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- <text id=93TT2330>
- <title>
- Jan. 18, 1993: Is Singapore a Model for the West?
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1993
- Jan. 18, 1993 Fighting Back: Spouse Abuse
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- ASIA, Page 36
- Is Singapore a Model for the West?
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>Sure, but only if citizens are willing to give up some of their
- freedoms in exchange for low crime, no drug problem and spotless
- streets
- </p>
- <p>By JAY BRANEGAN/SINGAPORE
- </p>
- <p> Singapore is Asia's dream country. Almost anywhere else,
- Goh Pang Meng, the son of a poor immigrant street vendor from
- China, would still be struggling to survive in a thatched hut
- like the one in which he grew up with 11 brothers and sisters.
- But at 44, Goh owns a comfortable five-room apartment and
- lives, like 87% of his countrymen, in a government housing
- project. He has three children, the minimum politically correct
- number preferred for the well-educated by a eugenics-inspired
- government: he received a $12,500 tax credit for the third
- birth, and his wife, who helps out in his business, got an
- additional 15% annual tax cut, because she had advanced past
- high school. He runs a firm with 17 employees making computer
- screens, and rents factory space in one of the 28 government
- industrial parks scattered around the island republic.
- </p>
- <p> Last year Goh won a $15,600 government grant to upgrade
- his factory equipment. He winced when he paid $38,000 for a
- small Datsun, but says the steep price was worthwhile because
- it helped the government prevent traffic jams by limiting car
- ownership. "Overall," he says, "life in Singapore is pretty
- good." Sultan Ahamed, an ethnic Indian Muslim spice trader with
- strong family links to his strife-torn homeland, speaks for many
- Singaporeans when he declares, "What shall I say? This is a
- paradise."
- </p>
- <p> In today's global tumult, a country that enjoys full
- employment and stability--along with no crime, no pornography,
- no drugs, and no dirt to speak of--may strike many as at least
- a reasonable facsimile of paradise. Singapore, long an object
- of curiosity for its unique blend of open economics,
- authoritarian politics and social engineering, is attracting
- attention as a model modern society. Francis Fukuyama, the
- author of The End of History?, says the "soft authoritarianism"
- of countries like Singapore "is the one potential competitor to
- Western liberal democracy, and its strength and legitimacy is
- growing daily." Tiny anticommunist Singapore (pop. 3.1 million)
- has even found an ardent fan in mainland China (pop. 1.16
- billion), where officials are studying the city-state for ideas
- on how they can throw off Marxist economics but keep dictatorial
- political control.
- </p>
- <p> One of Asia's four rapidly developing "Little Dragons"--along with South Korea, Taiwan and Hong Kong--Singapore is the
- smallest and in some ways the most successful. The former
- British colony at the tip of the Malay Peninsula only achieved
- full independence in 1965, yet it boasts Asia's highest living
- standard after Japan, an average per capita income of $15,000
- (about the same as the U.S.) and by far the world's highest per
- capita cache of foreign reserves.
- </p>
- <p> In contrast to other booming Asian cities that teem with
- noise, dirt and crowds, Singapore is orderly, regimented,
- well-planned--and rather boring. With low pollution, lush
- tropical greenery, a mix of modern skyscrapers and colonial-era
- buildings, the city resembles a clean and efficient theme park;
- even the subway stations are as spotless and shiny as Disney
- World. There are no traffic jams, even during rush hours. The
- multiracial population--78% Chinese, 14% Malay, 7% Indian--uses English widely.
- </p>
- <p> But what makes Singapore work would hardly succeed in the
- individualist West. There are hefty penalties, vigorously
- enforced, on human foibles: littering ($625), failing to flush
- a public toilet ($94) or eating on the subway ($312). The sale
- of chewing gum was banned last year, and 514 people were
- convicted of illegally smoking in public. A drumbeat of official
- publicity regularly enjoins Singapore Man to be more
- industrious, more courteous, thinner, healthier. Last year the
- government attacked his habit of arriving fashionably late at
- Chinese banquets as "a growing problem with wide implications
- for national productivity."
- </p>
- <p> Sometimes dubbed Singapore, Inc., the nation had its credo
- set by visionary economic architect Goh Keng Swee: "Government
- policy must be directed to the pursuit of business excellence."
- The country is the world's busiest container port, the third
- largest oil-refining center, the major exporter of computer disk
- drives. Its manufacturing relies on multinational corporations,
- and it has attracted some 3,000 foreign companies with generous
- tax breaks, ultramodern telecommunications, an efficient
- airport and tame labor unions.
