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Why is Singapore so rich? | CNBC Explains - YouTube
Channel: CNBC International
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Singapore is a tiny country, so tiny you can
drive across the island in just an hour.
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Despite its size and lack of natural resources,
Singapore鈥檚 5.6 million people enjoy
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one of the highest average incomes in the world,
ahead of countries like Germany, France and Japan.
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So, how did this little
island get so rich?
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Singapore doesn鈥檛 have resources like coal or oil but it
does have something countries can鈥檛 buy, location.
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The island sits in the middle of an important
trade route connecting Asia to Europe.
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That鈥檚 a key reason why the British decided,
back in 1819, to set up a colony in Singapore.
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Location isn鈥檛 everything though.
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There are several countries nearby that
could have made use of their whereabouts,
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but they weren鈥檛 quite
as successful.
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That鈥檚 because there are other ingredients
that go into this crazy rich Singapore recipe.
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I鈥檓 at the Raffles Hotel, which is one of the most
prominent icons of Singapore鈥檚 colonial history.
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Unlike some of its neighbors, which wanted to
separate themselves from their colonial histories,
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Singapore kept close ties with Britain,
even after independence in 1965.
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That decision announced to the rest of the
world that Singapore was open for business.
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That鈥檚 important because we know now that
exports help to grow and expand an economy.
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But back then, it wasn鈥檛
conventional wisdom.
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Singapore, Hong Kong, Taiwan and South Korea,
became known as the four Asian tigers,
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which have grown rapidly
since the 1960s.
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Their rise was fueled by exports, industrialization and
more crucially, big doses of government intervention.
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This was especially
true for Singapore.
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Labor strikes were common on the island in
the 1960s, even with high unemployment.
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On top of that, there
was a housing crisis,
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with Singapore being home to one of the
largest slum settlements in the world.
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So how do you build a more disciplined
labor force to attract investment?
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Well, you give them something to
work for, like a house of their own,
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which is why one of the first Singapore
government agencies set up was
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focused on building
affordable public housing.
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While just nine percent of the population
lived in public housing in the 1960s,
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that figure stands at more
than 80 percent today,
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add in greater employer rights and
strikes became extremely rare.
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At the same time, the government attracted
foreign investment through tax incentives,
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growing the economy
and easing unemployment,
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which fell from an estimated 14 percent
in 1959 to 4.5 percent in the 1970s.
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By the 1980s, Singapore was
a regional manufacturing hub,
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and it was the world鈥檚 biggest
producer of hard disk drives.
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But today, manufacturing makes up only
about 20 percent of Singapore鈥檚 GDP.
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Take a look at Singapore鈥檚 growth in GDP.
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You can see two big surges, one beginning in the late
80s and another at the start of the new millennium.
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Ironically, Singapore has a
downturn to thank for that.
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You see, in 1985, Singapore went into
its first post-independence recession,
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prompting the government
to introduce new measures.
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State-owned companies like telecommunications
were privatized to make them more competitive.
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Then at the turn of the century, service industries
like finance and insurance were further liberalized.
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That openness helped to grow the share of
services from just 24 percent of GDP in 1985
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to more than 70 percent in 2017.
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Multinational companies began to set
up regional headquarters in Singapore.
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That attracted even bigger players, boosting Singapore鈥檚
attractiveness to corporates and in turn its GDP.
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Now, Singapore is ranked as one of the
world鈥檚 easiest places to do business.
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Singapore has been praised for transforming
itself from a developing to a developed economy.
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But do most Singaporeans feel rich?
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Well, not exactly.
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Two of the most
important reasons?
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The high cost of living and inequality.
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For five years in a row, Singapore has been
named the world鈥檚 most expensive city,
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ahead of New York
and London.
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That鈥檚 largely because of taxes on cars, making
Singapore the most expensive place in the world
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to buy and run
an automobile.
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It鈥檚 also the third most expensive
place on Earth to buy clothes.
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But personal care, household goods
and domestic help in Singapore
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tend to be less expensive
than in other major cities.
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While Singapore is rich in terms of GDP per
capita, the median monthly salary is $3,270.
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That doesn鈥檛 sound too bad, but about 20 percent
of that goes into a mandatory savings account.
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You can use that account to pay for
medical bills, housing and education,
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but it does restrict the purchasing
power of the population.
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You鈥檝e probably heard of the movie Crazy
Rich Asians, which was set here in Singapore.
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And it鈥檚 no wonder.
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Because Singapore has about 184,000 millionaires,
making it truly the land of the crazy rich.
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That鈥檚 great news.
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But Singapore also has a fairly high rate of inequality,
compared with other developed countries.
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Let鈥檚 look at the Gini coefficient, which
is a scale used to calculate inequality,
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with zero being the most
equal and one being the least.
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Singapore鈥檚 Gini coefficient, after accounting
for taxes and transfers, was 0.356 in 2017.
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That was worse than countries like the
United Kingdom, Japan, Korea and Germany,
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although it fared better than
some, like the United States.
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Is that number really that bad?
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That question had books
like this flying off the shelves.
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A think tank ignited public debate on the divide
in social classes, after it found that on average,
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Singaporeans who live in public housing have fewer
than one friend who lives in private housing.
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The government has called the issue
of inequality a national priority,
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but it remains to be seen if it is a
problem that can be tackled effectively.
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Hi everyone, it's Xin En.
Thanks for watching!
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