I | | INTRODUCTION |
Singapore, Republic of, independent city-state in Southeast Asia, comprising 1 main island and 50 adjacent islands off the southern tip of the Malay Peninsula. The major island is separated from Malaysia on the north by the narrow Johor Strait and is connected by a causeway to the Malaysian city of Johor Baharu. On the south, the main island is separated from Indonesia’s Riau Archipelago by the Singapore Strait, an important shipping channel linking the Indian Ocean to the west with the South China Sea on the east.
Singapore is densely populated, with most of the country’s people concentrated in the south central portion of the island, where the central business district and main port are located. About three-fourths of the people are Chinese, but there are significant Malay and Indian minorities.
Singapore contained just a few fishing settlements and a small trading port when the islands became part of the United Kingdom’s colonial empire in the 1820s. Britain developed Singapore into a major international trade center, and the local Malay population soon swelled with immigrants from China and India. Since becoming an independent republic in 1965, multiethnic Singapore has maintained political stability and high economic growth. As a result, Singapore is now Southeast Asia’s most important seaport, financial center, and manufacturing hub, and its citizens enjoy one of the world’s highest standards of living.
II | | LAND AND RESOURCES |
The total area of Singapore, including the main island and all the islets, is 648 sq km (250 sq mi). From north to south Singapore Island, the main island, extends 22 km (14 mi), and its greatest east-west extent is 50 km (31 mi). The larger islets, which all have small fishing villages, include Tekong, Ubin, and Sentosa. Singapore Island is low-lying with no prominent relief features. A central area of hills rises to a maximum elevation of 176 m (577 ft) at Bukit Timah. Numerous short streams, including the Singapore River, drain the island.
Because Singapore lies just north of the equator, the wet tropical climate has no clearly defined seasons. The average annual temperature is 27°C (81°F) and the average annual rainfall is 2,400 mm (95 in). Although rainfall is abundant throughout the year, November through January are the wettest months.
More than half the island is built up. Jungles and swamps once covered Singapore, but most of these have been removed for residential, industrial, and, to a lesser extent, agricultural use. A small area of the central hills retains its natural jungle cover, in which mouse deer, porcupines, flying foxes, and flying lizards live. Since the early 1960s, land reclamation projects have been replacing Singapore’s once expansive mangrove forests, which grow in shallow or muddy saltwater. One example is Jurong, an industrial estate that lies on reclaimed land to the west of the central business district. The reclamation projects have added about 10 percent of new land to the nation’s total area. Soils are relatively infertile, and clays and sand are the only mineral resources. Coral reefs are found in some coastal areas.
Although Singapore has numerous short streams and several reservoirs, the country lacks sufficient fresh water. About half its water must be imported from Malaysia through an aqueduct that runs under the causeway linking Singapore and Johor Baharu. Rapid economic and industrial growth and the rapid rise in vehicle ownership have increased air and water pollution. Closely regulated government controls on emissions, effluents, and other wastes have done much to alleviate these problems, however.
III | | THE PEOPLE OF SINGAPORE |
At the time of the 1990 census, Singapore had a population of 2,705,115. The 2002 population estimate was 4,452,732. Immigration is highly restricted, so the natural population increase, which measures births and deaths, is an important indicator of the country’s future population growth. Singapore’s natural population increase is 0.9 percent annually, and this rate is expected to fall as much of the population ages beyond the childbearing years. The government is concerned about the slow growth rate because increasingly fewer working people must support a growing elderly population, straining available resources for health care and other social services. The government provides tax incentives to families that have several children, but the growth rate is still expected to fall because most Singaporeans prefer small families. The overall population density is 6,877 persons per sq km (17,811 per sq mi). Large residential areas with high-rise public housing estates are located throughout the main island, including the districts of Jurong in the southwest, and Geylang and Katong along the east coast.
A | | Ethnic Groups, Languages, and Religion |
Singapore’s population is ethnically diverse. Chinese constitute about three-fourths of the population. Malays form the next largest group, and Indians the third. The country’s four official languages are Chinese, English, Malay, and Tamil. Chinese is the primary language spoken in the majority of homes. English is the language of administration and business and it is widely spoken as a second language.
Singapore’s principal religions are Buddhism, Islam, Hinduism, and Christianity. The majority of Chinese Singaporeans follow Buddhism, although Daoism (Taoism), and more recently Christianity, are also popular. Malay Singaporeans are predominantly Muslim, while more than half the Indian Singaporeans profess Hinduism.
