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<!--Generated by Squarespace V5 Site Server v5.13.156 (http://www.squarespace.com) on Mon, 20 May 2013 13:55:43 GMT--><feed xmlns="http://www.w3.org/2005/Atom" xmlns:dc="http://purl.org/dc/elements/1.1/"><title>The Fertility Crisis In Singapore</title><subtitle>The Fertility Crisis In Singapore</subtitle><id>http://www.askmelah.com/the-fertility-crisis-in-singap/</id><link rel="alternate" type="application/xhtml+xml" href="http://www.askmelah.com/the-fertility-crisis-in-singap/"/><link rel="self" type="application/atom+xml" href="http://www.askmelah.com/the-fertility-crisis-in-singap/atom.xml"/><updated>2012-10-20T08:30:39Z</updated><generator uri="http://five.squarespace.com/" version="Squarespace V5 Site Server v5.13.156 (http://www.squarespace.com)">Squarespace</generator><entry><title>You, I and Us: The politics of birth</title><id>http://www.askmelah.com/the-fertility-crisis-in-singap/2012/9/8/you-i-and-us-the-politics-of-birth.html</id><link rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="http://www.askmelah.com/the-fertility-crisis-in-singap/2012/9/8/you-i-and-us-the-politics-of-birth.html"/><author><name>Askmelah</name></author><published>2012-09-07T16:18:01Z</published><updated>2012-09-07T16:18:01Z</updated><content type="html" xml:lang="en-US"><![CDATA[<p>by Devadas Krishnadas<br />Source: TODAYONLINE,&nbsp;Aug 23, 2012</p>
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<div><br />Mr Lee Kuan Yew recently commented that Singapore would "fold up" if we did not raise the birth rate.<br /><br />Mr  Lee's remarks were made against the backdrop of an announcement that  the Government would conduct another review of the Marriage and  Procreation policy.<br /><br />First off, whatever value judgments Singaporeans may make about his interpretation, no one can argue with the demographic facts.<br /><br />We  do have an abysmal birth rate, consequently we are dependent on  population augmentation, and this does have undesirable and  uncomfortable consequences; but if we do not reverse the first and if we  reject the second, we will face population decline within a generation.  There should be no dispute here.<br /><br />Predictably, however, Mr Lee's  point of view provoked a volley of comments from Singaporeans. I have  categorised the protestations into three buckets.<br /><br /><br /><strong>POINTING FINGERS</strong><br /><br />The  first bucket contains two strands of criticisms. One, that the  Government is being hypocritical because of the culpability of its "stop  at two" policy in causing the low birth rates.<br /><br />Proponents of  this view do not dispute the legitimacy of the argument that the birth  rate needs to increase, but absolve themselves of the responsibility of  doing anything about it because they view themselves as victims of a  past policy decision.<br /><br />The second criticism is that the  Government's emphasis on growth has shaped a mental model of  prioritising careers over family. The proponents of this school of  thinking are convinced that if the Government reduces the priority it  places on economic growth, the problem would remedy itself over time.<br /><br />The  second bucket is made up of the interesting critique that the  exhortation to increase the birth rate constitutes an intrusion into the  private space of individuals.<br /><br />Quite rightly, birth is an  intimate and personal decision. But it is a logical stretch to use this  truism as a basis to detect an authoritarian intent to conscript the  bodies of women to the national cause. This school of thinking perceives  the case for individual autonomy as trumping any call for collective  burden sharing. Although not fully embracing the idea of population  augmentation, the proponents of this view, by logical default, accept it  as a necessary evil.<br /><br />While not offering any solutions, this view  does move the discussion beyond finger pointing to the tensions between  individual choice and national interest.<br /><br />The third bucket of  criticism is from those who feel that high costs and inequality are the  impediments to procreation. They call for a more redistributive social  model as a response, not only to falling birth rates but also to close  the inequality gap.<br /><br />The virtuous amongst this group even  preemptively volunteer to pay higher taxes. Only proponents of this  perspective recognise the systemic nature of the problem and propose a  systemic response. Now let us take a closer look at these buckets.<br /><br /><br /><strong>THE 'YOU' PEOPLE<br /></strong><br />I  think of the first bucket as the "You" people. "You", because their  criticisms typically commence with that word, meaning the Government or  some Minister of the same. However sincere the motivating angst, there  are several problems with the case of the "You" people.<br /><br />First,  even if and where policy was misjudged, was there malicious intent and  what effect did the policy really have? The "stop at two" policy was  driven out of a fear that the population was growing faster than  economically viable. It reflects the sober and conservative expectations  for future economic performance in the midst of the global economic  shocks of the 1970s.<br /><br />It is hardly fair to indict past decision  makers with the benefit of 20-20 hindsight. Did the policy makers in the  past miscalculate? Perhaps, but not in the way the "you" people think.<br /><br />A  close study of the correlations between our birth rates and level of  economic development reveals that we followed a well-established pattern  of inverse correlation.<br /><br />In other words, even without the "stop  at two" policy, we should have expected to see the birth rate fall as it  did, as we became more affluent and our people, particularly women,  became better educated. So the argument for policy hypocrisy is  debatable.<br /><br />Second, the view that the emphasis on growth is a  major causation is a weak argument. It is too much to suggest that an  economy of our size and nature can function independently of global  economic events.<br /><br />Quite the opposite, we are almost wholly dependent on these events to dictate our economic performance.<br /><br />The  Government can only use policy to best position our economy for growth  and to cushion it when growth is absent. Notions such as "growth  calibration" are misguided. (A more valid criticism within this bucket  is that the Government has been quick to credit itself for growth but  attributes to global conditions the causation for its lack.)<br /><br />Further,  this bucket presents a too simplistic picture which casts the  Government in the role of the antagonist while the people are cast as  helpless victims absolved of responsibility for their future.<br /><br />Perhaps  the most limiting quality of this bucket is that it offers no ideas on  what to do next. So while the "you" bucket makes the most noise in  social media, it is probably because it conforms to the old axiom about  empty vessels.<br /><br /><br /><strong>THE 'I' PEOPLE</strong><br /><br />The "I" people, in the second bucket, think about themselves as almost wholly distinct from the collective.<br /><br />Admittedly,  the tension point between individual and the collective space would  seem an important determination. But while no one can deny that the  decision to procreate is a personal one, this does not make it mutually  exclusive with a discussion of aggregate procreation.