Republic of Singapore - country.
Publié le 04/05/2013
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Singaporeans of Chinese and Indian ancestry live in small, nuclear families.
Housing favors smaller families, as most units consist of small apartments in high-risebuildings.
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 andsquatter areas with high-rise public housing projects, and strict controls on air and water pollution to ensure a healthier environment.
While these policies draw fewobjections, other aspects of Singapore’s social engineering are occasionally considered extreme, such as one campaign that urged well-educated couples to producechildren.
The government has discontinued this particular campaign, but it remains committed to defining and promoting—either by law or through officialcampaigns—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 inSingapore’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’sNational 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
Modern Singapore was founded as a trading post of the British East India Company in 1819.
Its strategic location on the Singapore Strait and its deep natural harbormade it an important port for British trade.
It developed as an entrepôt, meaning it had a duty-free port that allowed the import of goods solely for the purpose of re-export.
Nevertheless, when Singapore became an independent republic in 1965, its economic outlook was bleak.
Its infrastructure was relatively undeveloped,unemployment was high, and its foreign markets were limited.
Over the following decades, however, the government’s free-market policies, coupled with strict fiscalcontrols, created one of the fastest-growing economies in the world.
Singapore developed beyond its limited entrepôt role, with growth of the manufacturing andfinancial-services sectors bolstering the export-oriented economy.
Its port became one of the busiest in the world.
During the last three decades of the 20th century, Singapore’s booming economic growth largely outperformed the world economy.
At the same time, Singaporemanaged to maintain an inflation rate below world averages and large budget surpluses.
Because of its phenomenal economic growth, Singapore became known as oneof Asia’s “Four Tigers,” along with Hong Kong, South Korea, and Taiwan.
Because of its sound fiscal policies and diversified trading partners, Singapore was the leastaffected of all Asian countries during a financial crisis that hit the region in 1997.
However, Singapore’s economy is particularly vulnerable to fluctuations in globaldemand for electronics products, which make up a significant portion of the country’s exports.
In 2006 the gross domestic product (GDP) was estimated at U.S.$132 billion, or $29,474 per capita, among the highest per capita GDPs in the world.
The economycenters around services, notably financial and business services.
A Labor
In 2006 Singapore’s labor force consisted of 2.3 million people.
Women make up 40 percent of all workers.
Some 70 percent of the total labor force was employed inthe service sector in industries such as banking, finance, retail, and tourism.
Manufacturing and construction employed 30 percent of the labor force.
Agriculture andfishing employed just 0.3 percent of Singapore’s working people.
B Services
Services comprise 65 percent of the GDP.
In this sector, financial and business services are the most important, followed by wholesale and retail trade, transportationand communications, and tourism.
Electronic commerce (e-commerce), an increasingly important component of the service sector, is supported by Singapore’s well-developed telecommunications infrastructure.
Tourism is an important source of foreign exchange.
Singapore is Southeast Asia’s third most important tourist destinationafter Malaysia and Thailand, and in 2006 some 7.6 million tourists visited Singapore.
Most visitors were from other Southeast Asian nations, especially Malaysia, andfrom Japan.
C Manufacturing
Manufacturing accounts for 29 percent of the GDP.
Industry has grown rapidly since the 1960s, and Singapore now produces a diversity of goods, including electronicitems, chemicals, transportation equipment and machinery, petroleum products, rubber and plastic products, and fabricated metal products.
Electronic goods—notablycomputer disk drives, communications equipment, and televisions—account for about half of the country’s manufacturing output.
Singapore is one of the world’s largestpetroleum-refining centers and is also an important shipbuilding center.
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 0.9 percent of Singapore’s total area is farmland.
Vegetables, pigs, and poultry are raisedfor 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 tomeet 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 themain island is one of the largest and most modern international airports in the world.
Singapore Island is serviced by the Mass Rapid Transit (MRT) system, one of thecleanest and most efficient transit systems in the world.
It is supplemented by the Light Rail Transit (LRT) system.
The government has significantly expanded both rail.
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