional women, the most successful ones who say that it is
expensive to bring up children. �So
paradoxically, the lower-income women feel less opportunity cost but higher
income women feel it so and say so. �
Financial considerations cannot be the motive for having children. I
think if you suggest to a couple that I give you a bit of discount, how about
having more kids, I think many would be very indignant at this and rightly so.
But it's right for us to help women to lighten the burden of having children
and that's why we had the baby bonus, that's why we had a tax incentive and we
will enhance these schemes. �I don�t have
the details tonight, so you watch the next instalment but for the baby bonus we
will improve it for the first time parents. For the tax incentives, we will do
more in order to encourage mothers to work. �
The fourth thing which the women asked me to focus on is early childhood
arrangements. This is a major concern of parents especially if both parents are
working.� The critical period is from
birth to six years when they go to school. Because after they've gone to
school, they are in primary one. Well, they are mostly taken care of and also a
little bit bigger able to look after themselves. �But before they reach school, the first six
years, those are critical and you want to have that peace of mind that they are
being looked after well. �Most families
take care of children at home, either the grandparents keep an eye on them or
they have extended family or they have maids. ��But many working mothers depend on formal
childcare arrangements and one quarter of children of this age are in childcare
centres and the most popular centres have got queues. �You wait one year, sometimes more before you
get in. �
I visited one, NTUC childcare in Jurong which
is one of the popular ones. �Very
impressed with what they were doing. �Talked to some of the parents who came in the evening to pick their
kids up and to meet me. They were very happy to have their kids
there.� Good environment, they will socialise,
they learned skills, social skills, dancing, they were preparing for national
day, they were making models, learning to interact with other kids, get along
with other kids, and the parents had peace of mind while they were working. ��So I think that we should do more to build up
the childcare sector. �It is important. �I think we should do three things. �Make it more accessible, that means more
centres. Make it more affordable, that means bigger subsidies per child. Make
it higher quality, raise the standard, so that we can work with this. �That way, we will have a better quality
childcare centre and we will able to work. �
The kindergartens are another thing which we must do to improve. Not
everybody goes to childcare centre but nearly everybody goes to kindergarten.
And we have a very lively kindergarten sector in Singapore.� At the high end, I think they can look after
themselves, at the middling end, mass market, the PAP Community Foundation centres,
standards have improved but I think they can do better. �I think that we should put a lot more effort
into enhancing the kindergarten sector as well because it is important for our
kids to have a good kindergarten preparation when they go to school. �You don�t want the kindergartens to be a pre pre-school.
�So when you go to primary one, you are
already pressured before you reach primary one, you have pre-pressured. You
have competition to get into the kindergarten but you want a good kindergarten
environment. �And I think that we should
be able to do that. �We've got already
government spending money on the kindergartens because qualifying institutions
are getting subventions and help from MOE. �I think we should push this up substantially. �So that we can raise the standard, we can
raise not just better teachers which we are doing. We can have better syllabuses,
better run institutions, higher quality environment so the kids grow up much
more confident and particularly for those whose backgrounds aren�t so ideal at
home, they will be able to make it in kindergarten and start from a more equal
starting point when they go to school. �
This is a big move. We have deliberated this over a long time. �We didn�t decide because our cut-off point was
at primary one. �I think our cut-off
point mainly should still be at primary one but we should begin to do more
before kids reach primary one so that we can prepare them for life and for
school. Those are four big things which we need to do. �
There are two more small things which we will also do which don�t affect
a lot of people but I think we should do. It's right. �One, couples who want to have children but
can't conceive. They go for IVF but it's expensive. So we will offer financial
support to lower the costs of the IVF. Secondly, couples with many children.
There was a letter in the Straits Times, I think there were five mothers each
of whom had five kids, who said remember us and we have five children, your
incentives stop at four. �So I think we
should remember them and I think we should extend most of the incentives like
tax relief, childcare subsidies and so on to the fifth and the subsequent
child. There are not many of them. But I hope the incentives will encourage
those who can afford to have more.