B | | Education |
Although education is not compulsory in Singapore, primary school is free for six years, and attendance is nearly universal. Some 67 percent of children also attend secondary school. Since 1987 English has been the language of instruction, but a policy of bilingualism requires that children also be taught Chinese, Malay, or Tamil. Institutions of higher education include the National University of Singapore and Nanyang Technological University. Of Singaporeans aged 15 and older, 100 percent can read and write.
C | | Way of Life |
Like many other Asians, Singaporeans value a strong work ethic and close family relations. But some traditions have been altered by Western influences and Singapore’s rapid industrialization and modernization. For example, unlike families in China and India where several generations may share the same housing, Singaporeans of Chinese and Indian ancestry live in small, nuclear families. Housing favors smaller families, as most units consist of small apartments in high-rise buildings. Western clothing is common, and foods reflect the Chinese, Malay, and Indian origins of the people.
D | | Social Issues |
Since Singapore became an independent state in 1965, government policies have brought orderliness and efficiency to the country. Examples are supplanting slum and squatter areas with high-rise public housing projects, and strict controls on air and water pollution to ensure a healthier environment. While these policies draw few objections, other aspects of Singapore’s social engineering are occasionally considered extreme, such as one campaign that urged well-educated couples to produce children. The government has discontinued this particular campaign, but it remains committed to defining and promoting—either by law or through official campaigns—the appropriate public and private behavior of its citizens. Outsiders sometimes also consider Singapore’s criminal punishments severe. Singapore stresses, however, that its strict laws and sentences have made the nation one of the safest places in the world.
E | | Culture |
Singapore’s cultural life reflects its past colonial administration and the country’s diverse population. Chinese, Malay, Indian, and British influences are apparent in Singapore’s art, architecture, and fine arts. British colonial architecture, for example, is represented by the Parliament House, City Hall, and the Raffles Hotel. Chinese, Hindu, and Islamic architecture are represented in the ornate Shuang Lin Temple, the Sri Mariamman Temple, and the Sultan Mosque, respectively. Singapore’s National Museum complex consists of one museum devoted to the contemporary art of Southeast Asia, one to Asian cultures, and the third to the history of Singapore.
IV | | ECONOMY |
Because of its phenomenal economic growth since independence in 1965 and the continued robustness of its economy, Singapore is often referred to by economists as one of Asia’s “Four Tigers,” along with Hong Kong, South Korea, and Taiwan. In 2000 the gross domestic product (GDP) was estimated at U.S.$92 billion, or $22,960 per capita, among the highest per capita GDPs in the world. The economy centers around services, notably financial and business services.
A | | Labor |
In 2000 Singapore’s labor force consisted of 2 million people. Women make up 39 percent of all workers. Some 71 percent of the total labor force was employed in the service sector in industries such as banking, finance, retail, and tourism. Manufacturing and construction employed 29 percent of the labor force. Agriculture and fishing employed just 0.3 percent of Singapore’s working people.
B | | Services |
Services comprise 66 percent of the GDP. In this sector, financial and business services are the most important, followed by wholesale and retail trade, and transportation and communications. Tourism is an important source of foreign exchange. Singapore is Southeast Asia’s second most important tourist destination after Malaysia, and in 1999 some 6.3 million tourists visited Singapore. Most visitors were from other Southeast Asian nations, especially Malaysia, and from Japan.
C | | Manufacturing |
Manufacturing accounts for 26 percent of the GDP. Industry has grown rapidly since the 1960s, and Singapore now produces a diversity of goods, including petroleum products, chemicals, pharmaceuticals, electronic items, textiles and clothing, plastics, rubber products, steel pipes, and processed foods. Singapore is one of the world’s largest petroleum refining centers and is also an important shipbuilding center. In the 1990s the largest manufacturing industry was electronics, accounting for one-half of its manufacturing output and one-third of its employment. The leading industrial area is the Jurong Industrial Estate.
D | | Agriculture and Fishing |
Agriculture and fishing contribute only a tiny share of Singapore’s GDP. Just 1.6 percent of Singapore’s total area is farmland. Vegetables, pigs, and poultry are raised for domestic consumption, although the vast majority of food must be imported. The fishing industry is centered on the port of Jurong.
E | | Energy |
Singapore has no energy resources, so it must rely solely on imported fuels. Crude oil is imported and refined in the country. Singapore also imports natural gas to meet its energy needs. Some of the petroleum imports are used to fuel electricity-generating plants.