- </p>
- <p> The industrial policy debate here was settled long ago:
- the government coldly ushers fading industries like textiles
- offstage, and targets promising new ones like biotechnology with
- investment, grants and retraining of workers. Oddly in such a
- capitalist nirvana, the government owns scores of firms, from
- the telephone, electricity and airline companies to banks,
- supermarkets and taxis, but they all run on a competitive,
- profitmaking basis. Says a Western analyst: "Fortune 500
- executives love it here because the government runs the country
- the way AT&T would."
- </p>
- <p> Providing, that is, that AT&T could ignore the
- Constitution and the Bill of Rights. The country depicts itself
- as a British-style parliamentary democracy with regular
- elections, but in practice the ruling People's Action Party,
- which has held power since home rule in 1959, tolerates only
- token opposition, and the government owns the TV stations and
- indirectly controls the press.
- </p>
- <p> The government has vast legal powers to stifle dissent: an
- Internal Security Act that allows detention without trial, sharp
- restrictions on any statements that might stir racial or
- religious tension, and tough libel and slander laws. These have
- cowed most political opposition. "There is an undercurrent of
- fear," says a young man who left to live overseas. But
- Information Minister George Yeo does not apologize for "a
- political process that forces people to speak responsibly."
- </p>
- <p> Most citizens would agree with Goh, the small businessman:
- "We have plenty of freedom here, except political freedom." And
- for most, that is just fine. Singapore is a nation of
- immigrants from countries historically ravaged by chaos and
- poverty. The average Singaporean is conservative and
- family-oriented, and cares most about two things: money and
- security. He approves of hanging drug dealers and locking up
- gangsters without trial. He has struck a simple social contract,
- accepting limits on personal freedom in return for prosperity
- and stability. What holds the deal together is the country's
- lack of corruption. When officials say some policy, no matter
- how abrupt or painful, is for the public good, people usually
- believe them.
- </p>
- <p> This strict ethos of honesty comes straight from the
- country's remarkable founding leader, Lee Kuan Yew, now 69, who
- "believed anything venal had to be destroyed," says Bilveer
- Singh, a leading political scientist. "Lee basically weeded out
- corruption by giving it no excuse or legitimacy."
- </p>
- <p> Vigilant, ruthless, shrewd, brilliant, pragmatic, Lee
- imposed his personal vision until he stepped down as Prime
- Minister in 1990 to become Senior Minister. He still approves
- important decisions. He believes that Western-style liberal
- democracy, with its emphasis on individual rights, won't work
- for most developing countries. "When you are hungry, when you
- lack basic services," he told an audience in the Philippines,
- "freedom, human rights and democracy do not add up to much."
- Instead, poor countries should promote savings, discipline, hard
- work and education, open the economy to foreign competition,
- spur investment.
- </p>
- <p> Can Singapore be cloned? Not without a Lee Kuan Yew, say
- many citizens. Moreover, their city-state possesses special
- advantages: small size that makes control easy and
- infrastructure cheap, no job-seeking rural poor to overwhelm the
- city with slums, an ambitious immigrant population, a Confucian
- ethic stressing education and respect for authority, location
- on a major trade route in the heart of a dynamic region. The
- country's perpetual siege mentality--it feels threatened by
- bigger neighbors and fears its own ethnic mix is volatile--also encourages economic and political sacrifice.
- </p>
- <p> Fukuyama asks "whether, in the long run, human beings are
- really made happy by the sacrifice of their individuality."
- Young and better-educated Singaporeans chafe at the petty
- restrictions and ruling-party patronizing. "Lee Kuan Yew thinks
- we are basically stupid," says law professor Walter Woon, a rare
- establishment critic.
- </p>
- <p> Snug--and smug--in their manicured garden,
- Singaporeans are unprepared for the jungle of the outside world.
- "They generally don't transplant well," says a Hong Kong-based
- executive of an international firm. "When faced with
- difficulties, they wilt."
- </p>
- <p> Singapore can adjust to meet new challenges, insists Yeo,
- without adopting the West's "hard liberalism." But neither can
- Singapore be a model for many other countries. Setting aside
- democracy to concentrate on economic development can work for
- a while. But the resulting affluence breeds more demands for
- democracy, even in Confucian societies, and autocracy can rarely
- remain enlightened and uncorrupt for long. Just as Singapore's
- leaders have made the most of its small size and unusual
- cultural mix, so too leaders of other countries will have to
- find their own formulas for success.
- </p>
-
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
-