<br /><br />The State  cannot force the individual course in the matter of procreation. What is  clear, after more than a decade of affirmative policy action, is that  promoting procreation with targeted policies has proved to be  spectacularly ineffective.<br /><br />We have also reason to suspect that  the targeted policies to limit procreation were probably less effectual  than is commonly assumed.<br /><br /><br /><strong>THE 'US' PEOPLE</strong><br /><br />The  third bucket is composed of the "Us" people, those who believe in social  models having determinative power over individual action. Of all the  buckets, only the "Us" people think in system terms.<br /><br />Their main  idea is that a different social safety net model would influence  personal behaviour. There have been many eloquent advocates in favour of  changing to a "Nordic" model characterised by higher taxation, a more  interventionist and deliberate redistributive model and greater State  presence in the social space.<br /><br />The motivations for promoting such  advocacy range from a desire for less inequality, more inclusiveness and  belief that if the costs of child rearing were socialised, then the  individual proclivities could be positively influenced in favour of  procreation.<br /><br />The problem is that we will never know for sure  whether moving in this direction will work until we try it. But trying  it has a very long tail, for we will need at least a generation to judge  the effects.<br /><br />The fiscal costs of the "Nordic" model should not  be underestimated. But neither should these cost projections be  considered sufficient argument not to go in this direction. The matter  is ultimately not one of whether we can afford it, but whether we want  to afford it. What is required is a deliberate, protracted and  participatory discussion as to the full meaning and potential  implications of such a systemic move.<br /><br />Given the importance of the  issue, the conversation should take place over a substantial period of  public and parliamentary debate which should include as many voices as  possible. The general public and civic groups should activate themselves  to participate as stakeholders in Singapore society. There need not be a  rush to consensus, we should take the time to get this right.<br /><br /><strong><br />PATH TO PROGRESS</strong><br /><br />We  need to move the debate forward, and out of the state of policy stasis.  All parties should be open to possible different futures. How do we do  this?<br /><br />First: Confront the facts.<br /><br />Second: Distinguish between the fatuous and the fair criticisms.<br /><br />Third:  Recognise that targeted policies have not worked, thus leaving us with  the implication that only a systemic adjustment would be of the scale  and dimension to match the nature of the problem.<br /><br />Fourth: Accept  that individual choices have a collectivised expression, but also that a  collectivised decision may well ultimately stand the best chance of  influencing individual choice.<br /><br />Fifth: The process of arriving at a  decision on a social model is important to the legitimacy of that  decision. And by social model, I mean more than a system of  redistribution but also a reconsideration of traditional notions of  family and the legitimacy of single mothers. A mark of social maturity  is the acceptance that while one may not adopt, or even approve, a  social choice, this does not give us the right to deny that choice to  another.<br /><br />It is an unsettling truth that we will not, for a long  time, be certain of the outcome of any decision to change. But this  should be contrasted with the more disturbing certainty of knowing the  result of continuing as we are.<br /><br />We need to enter into a national  conversation about the kind of future we want, and commit ourselves to  the price to be paid for the choice that we as a people make, and which  the Government then should implement, not the other way around.<br /><br /><br /><em>Devadas  Krishnadas is Director and Principal Consultant for Future-Moves, a  foresight consultancy. He has extensive policy and operational public  sector experience in Singapore and, as a Fulbright Scholar, read for a  Masters of Law and Diplomacy at the Fletcher School, Tufts University.</em></div>
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<h2>S'poreans respond to LKY's comments on birth rate</h2>
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<div class="byLineDateArticle">Source: Todayonline &nbsp; Aug 13, 2012</div>
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<div id="articlePage0" class="bodyText">Former Prime Minister Lee Kuan Yew's comments that Singapore would face "enormous" problems if Singaporeans do not procreate have sparked a debate on TODAY's Facebook page. Here are excerpts of the various viewpoints (40 comments as at press time) .<br /><br />Right off the bat, Mr Wong Teng and Mr Ian Cornelius Lai wondered if the "Stop at Two" policy, launched in the 1960s when Mr Lee was PM, was the root of today's low birth rates.<br /><br />This drew rebuttals from two other readers. As Mr Ngan Swee Heng put it, "This policy was discontinued in the 1980s; it is now 2012!" And even if it were still in place, he argued, many married couples today "have not even begun at one".<br /><br />He found support from Mr Terence Tan, who asked: "If everyone still stops at two ... how would there be a low fertility rate?" Last year's figures were 1.08 for the Chinese, 1.09 for Indians and 1.64 for Malays.<br /><br /><br /><strong>Affordability</strong><br /><br />It did not take long for the affordability issue to then be raised. "Who's going to address that?" asked Mr Billy Soh.<br /><br />Others had a different perspective. Ms Audrey Soo wrote, "Children are not unaffordable; it's our wants that are." Mr Rosman Ahmad added in agreement, "Children are a blessing, not a burden. We should live within our means and keep our expectations achievable."<br /><br />But Mr Soh persisted and called for the economic model "to be re-examined", while Mr Troy Parry went further to question if the economy "needs to keep growing".&nbsp;<br /><br />"There's a limit to everything, especially on this small island. The only reason why I see a need to keep the fertility rate high is the aging population ... Who'll replace (the baby boomers)? And who'll look after them?" wrote the latter.<br /><br />On this issue, Mr Tan urged discussants to see that "we need to be an economic power for other countries to respect us". "We're nothing without any natural resources. What will we do without economic success?" he posted.<br /><br /><br /><strong>Then and now<br /></strong><br /><br />To those like Mr Ben Oh, who maintained that he would not mind having more children if he was rich, Mr Ngan made a comparison to the past.<br /><br />"My parents had four children, and my wife's parents had eight children. I have two children. I believe it was tougher for my parents and my wife's parents to bring up their children than it was for me and my wife," he said.<br /><br />"Money is important, but not all-important. Otherwise ... poor people like me would be childless."<br /><br />Joining in the conversation, Mr Danny Seow distinguished between having more children and having them all be "equally successful", which requires two ingredients: "Time and money ... it's difficult to balance and achieve both in our society today."