These measures all add up to a very significant package. We are talking
about maybe $700 million a year.� If more
babies are born, it is going to be more than $700 million a year but even that
is about double what we are spending today on child incentives. And altogether
we�ll have about $1.6 billion spent a year or 0.6 per cent of GDP.� Wong Kan Seng is in
charge of population policies, so he will have a press conference later this
week and he will give you the full picture, including the numbers which I think
many parents will be anxiously waiting.�
But please don�t wait for the press conference to pay attention.�
This package will make a difference to many
couples but I can�t guarantee that it will solve our problems because this is a
deep problem.� We have to come back to
this, revisit it periodically.� Finally
it�s about mindsets, personal choices and values.� Please put emphasis on marriage, on family,
make these your priorities, have a full and happy life.�
I�ve got a message. We have lost 0-3.�
We were up against a very strong China team.� I think they have done us proud.� We should congratulate them and we should
rejoice and celebrate.�
Our children will grow up in a completely different world and we have to
prepare them and Singapore society for this world.� One of the biggest changes that will affect
us is the Internet.� The new media is
pervasive and fast moving.� Everyone is
plugged in and connected.� People are
blogging, engaging one another, organizing themselves online, doing politics
online.� We used to talk about
grassroots, now we have to think about Netroots,
people on the Internet and it�s happening worldwide.�
You look at America, the current election campaign.� John McCain says I don�t know how to use the
computer, I have no email but he has a website on the Internet. �He has to, John McCain.com,
This is John McCain�s website.�
Barack Obama. He uses a blackberry, constantly texting, communicating,
emailing and the Internet is a key part of his campaign.� He has got a powerful simple homepage, �Change
we can believe in� and he�s used it effectively to reach out to younger
Americans to get them highly energised and participating and rooting for him
and helping him to run the system.� He�s
got Chris Hughes, Chris Hughes is one of the founders of Facebook,
24 years old, I suppose must be worth a few hundred million dollars now, dropped
out of university. He joined Barack Obama to help, used
Facebook technology to organise his campaign, his
volunteers, his events, his donations, his activities, his appearances, his
emails, the whole lot.� Therefore Barack
Obama has a Facebook presence which you can see and
like all of his pages, there�s one very interesting button on it which is
bright red � Donate now.� And very
powerful because people are taken up by this and 1.5 million people have
clicked that button and each one donates small amounts but altogether adding to
about a hundred �million, maybe more by
now.� Cumulatively, a huge boost to his
campaign, so much so that he can say I don�t want government money, I�m going
on my grassroots money. But it�s still money.�
But Barack Obama also runs into trouble on the Internet because all
sorts of stories go on. Like he is a Muslim or he didn�t do this or he did that
and he can�t go around fighting untruths all over the Internet everywhere.� What he has done is to collect all these
untruths together to make one website which is called Fight the Smears.� John McCain attacks him for not visiting
wounded troops and then there�s a rebuttal. And if you go in, a whole list of
all the things which are untrue and all the explanations according to Barack
Obama�s campaign.� He is using the
internet but he is also running into some of the difficulties of using the
Internet.� This is America.
Let me take another country nearer here, Korea, in Asia.� It is the world�s most wired country, mostest broadband, mostest usage,
people do everything on the Internet and it�s had a huge impact on Korean
politics.� It�s empowered new groups because
they mobilise and they activate on the Internet. �So it helped President Lee Myung-
bak in his election campaign last December to win a
resounding victory because on the Internet people could mobilise and new groups
could form but on the Internet you also have rapidly changing moods in the
population.� So within a few months after
being elected, President Lee was under siege and there were mass
demonstrations.� They said million man
demonstrations, maybe a slight exaggeration but if you look at the picture, it
looks huge.� This is a candlelight