F | | Transportation and Communications |
Singapore is a major world port and has extensive dock facilities along Keppel Harbour on the southern coast. Changi International Airport in the eastern part of the main island is one of the largest and most modern international airports in the world. A rail line across the Johor Strait links Singapore with the Malaysian railroad system. In addition, Singapore Island is serviced by the Mass Rapid Transit (MRT) system, one of the cleanest and most efficient transit systems in the world. Numerous roads and expressways also cross the island.
There are three English daily newspapers, the most widely circulated of which is The Straits Times. There are also three dailies in Chinese, one in Malay, and one in Tamil. All newspapers are public companies and also open to the scrutiny of the government. In 1986 Singapore enacted a law empowering the government to restrict the sale of foreign periodicals that are deemed to influence domestic political issues.
G | | Foreign Trade |
The value of imports generally exceeds the value of exports in Singapore. In 2000 the country exported goods worth U.S.$138 billion, but imports cost U.S.$135 billion. Singapore is an entrepôt, meaning that much of the country’s trade involves the transshipment of goods produced in the region. The chief imports, in order of value, are machinery and transport equipment; basic manufactures, such as textile yarn, fabric, iron, and steel; miscellaneous manufactured articles; petroleum and petroleum products; and food and live animals. The country’s major exports are machinery and transportation equipment and refined petroleum products. Leading purchasers of Singapore’s exports are Malaysia, the United States, Hong Kong, Japan, and Thailand; chief sources of imports are Japan, Malaysia, the United States, Thailand, Taiwan, Saudi Arabia, Germany, and South Korea.
Singapore is a charter member of the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN). As an ASEAN member, Singapore is also a member of the ASEAN Free Trade Association (AFTA), established in Singapore in 1992. In 1989 Singapore became part of the Southern Growth Triangle (SGT), which also includes Johor Baharu and Indonesia’s Riau Archipelago.
H | | Currency and Banking |
The unit of currency is the Singapore dollar (1.72 Singapore dollars equal U.S.$1; 2000 average). Although Singapore does not have a central bank, the Monetary Authority of Singapore performs most functions of a central bank. The country’s currency, however, is issued by the Board of Commissioners of Currency. There are more than 130 commercial banks, most of which are foreign.
V | | GOVERNMENT |
Singapore is a parliamentary democracy governed under a 1959 constitution, promulgated when Singapore became a self-governing state. The constitution was amended in 1963 when Singapore joined with Sarawak, North Borneo (now Sabah), and the Federation of Malaya to form Malaysia. In 1965 the constitution was amended again when Singapore separated from Malaysia to form an independent republic. Voting is compulsory for all Singaporeans 21 years of age and older.
A | | Executive |
A president, elected to a six-year term, is Singapore’s head of state, and a prime minister is head of government. The president used to be elected by parliament, but by a 1991 constitutional amendment the president is now elected directly by the voters. In order to run for president, candidates must be declared eligible by the Presidential Elections Committee, a body composed of governmental ministers that screens candidates based on qualifications outlined in the Singapore constitution. The president acts on the advice of the cabinet, which is responsible to the parliament and headed by the prime minister. The cabinet is appointed by the president from among the members of parliament.
B | | Legislature |
Legislative power is vested in a one-house parliament, which in 1997 included 83 popularly elected members. In addition to elected members, the parliament may also contain up to 6 members nominated by the president and up to 6 members appointed from opposition political parties. The purpose of the nominated and appointed members is to ensure parliament represents a wide range of views. Nominated members are chosen from distinguished professionals or public servants in the general public. All members of parliament serve five-year terms.
C | | Judiciary |
Judicial power is vested in the Supreme Court and the subordinate courts. The Supreme Court consists of the High Court and the Court of Appeal. Supreme Court judges are appointed by the president, with the consent of the prime minister.
D | | Political Parties |
Although Singapore is nominally a multiparty nation, the People’s Action Party (PAP) has been the dominant political party since the country became independent. In the 1997 general election opposition parties contested 36 of the 83 seats in parliament. PAP won 34 of the contested seats, bringing its total members in parliament to 81. One Workers’ Party candidate and one Singapore Progressive Party candidate each secured a seat. Because opposition parties were elected to only two seats, the president nominated a second Workers’ Party candidate to create increased opposition representation in parliament.
E | | Social Services |
Singaporeans enjoy modern and affordable health care, as it is heavily subsidized by the government. Health conditions are similar to those in other developed nations. For example, Singapore strictly enforces sanitation and public health regulations. Life expectancies are among the highest in the world and infant mortality rates are among the world’s lowest. As in other developed countries, the major causes of death are heart disease, cancer, and stroke.
