Population
We can’t have more
It is already fully stretched and Singaporeans are feeling
the pinch; any increase not sustainable. By Yueh Chinn.
Apr 4, 2008
In absolute
numbers, I would think that Singapore’s current population,
i.e. 4.5m, is about the maximum that Singapore can support.
Never
in my living memory have I been unable to board the MRT
during peak hours, as in the case in the past 2 years.
The
roads are also congested nowadays; I remember telling people
in Bangkok many years ago that Singapore does not jam. Shopping
areas in town and in the heartlands are packed with people
during the weekends.
I can’t
even feel the air-con at times. Now, I dread leaving the
house on weekends.
Further,
it’s getting really hard to find seats in eateries,
be it at hawker centres or restaurants. Argh! I hate the
number of people I see around me!
The
above paragraph is about how the increment in population
affects the personal daily life of a typical Singapore citizen
like myself.
However,
it is more than that. It is reflective of how the infrastructure
in Singapore is coping with the recent influx of migrants.
If the
infrastructure is coping well, I wouldn’t be complaining
this much.
The
population growth rate of Singapore from June 2006 to June
2007 is 4.3%, with the non-resident population growing at
14.9% and resident population growing at 1.6% (The Edge
Singapore, 2008).
However,
the current infrastructure is proving unable to support
this number of population.
The
desire to push our population density to the brim is understandable.
After all, having a larger population brings benefits to
the economy.
A larger
population translates into more demand for goods and services,
and hence, more money circulating in the economy, generating
more income.
It also
means that there will be more talents present to contribute
to further economic growth, especially in light of Singapore’s
migration policies that give preferential treatment to ‘foreign
talents’.
Meanwhile,
migrants coming into Singapore to take up dirty and dangerous
jobs that Singaporeans shun. All seem right for a capitalist
Singapore.
Indeed,
the government has come up with plans to develop the city’s
infrastructure to cope with 6.5m people, as announced by
the Ministry of National Development some time ago.
However,
doubts has been raised by Minister Mentor Lee about how
many people we can really support on this tiny little island?
Between 5 to 5.5m.
Apparently,
when we state numbers such as the above, we are somehow
measuring the maximum population Singapore can sustain based
on our own definitions of ‘sustainability’,
be it in personal terms, economic terms, environmental-friendliness
etc.
Different
people belonging to different strata of society, thinking
of ‘sustainability’ with different scales and
criteria of measurement will come up with different population
numbers.
Yueh Chinn
http://sres1001-environmentalsustainability.blogspot.com/2008/04/population-sustainability-in-singapore.html