<br /><br />Points and counterpoints came fast and furious here. "If children don't possess good morals or are filial ... what's success?" wrote Mr Tan. "Even if their children aren't successful, (parents) would be glad if their children grow up to be good people."<br /><br />Mr Seow's reply: "Expectations of success change. Seeing your children grow up to have good values are indeed fulfilling, but seeing them suffer from stress, emotional instability due to economic uncertainty/burden is as painful.<br /><br />"(Today), to even have the 'opportunity' to live comfortably requires investment in education. Definitely, children have to work and persevere on their own ... but when will you inculcate such values? My bet is in their earlier childhood days."<br /><br /><strong>Who is responsible?</strong><br /><br />In his comments at his constituency's National Day dinner, Mr Lee also noted that "we cannot have new citizens, new permanent residents to settle our social ethos, our social spirit, our social norms".<br /><br />In his post, Mr Leonard Lim wondered, "It's a bit late to say that now, isn't it, when all of you were the ones who brought in the influx of new citizens to begin with?"<br /><br />But in another rebuttal, Mr Ngan wrote, "If Singapore survives the next 30 years ... will (our descendants) be proud of those among us who whined and blamed everybody except ourselves, instead of taking responsibility for our own shortcomings and selfishness?<br /><br />"Having children in Singapore isn't easy, but it can be done, and it's well worth doing, not just for the country but for ourselves."</div>
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</div>]]></content></entry><entry><title>Having a child - it's all in the mind</title><id>http://www.askmelah.com/the-fertility-crisis-in-singap/2012/8/1/having-a-child-its-all-in-the-mind.html</id><link rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="http://www.askmelah.com/the-fertility-crisis-in-singap/2012/8/1/having-a-child-its-all-in-the-mind.html"/><author><name>Askmelah</name></author><published>2012-07-31T17:10:00Z</published><updated>2012-07-31T17:10:00Z</updated><content type="html" xml:lang="en-US"><![CDATA[<p>Source: The Straits times &nbsp;30 Jul 2012</p>
<p><strong>NO AMOUNT of baby bonuses or increased maternity or paternity leave can encourage couples to have children</strong> ("Stress of raising children discourages pregnancies" by Dr Tham Meng Keat; last Thursday).</p>
<p>The fear of not knowing how to handle a newborn baby may be one reason why couples decide not to have children. Having to give up one's carefree and lavish lifestyle is another.</p>
<p>Apart from these, finding reliable caregivers to look after our children in their growing years and the prospect of having to give up our careers are other reasons.</p>
<p>Then, there is the issue of money. Will there be enough to raise a child or two?</p>
<p>Education is yet another concern. Will our children be able to cope with the demands of school? What about finding places in reputable primary schools? Can they earn degrees and land themselves well-paying jobs?</p>
<p>Children can bring great joy to a couple's life. A happy family need not be one that lives in a big house, with parents bringing home big pay packets, and children excelling academically.</p>
<p><strong>Maybe if we change our mindsets about what a happy family should be, then we can be encouraged to start one "bravely".</strong></p>
<p><strong>Geraldine Khong (Madam)</strong></p>]]></content></entry><entry><title>More well-educated women having abortions</title><id>http://www.askmelah.com/the-fertility-crisis-in-singap/2012/6/4/more-well-educated-women-having-abortions.html</id><link rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="http://www.askmelah.com/the-fertility-crisis-in-singap/2012/6/4/more-well-educated-women-having-abortions.html"/><author><name>Askmelah</name></author><published>2012-06-03T17:00:11Z</published><updated>2012-06-03T17:00:11Z</updated><content type="html" xml:lang="en-US"><![CDATA[<p>Reading The Sunday Times news special on abortion ("Up for foreigners, down for S'poreans"), the one story that caught my eyes was related by a doctor who said he had a patient, a banking professional in her 30s, who ended her second pregnancy so she could retire at 45 as planned. He said she figured she would have to put off retirement by 10 years to maintain the same standard of living if she had the baby.</p>
<p>Askmelah is speechless and feel like jumping off the cliff. This is the epitome of selfishness at its crudest form to achieve one's dream of retiring early by killing a life! Such is the morale decay in the new generation as a result of our affluence.</p>]]></content></entry><entry><title>The parallels of Japan and Singapore low fertility rate</title><id>http://www.askmelah.com/the-fertility-crisis-in-singap/2012/4/27/the-parallels-of-japan-and-singapore-low-fertility-rate.html</id><link rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="http://www.askmelah.com/the-fertility-crisis-in-singap/2012/4/27/the-parallels-of-japan-and-singapore-low-fertility-rate.html"/><author><name>Askmelah</name></author><published>2012-04-27T05:51:50Z</published><updated>2012-04-27T05:51:50Z</updated><content type="html" xml:lang="en-US"><![CDATA[<p>Reading the article "Three reasons Japan's pain is getting worse" by Jared Diamond (Todayonline 27 Arp 2012), where the first part of the article attempts to explain the low fertilit rate in Japan, one can be forgiven that he is talking about Singapore as the reasons for the low fertility rate in both countries are uncanningly similar, here is an extract:</p>
<p><em><strong>"They report that most single adult Japanese still live with  their parents, because it is comfortable to live at home and expensive  to leave. <br /><br /> Young Japanese feel more comfortable  communicating with each other electronically than by phone or in person.  "Over the years that the formerly widespread practice of arranged  marriage almost completely disappeared", one person explained to me,  "the digital revolution made it increasingly difficult for Japanese to  develop the social skills necessary to woo a potential spouse  themselves."<br /><br /> Among men, the biggest reasons given for not  marrying are worries about their economic future and their ability to  bear the responsibility for a family.<br /><br /> Married women tend to  manage the household finances and take care of both their own and their  husbands' parents, and many of them now swear they will be the last  generation to be saddled with those burdens.<br /><br /> Career women,  who find strength in their education, jobs and earning power, are  capable of supporting themselves in the style to which they aspire, and  are buying condominiums and planning for their own retirements. If they  do want to marry, they find that their age is an obstacle, because  Japanese men over the age of 40 want much younger women. <br /><br /> If they do want children, Japanese societal support for working mothers  is low. Hence they either forgo children, or leave the workforce or even  leave Japan, and that represents a big loss of human capital for the  country."</strong></em></p>]]></content></entry><entry><title>Just the two of us (More married couples not having babies)</title><id>http://www.askmelah.com/the-fertility-crisis-in-singap/2012/4/17/just-the-two-of-us-more-married-couples-not-having-babies.html</id><link rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="http://www.askmelah.com/the-fertility-crisis-in-singap/2012/4/17/just-the-two-of-us-more-married-couples-not-having-babies.html"/><author><name>Askmelah</name></author><published>2012-04-17T02:49:51Z</published><updated>2012-04-17T02:49:51Z</updated><content type="html" xml:lang="en-US"><![CDATA[<p class="date-header"><span>Source: </span><span style="font-family: inherit;">The Straits Times </span><span>15 April 2012</span></p>
