Singapore
Contrasting voices
The Internet and old media speak in conflicting languages,
neither of them credibly yet. By Seah Chiang Nee
Nov 26, 2006
IN the
real world, the economy is humming strongly, more jobs are
being created than at anytime in the last 10 years, the
stock market is near record high and so are high-end properties.
The Singapore dollar has strengthened to around S$1.55 to
the US dollar on speculation that economic growth would
quicken, thus encouraging investors to put more funds in
the city-state.
The
sanguine mood is reflected on the streets. With the school
holidays on, the crowds are out in force. At night, it is
virtually impossible to get a cab in the city centre without
prior booking.
Restaurants
and shopping malls are full, and people are spending ahead
of a hike in Goods and Services Tax from 5% to 7% next April.
Year-end
festivals are a month away but a fairyland of lights already
covers the kilometres stretching from Orchard Road and Bras
Basah Road to Marina Bay.
While
the mood is upbeat, the Internet world, however, is painting
a very different picture. Here, the talk is of continued
weakness, rising unemployment and people committing suicide.
Forums are still full of tales of retrenched managers driving
taxis, and 70-year-old “uncles” cleaning tables
when they should be enjoying their sunset years.
They
also feature pictures of homeless families sleeping in housing
estate lobbies.
To the
cynics, the government has lost its economic way, unable
to steer Singapore to a better future. “They’re
so desperate they need casinos to get out of the rut”,
is a frequent comment.
Ironically,
this is happening as the city is flourishing with growth
expected to reach 7.5% to 8% this year and new jobs created
– 132,000 in the first nine months – being at
a 10-year high.
So who is right? Are we in a time of boom or doldrums? Why
is there such a large disparity between the real world and
the blogosphere?
To market
analysts, the question is not whether there is a boom. It
is: Can the boom be maintained?
A Citigroup analysis recently asked if it is sustainable
or heading for a bust like that in the 1990s when the economy
fell into a recession.
By keeping
labour plentiful and wages low, it said Singapore should
continue to perform strongly.
Other reports predicted a 6% annual growth for the next
10 years. There is a caveat, though: the wage gap between
rich and poor will continue to widen.
The Internet community, which considers itself an alternative
information source, carried few, if any, of the good news.
Even
the most serious bloggers are indulging in predictions of
doom-and-gloom with young people talking of migrating or
seeking jobs elsewhere.
It is a problem for Singaporeans who believe that the mainstream
media are too controlled to give them a balanced, objective
coverage and who turn to the Internet to seek it.
“If
they think the newspapers are too pro-government, reporting
only the good and avoiding the bad news, the Internet isn’t
any help either,” commented a surfer.
“That’s
because it is providing the exact opposite; that the government
can do no right, magnifying the negative and ignoring the
good news (like the current economic boom).”
So why is there a credibility gap? There are several reasons.
Firstly,
the growing influence of a liberal-minded Internet, which
often paints the sufferings of a minority as a city-wide
phenomenon.
Secondly,
Singaporeans, by nature, find it easier to believe the bad
news more easily than good news.
Thirdly, the society has become more divided. Unlike their
parents who tended to believe whatever the government told
them, today’s youths are more cynical.
The Internet is still in transformation, not as mature as
civil societies. The easy availability and anonymity are
giving people a cover to say anything they want without
being held responsible.
In 20 years of growth, the web hasn’t really built
a better-informed Singapore as was once hoped.
Those who argue for an anti-government Internet as a means
to counter a pro-government media are themselves contributing
to its lack of credibility.
This
poses a problem for the government if the Net continues
to spread negativism as it tries to rally its citizens and
dispels pessimism.
How
serious is it? A recent government survey on the influence
of the Internet on the young surprised me.
Published by the Media Development Authority of Singapore
(MDA), the survey showed half of all teens between 15 and
19 are on the Internet, blogging or podcasting.
It meant about 120,000 of these teens take part in web activities.
Among those aged 20 to 24, some 46% are participants, and
the figure dropped to 18% for those between 39 and 49.
Not
all youths take part in political, let alone anti-government,
discussions. The majority, I suspect, are just passive readers
indulging in teenage chat-rooms or simply posting diaries
of their personal activities.
But the extent of their participation surprised me, though.
I had thought it amounted to no more than 10%.
Which
brings me to a serious point: if the youths are so active
and the Net is anti-government (a government backbencher
said she was shocked to find they made up 80% of postings)
it is a worrying trend.
A rising
number of youngsters have stopped reading the traditional
media, or what the government says, and have cocooned themselves
into a sub-culture group that just talks to each other.
By ignoring this group, or, worse, treating them as enemies
instead of engaging them, the government may be in danger
of losing these young citizens by default.
Until a clear policy surfaces, it doesn’t augur well
for Singapore.
(This article was published in The Sunday Star on Nov
26, 2006).