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Ethos Issue 3, Oct 2007
Singapore’s Social Support
System: Two Anomalies
Chua Hak Bin

The Singapore economy is rising with the
tide of globalisation, but not everyone appears to be prospering
equally. A two-speed dual economy appears to be emerging,
where divergent growth patterns between different income groups,
businesses and even within certain asset classes have become
quite stark.1
Closing the door on globalisation is not
the solution, as protectionist policies will only hurt overall
growth to the detriment of all. Tightening immigration policy,
for example, may help protect low-wage jobs but may raise
business costs, discourage investment and stifle growth. Fine-tuning
the current social support or safety net system is preferable
and probably necessary to address some of the negative distributional
effects of globalisation.
There appear to be some peculiarities worth
highlighting in Singapore’s current social support system.
The first pertains to the distribution of social support across
the household income dimension, and the second to social support
across the business cycle or time dimension. There is some
scope to improve the design of social support on both counts.
First, the current distribution system of
social transfers is heavily skewed towards the purchase of
Housing and Development Board (HDB) flats.2
The most generous government subsidies are HDB housing grants,
which provide a S$30,000 to S$40,000 housing grant and a 20%
price discount for purchases of new flats.3
These HDB housing entitlements currently dominate payouts
from the Workfare scheme.
FIGURE 1. DISTRIBUTIONS OF SUBSIDIES/ENTITLEMENTS
ACROSS HOUSEHOLDS-CURRENT (CONJECTURE) VERSUS IDEAL

Plotting subsidies or entitlement (on Y
axis) against income (on X axis) will likely produce a skewed
distribution with those in the lowest income group getting
less government support than those who are slightly better
off and able to purchase a HDB flat.
This is because those who are very poor
are probably not likely to purchase a HDB flat and exercise
their entitlement to the grant and discount. While HDB also
offers hefty rental subsidies for lower-income households
who cannot afford a basic HDB flat, not all of them may choose
public housing. Some may opt to stay with their families or
relatives to minimise their financial outlay.
It is probably not ideal to pressure those
very poor to commit to the purchase of a HDB property (even
with the subsidy) as these households should probably not
assume the debt burden and may face difficulties servicing
the HDB loan. But should this group be penalised because they
are too poor to exercise their privilege? Should lower income
households who do not exercise their right to buy a HDB flat
be given the lump sum grant of S$30,000 to S$40,000 instead
(perhaps into their Central Provident Fund accounts) upon
reaching a certain age? Providing such an option may produce
an outcome where the subsidy/entitlement is fairer and more
a function of need rather than a decision tied to HDB home
ownership or consumption of public housing.
The number of lower-income individuals who
do not exercise their entitlement to purchase a subsidised
HDB is probably not small. Back-of-the-envelope calculations
suggest that a current home ownership rate of 93% imply that
about 220,000 citizens currently do not live in their own
homes. A significant fraction of these may not have exercised
or cannot afford to exercise their entitlement to purchase
a subsidised HDB flat. Some, but not all of them, may enjoy
subsidised rental housing, but the remainder would have lost
out in the current HDB-centred social support system because
of their financial circumstances.
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