F | | Defense |
In 2001 Singapore had 50,000 members in its army, 4,500 in its navy, and 6,000 in its air force. Beginning at age 18 all male citizens and permanent residents must serve two years of national service.
VI | | HISTORY |
Humans have inhabited Singapore for about 2,000 years. The original seaport, Temasek, may have been a trading center in the Malay kingdom of Sri Vijaya until the 14th century, when title passed to the Javanese kingdom of Majapahit. The settlement most likely received the name Singapura (Sanskrit for “Lion City”) between the 11th and 14th centuries. It was destroyed in the late 1300s and replaced by Malacca (now Melaka) as the most important port in the area. For more than 400 years Singapore Island was inhabited only by a few Malays who lived in small fishing villages.
A | | European Colonization |
British colonial administrator Thomas Stamford Raffles founded the modern city in 1819 on the site of a fishing village. The sultan of Johor deeded the land to the English East India Company in 1824. In 1826 Singapore was incorporated, along with Malacca and Pinang, into the British colony of the Straits Settlements. Singapore soon became a major commercial center. It benefited from both its advantageous location on the narrow passage between the Indian Ocean and the South China Sea and from its designation as a free port where ships could avoid certain taxes on their cargo. Its growth as the most important port in the region attracted thousands of migrants from China, India, and other parts of Southeast Asia and established the ethnic and cultural diversities that are still characteristic of its population. By far, however, many more Chinese migrated to Singapore than other groups.
After World War I (1914-1918) Britain designated the island its principal naval base in East Asia and undertook extensive military construction. Singapore was captured and occupied by the Japanese in 1942 during World War II. As the British retreated, they only partially destroyed the causeway that linked Singapore with the Malay Peninsula and the Japanese had easy access to the great port. Important installations, however, such as the world’s largest floating dry dock, were destroyed to deny them to the Japanese. Singapore was returned to the British when Japan lost the war in 1945.
The following year the United Kingdom designated Singapore a separate crown colony, and on June 3, 1959, Singapore became a self-governing state in the Commonwealth of Nations. For security and economic reasons, Singapore sought to join with the Federation of Malaya, which had become fully independent in 1957. At first cautious, because Singapore had a left-wing government at that time, Malaya eventually agreed to a union because it feared that Singapore would become Communist if left on its own. Malaya also called for the inclusion of other Malay states to provide an ethnic balance to Chinese Singapore. On September 16, 1963, Singapore, the Federation of Malaya, North Borneo (renamed Sabah), and Sarawak united to form the Federation of Malaysia.
B | | The Republic |
The union was uneasy, however, and in 1965 Singapore separated from Malaysia and became a sovereign state within the Commonwealth. It also became a separate member of the United Nations (UN). In December of that year the island was proclaimed a republic. Inche Yusof bin Ishak, who had been Singapore’s head of state since 1959, became the first president. His successors were Benjamin Henry Sheares, who held the office from 1971 until his death in 1981, and C. V. Devan Nair, who took office in 1981. Nair resigned the presidency in 1985 and was replaced by Wee Kim Wee. From 1959 to 1990 executive power was exercised by Prime Minister Lee Kuan Yew. His People’s Action Party (PAP) captured parliament in every election from 1968 on, and he governed with a firm hand. Fearing Communist subversion, Lee staunchly supported U.S. policies in Southeast Asia, and in 1971 he led Singapore into a defense alliance with Australia, the United Kingdom, Malaysia, and New Zealand. Lee’s attitude toward the Communist regimes in the region was a more conciliatory one after the end of the Vietnam War (1959-1975). In 1990 he finally extended diplomatic recognition to mainland China.
Lee resigned in 1990 and designated Goh Chok Tong as his successor. Goh’s People’s Action Party won 77 out of 81 seats in the 1991 parliamentary elections. In 1993 Singapore held its first direct presidential elections, and Ong Teng Cheong of PAP received nearly 60 percent of the votes cast. In parliamentary elections held in 1997, PAP raised its number of seats to 81 out of 83. Opposition candidates won 2 seats, and an additional opposition candidate was nominated to parliament. Ong declined to run for a second term as president. He was succeeded in 1999 by former diplomat S. R. Nathan, who became president without an election after Singapore’s Presidential Elections Committee declared his two rivals ineligible.
No comments:
Post a Comment