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<div style="text-align: justify;"><span style="font-family: inherit;"><strong><span style="color: orange;">More married couples not having children; women in study cite financial constraints, careers as reasons</span></strong></span></div>
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<div style="text-align: justify;"><span style="font-family: inherit;">The  ranks of married Singaporeans remaining childless have grown in the  past decade and a small-scale study has shed some light on why some  women have chosen not to procreate.</span></div>
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<div style="text-align: justify;"><span style="font-family: inherit;">In  2010, 20.5 per cent of ever-married female citizens in the 30 to 39 age  group were childless - and that is a significant jump from the 13.2 per  cent in 2000, said demographer Gavin Jones.</span></div>
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<div style="text-align: justify;"><span style="font-family: inherit;">By  the end of their child-bearing years, the proportion of married women  in their 40s who are childless has also risen in the past decade,  although not as sharply as those in their 30s, he noted.</span></div>
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<div style="text-align: justify;"><span style="font-family: inherit;">In  2010, 8.6 per cent of ever-married female citizens in the 40 to 49 age  group were childless - up from 6</span><span> </span>per cent in 2000. Ever-married refers  to those currently married, divorced or widowed.</div>
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<p>The latest Census data suggests that more married Singaporeans were not having babies, said Professor Jones of the Asia Research Institute. The figure includes women who want children but are infertile.</p>
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<div>This trend is a headache for policymakers struggling to boost Singapore's shrinking birth rates.</div>
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<div style="text-align: justify;"><span style="font-family: inherit;">But  not all women who have decided against motherhood are doing so because  they do not want children, according to an in-depth study of 16 married  Chinese Singaporean women who have chosen not to have babies.</span></div>
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<div>For  the eight women without degrees and earning an average monthly pay of  $2,350, the most commonly cited reason for being childless is a lack of  money. Most said they desire children but feel that they cannot afford  to raise a child in costly and highly competitive Singapore.</div>
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<div>The  top reason against babies for university-educated women who take home  an average monthly pay of $6,250 is that they feel they cannot juggle  motherhood and a job, and are unwilling to sacrifice their career  prospects.</div>
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<div style="text-align: justify;"><span style="font-family: inherit;">The  qualitative study is the first published research examining why Chinese  Singaporean women consciously choose not to have children, Nanyang  Technological University sociology professor Caroline Pluss, 48, told  The Sunday Times.</span></div>
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<div style="text-align: justify;"><span style="font-family: inherit;">Her  former student Amanda Ee, 25, and Hong Kong sociologist Chan Kwok-bun,  62, also authored the study. It will be published in Springer's  International Handbook of Chinese Families later this year.</span></div>
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<div style="text-align: justify;">The  study, while not representative of Singapore's population, provides a  'unique insight' into a phenomenon not openly discussed or well  understood, said Professor Pluss, who has a young son.</div>
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<div style="text-align: justify;"><span style="font-family: inherit;">Its  sample size is small given that married women who choose not to have  children are in the minority and it is hard to get them to open up.  Qualitative studies also usually involve a small number of people.</span></div>
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<div style="text-align: justify;"><span style="font-family: inherit;">In  fact, most women interviewed preferred to keep mum about their  decisions not to have children, as it is considered a deviant attitude  in family-friendly Singapore, said Miss Ee, who is single. All the women  had to persuade their husbands not to have children.</span></div>
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<div style="text-align: justify;"><span style="font-family: inherit;">The  university-educated women did not see the need for children to complete  their families, she added, even though society usually defines a family  as a couple with children.</span></div>
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<div style="text-align: justify;"><span style="font-family: inherit;">Aside  from financial constraints, the less-educated women also said they were  deterred by the lack of reliable help in raising children, such as from  parents.</span></div>
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<div style="text-align: justify;"><span style="font-family: inherit;">Both  groups of women were loath to give up their time and freedom, and  anticipated that their husbands would not do their share in caring for  Junior.</span></div>
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<div style="text-align: justify;"><span style="font-family: inherit;">Jane,  a 32-year-old graduate and business development officer who was not  involved in the study, said that she and her bank employee husband of  three years do not want children because it means a lifetime of having  to worry about everything from care to getting them into good schools.</span></div>
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<div style="text-align: justify;"><span style="font-family: inherit;">Jane,  who has a master's degree and declined to give her full name, said:  'It's too much trouble. I don't think having kids are worth it. There's  just too much to think about.'</span></div>
<p>&nbsp;</p>]]></content></entry><entry><title>Singaporeans in danger of extinction?</title><id>http://www.askmelah.com/the-fertility-crisis-in-singap/2012/3/29/singaporeans-in-danger-of-extinction.html</id><link rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="http://www.askmelah.com/the-fertility-crisis-in-singap/2012/3/29/singaporeans-in-danger-of-extinction.html"/><author><name>Askmelah</name></author><published>2012-03-29T01:43:01Z</published><updated>2012-03-29T01:43:01Z</updated><content type="html" xml:lang="en-US"><![CDATA[<p><em><strong>Source: The Sunday Times&nbsp; 25 Mar 2012</strong></em></p>