picture in Seoul.� What were they
agitated about, Mad Cow Disease. Facts? Actually
rumours, fantastic rumours.� The first
rumour, 94 per cent of Koreans have a special gene.� When they eat beef, they will get mad cow
disease.� That went around.� Everybody got excited.� Calmed down, next rumour � Cow products are
used to make pampers.� Babies wear
pampers, babies will get mad cow disease.�
Videos and pictures circulated online.�
This is a real event.� Here�s another
one.� There are some even ruder which I
thought I shouldn�t show you tonight but you can find them.� Then from the internet it comes back, people
get agitated, demonstrations go back on the Internet again.� President Lee Myung-bak
calls this info-demics. Anonymous false information,
create discontent and unhappiness, spread like an epidemic in the real
world.� But President Lee calls it info-demics.� One Korean
newspaper who doesn�t have to be so careful with its words, calls it mad cow
madness.� That�s Korea, that�s a negative
example.�
Malaysia is another interesting example where the Internet has become an
active space for information and engagement.�
There is lively debate, serious contributions but also more doubtful
stuff. There are blogs, chatrooms, there are
alternative news sites, like Malaysiakini which is
very popular and I know many Singaporeans visit it and it has quite a lot of
news.� The politicians themselves
actively participate in cyberspace.� Dr
Mahathir has a blog now.� He uses the name
Che Det.� He
started in politics and he went in to have a blog.� Other people start with blogs and then go
into politics.� You heard about Jeff Ooi? Famous blogger, stood for election, elected.� In the recent elections, there was a mass of material
circulating, Blogs, SMSes, Youtube and the public went to cyber space to get what they
couldn�t get from the mainstream media.�
The opposition was there, all over.�
I show you Anwar Ibrahim�s website, pictures of him, videos of him.� BN also has a website like that and so the
battle went on in cyberspace.� It wasn�t
just cyber space, of course.� There was
also real life politics in Malaysia because the opposition raised many hot
issues in their ceramahs,
in their meetings, rising cost of living, poor public service delivery and
perceived inequalities in the government�s policies, to put it delicately.� But these were issues which were picked up in
the new media and then virally distributed, one shares with two, two share with four and it multiplies and everybody gets the
message and the result was 8th March when the elections were
held.�
Even in China, which has the world�s largest number of Internet users,
more than America, the Internet has become an important factor. After the
Sichuan earthquake, Netizens mobilized to raise funds
and show support for the victims.� I show
you one slide "重建家园,中国力量" and it had an impact on the mood and the sense of patriotism and unity
which the Chinese developed after the Sichuan earthquake.� Their leaders are now engaging on the new
media and President Hu Jintao
had his first web chat recently, answered a few questions.�
These are other countries. �In
Singapore, the new media is also quite a big thing.� I talked about this
two years ago but in two years we�ve moved on since then.� Today more than 80 per cent of households
have broadband.� There are six million handphones in Singapore.�
You think about that, 4.5 million people, six million handphones, more handphones per couple than babies.� No wonder no time to have babies.� But the young people are totally immersed in
this medium.� They are reading the print
newspapers less, they are getting information,
discussing issues online.� The Straits
Times website, people are participating, CNA website, same. Zaobao
has OMY, ��also very interesting, new
approach to presenting the news and engaging the audience and people are
writing their own contents, sharing it with others, organizing interest groups.
All this has changed the way the government works.� Our services have gone online 24/7.� You want a passport renewal, you can do that,
you want to incorporate a new business, set up a new company, 20 minutes, it�s
done. You want to pay your taxes, IRAS, no trouble.� And the government is also communicating and
engaging with Singaporeans online.� We�re
not just pumping out stuff, we have some quite interesting stuff which we are
pumping out, we have some video clips, I think MDA is showing
the way.� Some of you may remember
Christopher Chia, who is a CEO,
turns out he�s a very good hip-hop dancer.�
But also two-way engagement and participation.
