How Singapore Became the World’s Hub - YouTube

Channel: neo

[0]
This video is made possible by CuriosityStream and Nebula.
[6]
This is Singapore - the second smallest nation in Asia.
[10]
But despite its size Singapore is known globally as a leading, innovative metropolis.
[16]
A global financial hub that is home to one of the most important ports in the world.
[21]
And it has become all this despite massive challenges that could have prevented the country's development-
[28]
In this speech by former Prime Minister Lee Kuan Yew, made in 1971 just six years into
[34]
Singapore’s independence, he hints that there is something deeper at the heart of
[39]
how Singapore achieves progress.
[41]
“But of course, everybody knows that Singapore is a very well-endowed place."
[49]
"Good infrastructure, communication, sea, air, land, good banking system, skilled workers.
[58]
Oh, it’s just, natural course of events.
[63]
It wasn’t you know, we made it so.”
[70]
Today, we will look at what he means with that.
[73]
Understanding how the country innovates as well as why.
[77]
- Intro music -
[97]
To understand how Singapore managed to thrive despite the limitations that a city-state
[101]
faces, we need to take a look at how this nation came to be.
[106]
From 1819 to 1963, with the exception of a few years during world war two, Singapore
[114]
was under British rule.
[116]
The colony served as a key trading hub within the region, receiving goods from the West
[121]
while also exporting raw materials sourced throughout Southeast Asia including rubber
[127]
and tin.
[128]
Therefore, from very early on - the transshipment port transformed Singapore into a multicultural
[135]
location, attracting British and European traders, as well as laborers and merchants
[140]
from throughout Asia.
[143]
In 1959, when the British granted Singapore the right of full internal self-government,
[148]
the People’s Action Party, or PAP, led by Lee Kuan Yew, was elected into power.
[154]
His party desired to increase the country’s standard of living by providing better jobs,
[160]
housing, medical care, and education to its residents.
[164]
To achieve these goals and secure Singapore’s independence from the British, in 1963 the
[169]
PAP led Singapore into a merger with the Federation of Malaya as well as the Crown colonies of
[177]
North Borneo and Sarawak, to form Malaysia.
[181]
However, Singapore’s place in this unified state was short-lived.
[189]
Just two years after merging, Singapore was expelled from Malaysia due to economic and
[194]
political disagreements.
[196]
And Lee Kuan Yew’s disappointment following Singapore’s exit was captured on live TV:
[202]
“You see, the whole of my adult life, I had believed in Malaysian merger.”
[216]
Singapore was left as an independent nation, founded on the back of a failed dream.
[225]
During this period, the country’s prospects were bleak and countless challenges arose.
[230]
With the failed merger and already contentious trade relations in the region, the new city-state’s
[236]
trade-reliant economy was considerably weakened.
[240]
At the same time, the British expedited their withdrawal from Singapore, closing their military
[245]
bases throughout the country, which further escalated the preexisting unemployment crisis.
[251]
“20% of our economy is based on expenditure from military bases and military personnel.
[258]
And if we get that run down I have straight away 40,000 unemployed on the social welfare
[267]
relief payroll. and we don't want that.”
[271]
The British exit also meant that Singapore lost its military defense capabilities.
[276]
And on top of this, racial tensions and riots throughout the 60s made developing a unified
[282]
Singapore an even tougher task.
[285]
The republic of Singapore was vulnerable.
[289]
For many in Singapore, the top priority was mere survival.
[294]
This survivalist mindset has come to define Singapore’s economic, political and social
[301]
systems.
[302]
Lee Kuan Yew and his party evoked Singapore’s weaknesses to justify their monopoly on power
[308]
as well as to crack down on political dissidents and critics in the media.
[312]
However, with that power, the Singaporean government set forth to create a united and
[317]
prosperous country, developing a state-capitalist and interventionist system to do so.
[325]
Singapore’s state-capitalist system is supported by statutory boards.
[332]
These autonomous statutory boards provide infrastructure and social services.
[336]
For instance, since 1960, Singapore’s Housing and Development Board, HDB, has transformed
[344]
the city-state’s housing situation.
[345]
In the early years of independence, the HDB focused on housing the 550,000 Singaporeans,
[353]
just over a quarter of the population, that were estimated to live in squatter-like settlements.
[360]
Since then, the HDB, along with the Urban Redevelopment Authority established in 1974,
[366]
have together developed 23 new towns and 3 estates throughout Singapore.
[371]
The city’s housing crisis was greatly alleviated through these two statutory boards; while
[378]
in 1960 only 9 percent of the population lived in public housing, this rose to 80% by 1985,
[386]
where it remains today.
[391]
The Economic Development Board initiated in 1961 has restructured and diversified the
[397]
city's industries, reshaping Singapore into a global city.
[403]
In the 70s, the EDB developed manufacturing capabilities in textiles, garments and electronics,
[409]
while also starting to attract foreign direct investment into the country.
[414]
As a small island nation, Singapore’s industrial development necessitated more land, which
[420]
was reclaimed on the island’s edges.
[424]
Industrial activities were concentrated in the Jurong region, which in the early 2000s
[429]
expanded to include the reclaimed Jurong Island.
[432]
To date there are dozens of statutory boards that have improved Singapore’s infrastructure,
[438]
health, public transport, insurance and other services.
[443]
Yet, along with these statutory boards, Singapore’s economic growth has also relied on fully and
[449]
partially state-owned enterprises called Government-linked Corporations, GLCs.
[461]
In the early 1970s, the Singaporean government, through GLCs, was responsible for 85% of gross
[468]
output in the country’s iron and steel industries, and 67.8% in the shipbuilding and repair sector,
[476]
with additional investments in food, timber and chemicals.