<p>Singaporeans are in danger of disappearing by 2100 if they continue not having enough babies.<br /> <br /> Dr Hans Rosling made that prediction as he said Singapore has yet to  feel the brunt of declining fertility and a rapidly ageing society.<br /> <br /> If the babies do not come, this place will just fill up with old people, he said, tossing up the numbers that tell the story.<br /> <br /> <strong>With a total fertility rate (TFR) - or births per woman - of 1.2 last  year, Singapore has one of the lowest fertility rates in the world.</strong><br /> <span class="fullpost"><br /> Latest United Nations data puts Singapore's five-year average TFR at  1.37 for 2010 to 2015, compared with 2.57 in Malaysia, and 2.06 in  Indonesia. Even Japan has a higher rate of 1.42 and South Korea, 1.39.<br /> <br /> What it means is that by 2030, Singapore will have as many people above  75 years of age as young people below 15, and an ever shrinking number  of young people will have to look after a growing number of elderly  folk. <strong>(Askmelah's Note: it is puzzling then why we import so many immigrants in the last few years, adding to the looming aging problem to come in 20 years time. There must be something the Government knows that Dr. Rosling does not know, or is it a grave Government misstep? Another irony: "Declining birth rates and its impact on Singapore's population represents a "big challenge" facing the Singapore Armed Forces (SAF) over the next decade, said Defence Minister Ng Eng Hen (<a href="http://www.todayonline.com/Singapore/EDC120630-0000102/NS-enlistment-numbers-could-dip-by-25-per-cent-in-2025,-Defence-Minister-says,">Source</a>)" this is probably the only country which faces a weir<strong>d</strong>&nbsp;phenomenon where the population almost Double in 20 years time an yet the eligible NSers <strong>d</strong>ecline.)</strong><br /> <br /> That is when Singapore will really need immigrants, to fill up the gaps in the population and to keep the economy humming.<br /> <br /> Dr Rosling, a sought-after international speaker and Swedish global  health professor and public statistics advocate, was in Singapore  earlier this month to give a talk.<br /> <br /> He was not short of ideas to encourage Singapore women to have babies.<br /> <br /> On a previous visit two years ago, he said <strong>gender equality </strong>was key to  fixing the great baby shortage, couples deserved more than four months'  paid maternity leave, and Singapore men had to get more involved in  child-rearing.<br /> <br /> <strong>Relying less on foreign maids </strong>would do wonders for getting husbands more involved in raising their families, he felt.<br /> <br /> Adding to that list on his recent visit, he said the baby situation  would improve if more was done to <strong>erase the stigma of divorce or being a  single mother</strong>.<br /> <br /> 'Allow women to divorce, give them favourable conditions... and you will  get more marriages and children,' he said, though he acknowledged that  this might be controversial in a society with Asian values.<br /> <br /> Recounting a recent conversation in Hong Kong with an unmarried,  childless Asian woman in her 30s, he said: 'I asked her, do you not like  children? She replied, '<strong>Oh yes, I do. It's the idea of a husband that I  don't like.</strong>''<br /> <br /> As the laughter from his audience died down, Dr Rosling pointed out that  Singapore is not the only country with a falling birth rate.<br /> <br /> Across the globe, as countries mature, people are having fewer children. Many couples stop at two.<br /> <br /> The result is that the number of children in the world has stopped growing.<br /> <br /> 'The world has hit 'peak child',' he said, noting that the number of  children in the world has hit 1.9 billion today and will likely maintain  or dip slightly below this level from now up to 2100.<br /> <br /> 'People think the global fertility rate is somewhere around 3.5 births per woman, but in reality, that number is 2.4 today.'<br /> <br /> Dr Rosling also emphasised that - contrary to what some  environmentalists say about population growth aggravating climate change  - it is not a growing number of people that is the major concern.<br /> <br /> Rather, growing resource constraints will come from the existing  billions in developing countries rising to the wealth and consumption  levels of the richest countries.<br /> <br /> Arising from this is the threat of war as countries jostle for land and  resources, and also increased poverty due to the rising prices of fuel,  fertilisers and food.<br /> <br /> He accused some environmentalists of pushing 'a toxic combination of  arrogant and ignorant views of the world' by saying the world would  cease functioning if Asia began using as much oil as Europe and the  United States.<br /> <br /> <strong>'Frankly, I can live without the polar bear,' he said. 'But I cannot  bear the thought of one billion people dying from terrible famines and  wars.'</strong><br /> <br /> He said the solution lay not in controlling population growth, but in changing the way people live.<br /> <br /> The world has the ability to harness technology and produce more food  with fewer resources to feed a growing population - but there must also  be a change in lifestyles.<br /> <br /> This includes getting people to eat less meat, consume fewer goods and  buy products that have a minimal impact on the environment.<br /> <br /> Clearly someone who loves children, Dr Rosling said: 'People use the  term 'population explosion', which I find severely derogative - you are  calling a loved child a bomb!'<br /> <br /> Life is more meaningful with children, he added. People and governments  must weigh the trade-offs when people choose to have fewer babies.<br /> <br /> 'What is it that makes a society choose a brand-new luxury car over one more child?' he asked. <br /> <br /> HUMOROUS YET DEADLY SERIOUS<br /> <br /> Dr Hans Rosling teaches global health at Sweden's Karolinska Institutet,  which selects winners for the Nobel Prize in medicine, but is arguably  more well-known for his humorous but 'deadly serious' lectures on  statistics which he conducts worldwide and which are viewed by millions  on the Web.<br /> <br /> He co-founded the non-profit group Gapminder Foundation in 2005 with his  son and daughter-in-law, which features a Trendalyser software that  animates global development statistics, usually from the United Nations,  to help people form a sharper view of the world. The software has since  been acquired by tech giant Google.<br /> <br /> He is married with three children and each has three children.<br /> <br /> He was in Singapore earlier this month to give a lecture organised by the Royal Geographical Society.</span></p>]]></content></entry><entry><title>Fewer babies despite more Singaporeans and PRs</title><id>http://www.askmelah.com/the-fertility-crisis-in-singap/2011/6/16/fewer-babies-despite-more-singaporeans-and-prs.html</id><link rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="http://www.askmelah.com/the-fertility-crisis-in-singap/2011/6/16/fewer-babies-despite-more-singaporeans-and-prs.html"/><author><name>Askmelah</name></author><published>2011-06-16T03:02:09Z</published><updated>2011-06-16T03:02:09Z</updated><content type="html" xml:lang="en-US"><![CDATA[<div class="smallfont">
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<p>Source: AsiaOne&nbsp; Sun, Jun 12, 2011</p>