And REACH is at the forefront of that. They need to engage people.� So they�ve got a website which is popular and
they�ve got blogs, online chats and so on and they also participate on Facebook. And you get quite a lot of participation.� For my rally today, I got a lot of feedback
from REACH and the subjects which I am talking about
are the subjects which are hot on REACH.�
So we look at their homepage, what do you find?� Rising costs of living.� Hot topics.�
So that�s the way the government works, that�s the way Singaporeans work
and that�s the way we will have to adjust in order to conduct our
politics.� We have to adapt to this, get
used to this, turn it to positive effect, use it to inform, to educate, engage
people.� And each of us has to
learn.� It�s not something which you
learn to mouse click, you�re there.� You
must learn how to be savvy, cyber citizens.�
Don�t get taken in, be discerning about what you see on the internet.� When people say click here, check first
before you click. When people say this is true, don�t just send it to all your
friends.� Ask first, is this true?� Set prudent limits so that we can flag
problems and we know where the dangerous ground is.� Participate actively by all means, but don�t
get swept away and please don�t catch mad cow madness.�
Our rules governing politics also must keep up to date.� First of all party political films.� That means films about political
matters.� Right now they�re totally
banned and for a reason because politics is a serious affair.� We want voters to consider issues,
rationally, coolly, detached, think through decisions which affect your future
and make a considered judgment.� And our
worry is that firms are an emotive medium.�
The impact of seeing something on a film is quite different from reading
something in cold print.� It hits you
viscerally, it affects you, engages your emotions before your thinking
processes can kick in and if you�re watching it in a crowd, even more
powerful.� Then, passions can get stirred
up and people can get carried away.� I
think this is a valid concern, but I don�t think an outright ban is still
sensible because this is how people communicate on the web in daily life.� They make videos, they pass clips around, you
saw the clips just now from the Flying Dutchman, even my NDR, National Day
Rally Speech, it is now National Day Rally multimedia
super show.� Has to be because that�s the
way you have to communicate and after the speech, videos, blog responses and
people make these things.� Anybody can do
this any time, anywhere.�
Let me show you.� I have a handphone here, it�s an ordinary
Nokia handphone.�
It�s a handphone which has a little programme
loaded in it called QIK.� And what QIK
does is to turn this handphone into a video camera.� If I click it, it will turn on, become a
video camera and furthermore it will stream the picture immediately onto the Internet,
onto my website.� So if I turn on the
camera now, I�m filming you now, you look on my website, you can see yourself. �I think we must make sure we see the upstairs
people too. �Slight delay, but it
works.� So please wave, you�re on candid
camera.� There you are, simple as
that.� I�ve just made our first
non-political video.�
So we�ve got to allow political videos, but with some safeguards. �Some things are obviously alright, factual
footage, documentaries, recordings of live events, I think National Day Rally,
surely no problem.� But I think some
things should still be off limits.� If
you make a political commercial which is purely made-up material, partisan
stuff, footage distorted to create a slanted impression, I think those should
still be off limits.� In between, what is
okay and what is not okay, there will be grey areas, but I think we can deal
with this, just as we deal with it for non-political films, we have censorship,
we have classification standards, it depends on subjective judgments, but we�ve
worked out a workable system, a panel applies their minds, they make a
judgment.� I think we can work something
out, but the overriding consideration is to preserve the integrity and the
quality and the honesty of our political discourse.� Keep it straight, keep it serious, think carefully about serious matters which concern our
lives.�
The second thing we should change are the rules
for political material which can be put on to the internet during
elections.� The rules we now have were
settled before the last general elections.�
So for example, and they�re very restrictive,
no podcasts, no video casts and most people can�t post materials during the
election period.� Only the parties, only
the candidates, the agents can do that.�
By the next general election, five years will have passed.� Now, cyber years are like dog years.� One year in cyberspace equals to seven years
in real life.� That�s the pace at which
things change. �So five years times seven
means 35 years in the real world, means our old rules are way, way out of
date.� That means we have to change to
new rules, liberalise to allow people to participate more actively and
flexibly.� So we must allow podcast,
video cast, must allow others to post election materials also, but we have to
maintain or try to maintain accountability and responsibility, somehow.� It�s not easy to do this.� Do not think that other countries do not face
these problems, they do.� The Koreans are
very exercised about this.� Every time I meet them I exchange notes with
them. They ask us how we intend to deal with it and I ask them how they are
dealing with it. They don�t have an answer, but it�s a real problem. �
We have an advisory council on the impact of new media on society, AIMS.