[482]
All in all, by the mid 1980s the Singaporean government owned 87 companies, and as some
[488]
of these, such as Temasek Holdings and Government of Singapore Investment Corporation managed
[493]
several enterprises themselves, the government was linked to just over 400 different companies.
[505]
In the following decades, the Singaporean government engaged in limited privatization,
[510]
releasing their monopoly on certain industries that were already flourishing.
[515]
This not only created the conditions for the private sector and foreign corporations to
[519]
invest in Singapore’s economy, but also enabled the government to shift their focus
[524]
and invest in under-developed sectors.
[528]
The country was able to move away from manufacturing garments and basic electronics and instead
[533]
move towards becoming a leading global supplier of financial services, sustainable technology,
[540]
and biomedical services.
[543]
Over the course of a few decades, the Singaporean government strategically used its state-capitalist
[548]
system to invest in the country’s success, pushing the economic profile to evolve and
[554]
fit into an ever globalizing world.
[558]
Essentially, The small island-nation with a population of less than 6 million people
[563]
as of today, is embedding itself into global networks.
[566]
May it be in global trade, with the Port of Singapore, which is the world's busiest transshipment
[572]
port, or in other economic sectors, such as financial services.
[577]
The government invests in emerging industries using a state capitalist approach adjusting
[583]
its economy based on global transformations.
[586]
In 1972, the Former Deputy Prime Minister of Singapore S. Rajaratnam talks about this
[592]
approach:
[593]
“an independent Singapore survives and will survive because it has established a relationship
[599]
of interdependence in the rapidly expanding global economic system.”
[604]
Today, Singapore’s Temasek Holdings and GIC are amongst the largest Sovereign Wealth
[612]
Funds in the world, together holding over a trillion US Dollars in assets.
[618]
But although Singapore has prospered by becoming an international hub, this approach has also
[623]
opened the country up to international vulnerabilities.
[627]
One such vulnerability is that of climate change.
[631]
The Singapore Green Plan 2030, recognizes the threat climate change poses on Singapore’s
[638]
survival.
[639]
Besides facing the threat of sea level rise, as an island nation, Singapore imports roughly
[644]
90% of its food.
[646]
And the nation relies on bilateral agreements, such as with the Malaysian State of Johor,
[651]
for its water supply.
[654]
Treated water is pumped from the Johor River towards Singapore, with pipelines running
[658]
along the causeway that connects both countries.
[663]
Facing this dependency on outside states for the necessities of life, as well as fluctuating
[668]
temperatures that produce food and water scarcity globally, the Singaporean government has ramped
[673]
up the development of smart and sustainable technologies in the name of self-sufficiency.
[680]
Following the world’s first commercial vertical farm that opened in Singapore in 2012, the
[685]
Singapore Food Agency has implemented a 30 by 30 target to produce 30% of nutritional
[691]
needs locally by 2030.
[696]
The Public Utilities Board has also increased the country’s water security, developing
[701]
NEWater in the early 2000s, which is a pioneering water recycling technology.
[707]
They hope that water recycling, along with water desalination facilities throughout the
[711]
country, will sustain Singapore, eventually meeting 85% of water demand.
[717]
Singapore’s government-led expansion into sustainable and smart technology is driven
[723]
by need.
[724]
And currently there are a number of projects that are being developed.
[728]
Today, the country has one single landfill, located on its own island.
[734]
But this landfill is expected to be at capacity by 2035.
[738]
Singapore’s National Environment Agency is developing more waste-to-energy facilities,
[745]
including Tuas Nexus an integrated water and solid waste treatment facility planned from
[750]
the ground up.
[752]
In line with the country’s goals for a car-lite future, the Housing and Development Board
[757]
is constructing Tengah, Singapore’s first car-free town centre full of green space and
[763]
urban farming.
[768]
After establishing itself as a global city in the first few decades of independence,
[773]
the Singaporean government is now trying to utilize its growing local resilience against
[778]
threats such as climate change to reassert itself as a global leader.
[783]
The government is an active investor in many companies and has established statutory boards
[789]
with wide responsibilities.
[792]
Often these state interventions are justified by the stark warnings about the country’s
[797]
vulnerabilities.
[798]
At the same time, the question arises to what extent the narrative of vulnerability is also
[804]
used to consolidate the power of the People’s Action Party, which has ruled the country
[810]
since independence.
[812]
As a nation that transforms vulnerabilities into opportunities, one can also wonder what
[818]
other weaknesses the government will identify to justify its power and direct the country’s
[825]
growth.
[826]
The question also arises to what extent Singapore's successful concepts can serve as models for
[832]
other regions.
[834]
On this subject, Polymatter has produced a number of really outstanding videos in which
[838]
he takes a closer look at how Singapore has solved Healthcare and Housing.
[844]
Many of his videos can be found with an extended version on Nebula, the streaming platform
[849]
created by me and a number of other educational creators.
[853]
And, I recently uploaded my first Nebula Original: The Unknown City, a 3D short film about global
[860]
displacement and refugees.
[863]
Nebula allows me to create bigger projects like this and to upload extended cuts of many
[868]
of my videos, because I don't have to tailor everything to the YouTube algorithm.
[873]
And what makes Nebula even better is the fact that it comes in a bundle with CuriosityStream.
[879]
Which is the place for high quality documentaries on the internet, such as Singapore’s Field
[885]
of Dreams.
[886]
A documentary about the construction of Singapore's National Stadium, which features the world's
[891]
largest retractable domed roof.
[894]
So, not only will you get more content from me and other creators on Nebula, but also
[900]
access to thousands of titles on CuriosityStream, all for less than 15 bucks a year, if you
[906]
sign up on CuriosityStream.com/neo.