<p>37,967 babies were born in 2010, according to figures from  the Department of Statistics.<br /> <br /> This is the lowest number of births since 2005. Singapore's total  fertility rate (TFR), which measures the average number of children a  woman will have in her lifetime, also sank to a low of 1.16. <em><strong>(Askmelah's Note: It is the Tiger year effect, Stupid! You will see a surge again in 2012.)</strong></em><br /> <br /> This is despite the surge of immigrants of child-bearing age over the  past ten years, reported The Straits Times today.<br /> <br /> Singapore's racial balance is also gradually changing, noted  demographers in The Straits Times report.<br /> <br /> More Indian and 'Other' babies were born, and their proportion has been  increasing every year since 2005.<br /> <br /> Indian babies made up 11.3 per cent of births - an increase from 9.8 per  cent five years ago. Indians also made up a higher percentage of the  population (9.2 per cent), as compared to a decade ago (7.9 per cent),  reported The Straits Times.<br /> <br /> In contrast, Chinese and Malay births show a downward trend. Chinese  babies made up 61.4 per cent of the babies born in Singapore last year,  down from 64.8 per cent the year before. Malay babies made up 15 per  cent of births in 2010, down from 17.4 per cent in 2006.﻿</p>
<p><a href="http://www.flickr.com/photos/52865067@N03/5837767165/" title="singapore baby drought by Askmelah, on Flickr"><img src="http://farm6.static.flickr.com/5065/5837767165_4432ca526c.jpg" width="500" height="187" alt="singapore baby drought"></a></p>]]></content></entry><entry><title>Money talks when S’pore women say ‘I love you’</title><id>http://www.askmelah.com/the-fertility-crisis-in-singap/2011/6/15/money-talks-when-spore-women-say-i-love-you.html</id><link rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="http://www.askmelah.com/the-fertility-crisis-in-singap/2011/6/15/money-talks-when-spore-women-say-i-love-you.html"/><author><name>Askmelah</name></author><published>2011-06-15T11:33:01Z</published><updated>2011-06-15T11:33:01Z</updated><content type="html" xml:lang="en-US"><![CDATA[<p><span style="font-weight: normal;"><strong>Source: Straits Times, 15 June 2011 &nbsp; June 15th, 2011</strong></span></p>
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<p>BLAME the material girl for Singapore&rsquo;s baby woes.</p>
<p>Cupid and the stork had no luck last year, with the number of marriages and babies born dipping to yet another record low.</p>
<p>New research by Singapore Management University (SMU) psychology  professor Norman Li could shed some light on Singapore&rsquo;s ever-shrinking  birth rate. His study, published earlier this year, shows that  Singaporean women are &rsquo;significantly&rsquo; more materialistic than their  American peers.</p>
<p><strong>When it comes to looking for a potential spouse, the top criterion  for Singaporean women is a man&rsquo;s social status. Next on the list is  kindness, followed by a lively personality. In contrast, American women  value kindness the most, followed by looks, then a man&rsquo;s social  standing.</strong></p>
<p>Prof Li did not ask his subjects for their reasons but said he is not  surprised by the finding. &lsquo;Maybe Singaporean women are just being  realistic. Here, you need a lot of money to survive and afford an  affluent lifestyle. Maybe they are just being practical,&rsquo; he said.</p>
<p>He and his associates surveyed about 400 psychology students aged  between 19 and 21, studying at the SMU and the Northern Illinois  University near Chicago in the United States, on their attitudes towards  marriage, children and preferences when it comes to choosing a partner.</p>
<p>The study found no major differences when it comes to men: Both  American and Singaporean men went for looks first. The second most  important trait in a spouse for men was kindness and the third was a  lively personality.</p>
<p>&lsquo;Men are wired to go for looks,&rsquo; he explained, adding that a woman&rsquo;s  physical attractiveness is a visual cue for fertility. Features such as  &rsquo;soft skin, full-looking lips and colourful cheeks&rsquo; are not just  attractive, but also associated with youth, which indicates a woman&rsquo;s  fertility. That is why men tend to go for younger women, he explained.</p>
<p>Prof Li, a 45-year-old American-born Chinese, knows this first-hand.  His American wife, Ruth, is 21 years his junior. Mrs Li, now a  housewife, was his student when he was lecturing at the University of  Texas at Austin before he came to Singapore in 2008. They have a  two-year-old son, Jasper.</p>
<p>His research also showed that the pursuit of material success is at  odds with the desire to settle down and have babies. &lsquo;Lots of past  research have shown that the more materialistic you are, the less you  place value on having friends and family,&rsquo; he said.</p>
<p>It&rsquo;s a simple trade-off, he added. We have only so much time and energy, and chasing one goal means giving up another ideal.</p>
<p>Another possible factor has to do with one&rsquo;s source for fulfilment,  whether it is strong family ties or material success. He said: &lsquo;If you  have good relationships, you may not need to value material things  because you already feel good.&rsquo;</p>
<p>However, he noted that research has not determined which comes first:  &lsquo;Do people pursue material goals and then abandon friends and family,  or is it because they are no good at having friends and family and so  they make up for it by grabbing onto material things?&rsquo;</p>
<p>He said he decided to study Singapore&rsquo;s baby woes from a  psychological perspective after learning that it was an utmost national  concern. By and large, he noted, wealthier countries tend to have lower  birth rates. Yet &rsquo;significant differences&rsquo; still occur among countries  which enjoy similar levels of economic development, he said.</p>
<p>That is why he decided to compare Singapore and the US. Singapore  ranks ninth out of 229 countries, while the US takes the 10th place, in  terms of per capita gross domestic product, according to the Central  Intelligence Agency World Factbook.</p>
<p>Yet the US&rsquo; total fertility rate (TFR) at 2.05 in 2009 was almost  double Singapore&rsquo;s rate of 1.22. Last year, Singapore&rsquo;s TFR, which  measures the average number of children a woman will bear in her  lifetime, sank to a historic low of 1.16.</p>
<p>Only 37,967 babies were born last year, the lowest number since 2005  when Singapore saw 37,492 births, despite the surge in the number of new  citizens and permanent residents in recent years. And only 24,363  couples tied the knot last year &ndash; the lowest since 2007, when 23,966  couples wed.</p>
<p>In a Family Research Network forum presentation on singlehood at the  National University of Singapore last month, Prof Li pointed out that  Singaporeans &ndash; both men and women &ndash; are &rsquo;significantly&rsquo; less satisfied  with life than Americans.</p>
<p>Americans scored an average of five, while Singaporeans came in at  4.38 in his study. The closer the score is to seven, the more satisfied  with life the respondents are. Singaporean women were also found to be  &rsquo;significantly&rsquo; more materialistic than American women. They polled an  average of 3.98, compared to the American women&rsquo;s score of 3.74. The  closer the score is to five, the more materialistic one is deemed to be.</p>
<p>While the study did not ask respondents for the reasons behind their  answers, Prof Li feels that the relentless rat race and high cost of  living are possible reasons Singaporeans are less happy with life and  are more inclined to go after money and success.</p>