Mr Cheong Yip Seng is chairing it and they�re
studying these issues in detail, they�ve been thinking about this I think for
quite many months now.� I look forward to
seeing their recommendations.� But let me
say that beyond cyberspace, politics is about people�s lives in the real
world.� You can�t vote for an avatar on
second life. You�re talking about real life, not second life.� You have to get a direct feel for the
person.� Do you trust him, is he capable,
is he honest, will he wilt?� So you�ve got to talk, you�ve got to argue,
you�ve got to persuade.� And then you�ve
got to mobilise and work together for what you together believe in and you
can�t just do this online, reading emails or even listening to podcast or watching
vodcast.� You
have to do it face-to-face and we do this all the time.� Grassroots sessions,
dialogues, meetings.� We are a
small society, so it�s possible for us to interact and get to know one another
well.� You cannot have make belief
because the prime minister is just an image on the screen,
everybody will know he is just an image on the screen.� He has to be here in real life and you have
to feel the person and then you will know.�
So that�s how politics has to be done.�
We have a few restraints because we cannot afford to take chance with
race and religion but by and large Singaporeans are free to engage, to talk, to
mobilise, to influence one another, to do nearly everything, especially indoors
where we lifted the limits a few years go.�
There is one remaining restriction and that is on outdoor
demonstrations.� We still do not allow
this and our concern is law and order and security.� It comes back to race and religion again
because one incident could undermine our racial harmony and confidence in
Singapore.� But again like political
videos, valid concern but we have to move away from this total ban and find
ways to allow people to let off steam a little bit more but safely. How?
We have Speakers� Corner at Hong Lim Park.� While they find the location accessible, near
the MRT, not so many speakers but if you want to go there, there is place. Just
put your name down and you can speak.� So
I think we should allow our outdoor public demonstrations, also at the Speakers�
Corner still subject to basic rules of law and order, still stay away from
race, language and religion.� I think we
will still call it Speakers� Corner, no need to call it demonstrators� corner
but we will manage with a light touch. So I think there is no need for the police
to get involved.� We will hand this over.
Mah Bow Tan has agreed. NParks
will take over.� NParks,
you know they have green fingers, everything will grow nicely, it will be well in hand. I think we should look into online
registration for Speakers� Corner. �So you
don�t have to go to their office. �
The overall thrust of these changes is to liberalise our society, to
widen the space for expression and participation. �We encourage more citizens to engage in
debate, to participate in building our shared future and we will progressively
open up our system even more. �If you
compare today with five years ago or ten years ago, it�s much more open today
and we will continue to feel our way forward. �We can�t just progress by copying others
blindly. �We have got to think through
our own problems, ourselves, find the right path for Singapore, crossing a
river by feeling for the stones step by step, as Deng Xiaoping said. �But please remember, even in the cyber age,
some things don�t change. �In 50 years�
time, Singapore will still be a little red dot. �To thrive as a nation, we will still need the
cohesion to stay united, the ability to outperform others and the will to
survive and excel and occasionally, win medals. �That means a hardworking and well-educated
population, a capable effective government, outstanding
people at all levels, totally committed to Singapore. Then however the world
changes, our children will still have a bright future. �Before I leave this subject on new media, I
want to do one more demonstration.
PM: �Hello Team Singapore�.
Mr Tan Eng Liang: �Good evening, PM.�
PM: ��Hello, Eng Liang.�
Mr Tan: �Yes, I am the Chef de Mission of the Singapore Olympic Team in
Beijing. �Sorry PM, we just lost the gold
medal to China. They are a better team with better skills and techniques but
our paddlers tried their best and they did play well.��
PM:� �Thank you, we heard the
results earlier. �I shared it with my
audience earlier. Our paddlers have done very well and they have done Singapore
proud. Please thank them from us. �Jiawei, Tianwei, Yuegu, but also the
whole Team Singapore in Beijing. You have done us proud,
you have carried our flag high.�
Mr Tan: �Yes, they will do that. Thank you Prime Minister for we will I
think carry on with flag of Singapore and I think with this silver medal, we
have achieved the objective. �Thank you
for your messages.�
PM:� �Thank you,
send our greetings and congratulations to the team.�
Mr Tan: �Yes, I will do that.�
PM: �Good night, Eng Liang.�
PM: That was my last special effects for tonight. �I have discussed some key issues that affect
our future. Immediate concerns like inflation, cost of living, long-term
issues, living graciously, raising families, opening up our society. �We have got to get these
right to keep our economy growing year after year.� Sometimes, people criticise us for putting
too much emphasis on economic performance because GDP growth, employment,
productivity and so on, they appear just as so many statistics, so many
numbers, decimal places but actually growth is critical. It gives us the
resources to solve our problems. �It
creates opportunities for our workers to secure better jobs, for our young to
receive a first-class education, for all of us to improve our lives and fulfil
our dreams. �So it�s not just abstract
numbers, it�s changing people�s lives for the better. �It�s about the Singapore story as lived in the
lives of all of us.
