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Source:
www.gov.sg |
SPEECH BY MR LEE KUAN YEW,
MINISTER MENTOR, AT TREE PLANTING DAY CUM TOUR OF THE PINNACLE@DUXTON,
10 NOVEMBER 2008, 11:21 AM AT DUXTON |
An Excerpt |
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Nobody knows how long this recession will
last, or when the America, UK, EU and Japan economies will stabilise and
recover. Meantime, all feel poorer with the loss in asset values of
their shares, properties and other assets. So their consumers have
stopped buying expensive goods, like cars, or machinery. Japanese
carmakers, including Toyota, expect to sell fewer cars and have to
retrench workers. |
The Chinese economy, although not so
advanced as the Japanese economy, is nevertheless affected because a
significant part of their GDP, 10% consists of manufacturing for exports
to America, Europe, Japan and the rest of the world. At the Canton trade
fair held recently, exhibitors had reduced demand for high-end products
like machine tools and increased demand for low-end consumers’ products
like clothes, shoes, items that Walmart buys. |
China has to boost its economy by
spending on infrastructure, railway networks, roads,
telecommunications, especially in the west. They have the
financial resources and the building capacity to revive the
residential housing construction that is still in high demand
because many Chinese have savings in the banks and money at
home, saved to buy homes. There will no longer be the
speculatively high prices properties commanded before the crash. |
This downturn is just beginning. No one can
say how long it will last and how deep the downturn will be. Recovery
will come when the property market in America reaches bottom and begins
to rise. That may not be for many months or even years. |
Fortunately, in Singapore, having
learned from the 1997/98 financial crisis, we have not allowed a
speculative rise in residential property prices. Few citizens have
bought homes that they cannot afford to service their instalments on
their mortgages. High price condominiums and office properties have
declined in prices. |
But HDB flat prices have remained
steady, going down only slightly. It is because there is real demand
from our own citizens, especially new citizens. And permanent
residents are buying used HDB flats in the open market. These have
kept our HDB flat prices up. |
Singapore’s economy is strong. Our reserves
can see us through this crisis without the country going broke although
we have no natural resources, no oil, gas, palm oil, whatever. |
Also jobs are
available in the two integrated resorts, each
needing to hire 10,000 workers, and investments
by high-end manufacturing companies like
Renewable Energy Corporation (producing solar
cells) and Halliburton (producing oil and gas
equipment). |
The government will prime up the economy,
and also buffer our citizens from reduced purchasing power, especially
the lower-income earners and those who may be unemployed. |
We have all lost purchasing power as
prices of imported food and goods have risen. We cannot restore
people to what they were enjoying before the worldwide crash. But we
will make sure that nobody falls below the poverty line. |
After studying the situation carefully,
we have to make a realistic estimate of how much we can afford in
additional U-save and Work-fare and other alleviating measures. Much
depends on how long and how deep this recession will be. |
By the next budget in March 2009 in
about 4 months, the government will be ready to decide on assistance
programmes for the lower-income earners. |
But to return to where we were before
the crisis and enjoy the same standard of living, we have to wait
until the recovery of the world economy. We all have to accept some
sacrifices and cut-backs. But compared to our counterparts in
neighbouring countries, Malaysia, Thailand, Philippines, Indonesia,
Myanmar, Cambodia and Vietnam, our low-income earners are much
better off. |
We will make sure that nobody falls
through the cracks and drops below the poverty line. The government
has to be prudent. |
Everyone has to put up with some
austerity until the economy turns around when the world economy
picks up. Our external trade, imports and exports, is more than
three times our GDP. When the external demand goes down, our GDP
will be affected, and it may go on for many months before we
recover. |
Full Text of Speech |
Source:
www.gov.sg Media Release 10 Nov 2008 |
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