<p>While it is expensive to live in major US cities such as New York or  Los Angeles, there are plenty of places in the US to &lsquo;live comfortably&rsquo;  for a lot less money than in Singapore. &lsquo;It&rsquo;s not that hard to buy a  house and car in the US,&rsquo; he said.</p>
<p>Besides, with the globalised economy and outsourcing, Singaporeans  are vulnerable to losing their jobs to a foreigner any time. &lsquo;People  can&rsquo;t really relax. Can you really get to the point where you feel  comfortable? People just don&rsquo;t get to that point any more,&rsquo; he noted.</p>
<p>Also, Singaporeans, like other Asians, tend to worry more about life  than Westerners, who are &lsquo;more relaxed&rsquo; and more comfortable with facing  the unknown.</p>
<p>&lsquo;I think you have to work really hard and succeed before you can  relax here,&rsquo; he said. &lsquo;On average, people in the West are able to enjoy  life as they go along. They are not going to kill themselves to  succeed.&rsquo;</p>
<p>So what is the bottom line?</p>
<p>He pronounced: &lsquo;Materialism is a double-edged sword.&rsquo; While  materialistic values spur the economy to greater heights, they dampens  people&rsquo;s desire for family and children.</p>
<p>His research shows that people who are less satisfied with life and  value material success more are less likely to view marriage and  procreation &lsquo;favourably&rsquo;. For career-minded women, having children &ndash; or  more children for that matter &ndash; is a drain on their time and resources.</p>
<p>With more women taking on high-flying jobs and their expectations of  their partners rising as their own earning power soars, he reckoned  getting the dismal birth rate up will be &lsquo;very, very difficult&rsquo; unless a  shift in values away from materialism towards more pro-family values  occurs.</p>
<p>But beyond saying that more monetary incentives are unlikely to spur  the stork to visit more often, he refused to delve further into  pro-natal incentives that will work, insisting that is not his area.</p>
<p>His research mainly explores &lsquo;what do people really look for in  mates&rsquo; and the science of attraction, love and lust in people, he  maintained.</p>
<p>So has knowing all about women&rsquo;s psyche helped in his own pursuit of  happiness? Prof Li is the first to admit he has had &lsquo;mixed success&rsquo; and  made &lsquo;lots of mistakes&rsquo; in his love life, despite his vast research on  the topic. His first marriage, to a former postgraduate course mate,  broke down after four years due to &lsquo;different values&rsquo;.</p>
<p>&lsquo;There&rsquo;s a difference between knowing what you should do and doing  it. Doing it is not always easy,&rsquo; he said. &lsquo;I&rsquo;m reasonably confident  that I can tell when someone is interested in me. I can generally  interest someone who might be interested in me but I could use more work  in the relationship maintenance department.&rsquo; &ndash; ST</p>
</div>]]></content></entry><entry><title>Religion - The key to pro-creation?</title><id>http://www.askmelah.com/the-fertility-crisis-in-singap/2011/6/6/religion-the-key-to-pro-creation.html</id><link rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="http://www.askmelah.com/the-fertility-crisis-in-singap/2011/6/6/religion-the-key-to-pro-creation.html"/><author><name>Askmelah</name></author><published>2011-06-06T02:35:59Z</published><updated>2011-06-06T02:35:59Z</updated><content type="html" xml:lang="en-US"><![CDATA[<h3 class="entry-title post-title">Baby steps in procreation</h3>
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<div class="byline">By                      Ong Soh Chin, Senior Writer</div>
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<br /> Source: The Straits Times, 03 Feb 2011
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<br /> AS A Singaporean who just managed to scrape past the  post-65  demographic gate, I am old enough to remember vividly the  Singapura  before the economic miracle, yet young enough to have been  able to  enjoy all the spoils of my country's remarkable transformation. <br /> <br /> And enjoy them, I have. <br /> <br /> My peers and I have benefited from a good education and good  career  opportunities that have kept us engaged intellectually and  socially,  both at home and overseas.<br /> <br /> We have traversed the world for  work and play, as one would catch a  bus; while a generation ago, some of  our parents regarded each plane  trip as a rare pilgrimage.<br /> <br /> We have  dined on food fit for emperors; while a generation ago, some of  our  parents regarded rice and soya sauce as luxuries. We have also  pretty  much missed the boat on having babies. <br /> <br /> There are those who would sniff at my demographic - the  single, older  and childless woman - as an aberration of all that is good  in nature.  They say we are, among other things, selfish, self-centred  and  narcissistic. <br /> <br /> I agree with them. <br /> <br /> But who could blame us for being so? Mine was the first  generation to  really taste the first fruits of progress, and it has been  a heady  addiction that has fed the growth of the country. The fact that   Singapore has so many successful and independent women, childless or   not, married or otherwise, is a shining testament to Singapore Inc.<br /> <br /> We could not have been luckier or more grateful. And we would not have  had it any other way.<br /> <br /> In the meantime, however, our country's birth rate has been  falling as  steadily as Raddy Avramovic's chances of winning a Coach Of  The Year  award.<br /> <br /> My peers and I have watched - with varying degrees of  disgruntlement  over the years - the ongoing state policies of  incentivising young,  married couples to have more babies. <br /> <br /> We have also watched - with emotions vacillating from  despair,  disaffection and smugness - as these policies have largely  fallen on  deaf wombs.<br /> <br /> The usual reasons have been trotted out - the high cost of  living, the  pressure-cooker environment, the lack of time, the  unaffordability of  housing. <br /> <br /> But, at the same time, there is a queasy realisation that  these cannot  be the real reasons. If so, people in impoverished  countries would not  be breeding at the rate they are. There is arguably  no greater pressure  than the realisation that you may not be able to  feed and clothe your  family.<br /> <br /> Fear, however, can be a powerful demotivator and  disincentive to  procreate. I don't mean fear of the 'will I be able to  afford my  child's education?' variety. But the giant psychical fear  existing in  the subconscious that we may not be here for very long.<br /> <br /> As a barely post-65 Singaporean, it is deeply embedded in my  DNA that  our nation has been a miraculous freak of nature, coming into  being by  sheer force of will, riding perilously, but deftly, on the  tsunami  waves of change rippling across the region.<br /> <br /> It is a chord that is still being sounded today. We must not  take  Singapore for granted. All that we have today may not be here  tomorrow.  We have enemies that are just waiting for us to fail. We are  an  80-storey building on marshy land.<br /> <br /> These are hard truths. And Singaporeans, being ever the  pragmatic kiasi  lot, may have imbibed them a little too enthusiastically  on the  conscious, as well as subconscious, level. If all that we know  and love  may not even be here tomorrow, why bother having children  today?<br /> <br /> There is one demographic that appears to be bucking the  trend, however.  