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234 pages, Kindle Edition
First published June 19, 2017
The general narrative of the PAP government and the economic development of Singapore are by now legendary. However, details of its ideological commitments and the concomitant economic and social political practices remain mired in simplistic explanations of authoritarianism in politics and apparently unstinting support for free market capitalism in Singapore’s economic policy. Indeed, the PAP government itself might be said to have encouraged the simplistic view of its governance and economic policies. What this “encouraged” understanding veils, intentionally or otherwise, is the social democratic origin of the PAP, which explains some of the fundamental social and economic programs which are critical to the economic and political success of the PAP government, and from which it has not wavered in more than its 50 years in power. The PAP’s social democratic origin, not authoritarianism, explains the Party’s vociferous disavowal of liberalism as the basis of politics and government. This book locates the social democratic traces that are embedded in, and continue to determine, the political economy of contemporary Singapore under the PAP government. (5)
Four institutionalized political and economic practices grounded in social democracy can be identified: ideological anti-liberalism, the national public housing program, state capitalism and multiracialism. Their primacy is reflected in the fact that other significant social policies and administrative practices, which are politically important in their own right, can be enfolded within the operating logic of one or more of these four institutions. (8)
Conceptually, the four areas of practices provide relative coherence to Singapore as a social, political and economic unit, demonstrating the possibility of a non-liberal electoral polity with a successful capitalist economy in the contemporary world. (9)
All this suggests that the PAP has created an enduring political system — an electoral democracy that:
• disavows liberalism and promotes national and collective interests over individual freedoms, especially in the governing of race where mutual tolerance is paramount as a minimal necessary condition for social stability;
• restricts the rights to property by nationalizing land and regularly intervenes in the housing market to maintain affordability of housing for all;
• asserts the right of the state as an active entrepreneur in domestic and global economy, in order to generate income for social redistribution; and
• has shifted democracy away from politics of representation to politics of trusteeship couched in a vocabulary of accountability based on a morality of trust between the governing and the governed. (181-2)
There appears to be no alternative political bases to be organized to challenge the political hegemony of the PAP in the foreseeable future for three reasons:
• Singapore does not have a capitalist class that is willing and able to fund alternative political parties;
• organized labor unions are firmly under the government’s control; and
• the middle class is highly conservative for various reasons, including being directly or indirectly dependent on the extensive civil service and state enterprise network for employment, and the desire to protect their investments in property. (182)