The older generation of Singaporeans have experienced this. �So take for example, Mr Arumugam
Jeyapal who works for PSA. He�s had PSLE plus two
years of vocational training, that�s all. �He started as a prime-mover driver earning
$250 a month, worked his way up over the years, now he�s 58 years old, mentor
to yard crane operators, earning $3,000 a month and active in the union. Over
the years, he has upgraded from a three-room flat to a five-room flat. �He has three children, and they are doing well
in different fields. One is a soccer coach, one is a lawyer in the AG Chambers,
a DPP, a daughter is studying in NIE to become a
teacher. �He�s now 58. �So he says �I have lived the Singapore Story,
I am grateful for what the government has provided.�
Middle-age Singaporeans have also seen this. �I give you another example, Madam Lim Hwee Bin, who is a wafer fab
specialist. �Here you see her all togged
up. �Her face is uncovered because
otherwise you can�t see but she is working in the Clean Room. �She quit her job a few years ago to help her
daughter who wasn�t doing well in school. �Then her daughter studies improved, she
returned to work full-time as a machine operator at Seagate, night shift, OT to
supplement the wage but her friends told her she could get a better job at the
wafer fab but she didn�t have a lobang. �So how to find the job at
the wafer fab? So she resigned, she responded
to an ad for E2i. �E2i is NTUC�s Employment and Employability Institute. �And she went there and the E2i helped here to
equip herself with new skills and she joined ST Microelectronics as a wafer fab specialist. Now, she�s earning $1,400 a month, nearly a
third more than before. �So at 45, it is
not so easy with children but she has made the career switch successfully to a
new job with brighter prospects. Her daughter is doing well, now in Singapore
Poly studying to become an optometrist. That means learning to measure eyes for
spectacles. �I think there is a brilliant
future in Singapore. �So
many of us are speckies. �
Young Singaporeans are writing their own Singapore Stories too. They
enjoy far more opportunities than their parents ever did. �I have this group - Crystalline Tan, Neng Abdul Rashid, David Aw �
three of them. SMU graduates, fresh out of school, gone to Dubai, recruited by
Fullerton Financial Holdings (a Temasek company). And
they are taking risks venturing seizing opportunities and launched off onto an
international career.
Or this young man, Mohamad Fadzuli. He is not here this
evening. �He�s a computer games
enthusiast. �He was addicted to computer
games as a boy. �So I think he must have caused
his mother a lot of stress but he went to Nanyang
Poly, he did a diploma in entertainment technology, he topped his class. �He applied to Carnegie Mellon University in
the US, which is the one of the best universities for computer games. �And they took him, they gave him advance standing,
they waived the undergraduate degree, he has gone in to do a Masters. And he
got an MDA-ST Electronics Scholarship. �So now he is on a three-month attachment at
Disney. �He is not on holiday there. �At least I don�t think so. �He�s at Disney because Disney has a
collaboration with Carnegie Mellon and he�s helping them to develop a new
computer game. �
Or take this young lady, Brenda Tan. �She is a marketing manager. �In school , she was
playful and lazy. ��O� level results not
so good but she went to ITE, then she went to Ngee
Ann Poly for a Diploma in Business. �She
got a job at Citibank as a tele-sales officer. �She did well and was promoted. �She was posted to Malaysia to set up a new
unit there and she became the manager of the unit, managing 80 people on her
staff.� She came back to Singapore and
now she�s progressing in her career. �And
she says, I should read this because you should hear this. �ITE has given many
opportunities to people like me who are less academically inclined. This is
something unique about our education system and about the openness and
acceptance of our society.�
They are not all here but several of them are here � Mr Arumugam, Brenda and Madam Lim. Some of them are overseas
so I think that we should thank them for living the Singapore Story. �This is what we mean when we talk about
growth, about investing in our people, about thinking long-term. �This is what drives us to do the best for
Singapore whatever the uncertainties and difficulties. �So let�s look beyond our immediate problems,
let�s work hard, grow our economy, transform the nation, then we will create
even more extraordinary opportunities for the new generation and together, our
children will write more chapters of our Singapore Story. �Goodnight!�
================