Recently, The Straits Times featured several graduate  couples who were  choosing to have big families of as many as seven  children. Their one  unifying thread? Religious values. Religion promises  life eternal and a  greater reward for believers and their issue after  they have shrugged  off this mortal passport.<br /> <br /> But are Singaporeans who choose to keep the faith in other  ways doomed  to extinction? In the interests of public morale, and as a  responsible,  law-abiding, tax-paying, agnostic and ultimately hopeful  citizen, I  say no. Because there are other avenues that have yet to be  explored.<br /> <br /> Some of my peers - single and married - would love to become  mothers,  now that they are financially stable and emotionally mature.  But they  may not be able to do it the natural way.<br /> <br /> Singapore has never failed to rise to the challenge, even if  it has  meant making tough decisions. Its population may be ageing, but  it is  also healthier and living longer than ever before. <br /> <br /> If we are being encouraged to work past the current  retirement age of  62 - it will be 65 in January next year and possibly  up to 68 later on -  who is to say that older women cannot be fit and  able mothers?<br /> <br /> The only thing against us, really, is biology. And a certain  measure of  public resistance, perhaps, to unconventional solutions that  explore,  encourage and support adoption and surrogacy options. <br /> <br /> We may or may not be looking at an opportunity to reverse the trend. But  at the very least, it may be worth a shot.<br /> <br /> After all, the obstacles to solving our baby problem may not just be  nature, but our own man-made inflexibilities.<br /></div>]]></content></entry><entry><title>The need for Pro-Family infrastructure.... Sadly is lacking</title><id>http://www.askmelah.com/the-fertility-crisis-in-singap/2011/4/21/the-need-for-pro-family-infrastructure-sadly-is-lacking.html</id><link rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="http://www.askmelah.com/the-fertility-crisis-in-singap/2011/4/21/the-need-for-pro-family-infrastructure-sadly-is-lacking.html"/><author><name>Askmelah</name></author><published>2011-04-20T16:10:15Z</published><updated>2011-04-20T16:10:15Z</updated><content type="html" xml:lang="en-US"><![CDATA[<p>&nbsp;</p>
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<div id="articlePage0" class="bodyText"><br /><br />I AM working full-time and my husband is currently on a long-term overseas working stint. My official working hours end at 6.30pm and I usually take about an hour via public transport to get from Raffles Place to Sengkang to pick my son up from his childcare centre every day, while my mother helps to take care of my 17-month-old daughter at home.<br /><br />At first, this arrangement suited me as the childcare centre closed at 9pm. Two years ago, they changed this to 8pm, and then they adjusted it again last year to 7.30pm.&nbsp;<br /><br />I was alarmed by the new timing as this meant I could not afford any unexpected delays or mishaps. I had to brave the crazy rush-hour traffic with my heart in my mouth, praying I would not be late to pick up my son or else I would be fined.<br /><br />The final bombshell came last month, when the centre issued a notice to say they would adjust the closing time to 7pm with effect from June 1 this year in accordance with stipulations by the Ministry for Community Development, Youth and Sports. I was shocked - no way am I going to be able to make the trip in half an hour.<br /><br />I do not have anyone else to rely on to pick up my son, and I have already tried calling other childcare centres to seek a place for him, to no avail.&nbsp;<br /><br />As most of the centres were full as of March, I can only be on the waiting list. I am near to desperation for an alternative. Where can I seek help?&nbsp;</div>
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<div class="articleHeadline" style="font-size: 140%;"><a href="http://www.todayonline.com/Voices/EDC110425-0000247/Closing-time-for-childcare-centres-not-mandated-beyond-7pm"><strong>Closing time for childcare centres not mandated beyond 7pm</strong></a></div>
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<div id="ctl00_cph1_ArticleContents1_authorNameTag" class="authorName">Letter from Musa Fazal Director, Child Care Division, MCYS</div>
<div class="byLineDateArticle">Source: Todayonline Apr 25, 2011</div>
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<div id="articlePage0" class="bodyText">I REFER to the letters from Ms Esther Tan ("Earlier closing hours at child care centre leave mum in a bind") and Ms Shirlene Sim ("Childcare a hassle for parents in CBD") on April 20 and 21 respectively.<br /><br />The MCYS recognises the demands working parents face and their need for accessible childcare arrangements. We work with relevant agencies to provide suitable premises for the setting up of child care centres at different locations around Singapore. We also provide funding so as to lower the cost of child care to parents.<br /><br />Childcare centres in Singapore are required to commence daily operations by 7am and close not earlier than 7pm. Today, some 115 centres offer extended operating hours beyond the minimum requirement, including 24 centres that operate up to 8pm and eight centres that operate up to 9pm.&nbsp;<br /><br />Parents can search for child care centres most suited to their needs from our Child Care Link website, www.childcarelink.gov.sg.<br /><br />In assessing whether to extend the operating hours, individual child care centres take into account factors such as the demand for such services. Making it mandatory for all child care centres to extend operating hours beyond 7pm will make it difficult for some child care centres to be viable.<br /><br />This may in turn reduce the supply of child care centres. It could also raise cost, and make childcare less affordable for parents.&nbsp;<br /><br />We thank Ms Tan and Ms Sim for their feedback. The MCYS will continue to work towards making child care more accessible for working parents.</div>
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<h3 class="articleHeadline"><a href="http://www.todayonline.com/Hotnews/EDC120220-0000051/Its-not-about-the-money-%2C%2C%2C"><strong style="font-size: 130%;">It's not about the money ...</strong></a></h3>
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<div class="articleHeadline">Source: Todayonline 20 Feb 2012</div>
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<p>Solutions to fertility woes could focus on the workplace, given  limited impact of Baby Bonus Scheme</p>
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<p>Money, it seems, has had little or no impact in getting Singaporeans  to have more babies: Almost S$2 billion in Baby Bonuses have been given out  since the scheme started in 2001. The falling birth rate, however, has yet to be  reversed. <br /><br />Now, the focus appears to have shifted to the workplace, as  policy makers continue to rack their brains over the solution to Singapore's low  birth rate. <br /><br />Despite the urgency of the problem, the absence of any  enhancements to the Baby Bonus Scheme in last Friday's Budget - the last time  the scheme was enhanced was in 2008 - has led some to question if the scheme has  outlived its usefulness. (read <a href="http://www.todayonline.com/Hotnews/EDC120220-0000051/Its-not-about-the-money-%2C%2C%2C">more</a>)</p>
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