By Peter A. Coclanis, Published The Straits Times, 29 Jul
2014
It has, for example, increased health subsidies for the elderly.
Through the National Wages Council it has also recommended significant wage
increases for the poorest-paid members of the labour force.
Such actions have surprised some critics, who have long
believed that the Government was committed, first and foremost, to limiting its
role and responsibilities in such realms to ensure that Singapore would not
succumb to some of the problems associated with over-extended welfare states in
the West.
Even before the recent moves, of course, Singapore was well
known for having created a social order and, indeed, a society that ranked at
or near the top of international league tables regarding material and social
well-being, as measured by such criteria as income and living standards, health
care, education, global competitiveness, transparency, lack of corruption and
global competitiveness. In so doing, Singapore also created a social order and
a society that fare pretty well even when employing moral calculus much
favoured by Western liberals.
In A Theory Of Justice (1971), his master work on morality
and political philosophy, the late Harvard professor John Rawls famously
employed the time-honoured "veil of ignorance" thought experiment to
evaluate the morality of political and social policy.
Through this experiment, Professor Rawls attempted to
establish a moral basis for a fair "social contract". He started from
a hypothetical "original position", in which a group of individuals
is tasked with developing principles and structures around which to organise a
society.
To Prof Rawls, the best way to ensure fairness and justness
in the society so established is for those involved to proceed behind a
"veil of ignorance", that is, a situation wherein "no one knows
his place in society, his class position or social status; nor does he know his
fortune in the distribution of natural assets and abilities, his intelligence
and strength, and the like".
With this veil in place, Prof Rawls believed, people would
behave more rationally, impartially, empathetically and morally.
In other words, the chance that a participant in the thought
experiment might be placed in society as a woman or a racial/ religious
minority, as a poor person or one with a physical handicap, as a person of
below-average intelligence, or a person without social capital or connections -
or some combination of the above - would lead people, at least at the margin,
to establish principles and structures that were both fair and humane to all.
Contemporary Singapore is no utopia and, like any other
society, it has its faults (increasingly, income and wealth inequality among
them). But in many ways it acquits itself well when judged by Rawlsian
criteria.
Obviously, few seriously question Singapore's achievements
in meeting its citizens' "basic needs" - subsistence, quality
education, access to quality housing and health care.
But what about other Rawlsian concerns?
In this regard, one might begin by pointing out that justice
and fairness are, more than anything else, about meeting basic needs. Over the
last half-century, Singaporeans have created a society that deftly balances
material well-being, educational opportunity, merit and "the right to
rise", personal safety and social security. It also extends such
"benefits" to the overwhelming majority of its citizens, regardless
of position.
Although there is no one index that captures such social
welfare accomplishments completely - the World Bank's Human Opportunity Index
shows potential, but is still being developed - Singapore generally ranks
highly in various international ranking schemes.
According to the United Nations Development Programme's
Human Development Index, for example, Singapore placed 18th out of 185 states
and territories ranked last year, even though its position has been hurt in
recent years because the index is now "inequality-adjusted".
Perhaps the most comprehensive, currently available index is
the Where-to-be-born Index, compiled by the Economic Intelligence Unit of The
Economist. This index brings together weighted economic, social, and political
data to establish a composite portrait of the overall quality of life in
countries around the world. It includes measures of income, education, health,
economic opportunity, job security, family life, gender equality, safety,
community life, and governance, at least some of which can be viewed as
imperfect proxies for fairness and justice.
Last year, Singapore ranked sixth out of 80 countries and
territories, behind Switzerland, Australia, Norway, Sweden and Denmark. The
Where-to-be-born Index is the closest thing to a Rawlsian index we have. And
Singapore, as we have just seen, scores very well indeed.
Moreover, one of the hallmarks of Singapore over time has
been the governing system's ability to move quickly and continually to
recalibrate public policy. This being the case, it seems possible, perhaps even
likely, that other elements important to Prof Rawls - such as individual
rights, and personal liberties - will rise in relative importance in the social
welfare equation in the years ahead.
Singaporeans have reason to feel good about what they have
created. Yet the country has a "brain drain" problem, arguably a
function of rising or perhaps even unrealistic expectations.
Let me end with another thought experiment which will
perhaps reinforce the need for perspective.
Ask yourself: If you had to land randomly anywhere on earth
- behind a veil of ignorance, not with curriculum vitae in hand - how many
places would be preferable to Singapore?
The writer is Albert R. Newsome Distinguished Professor of
history and director of the Global Research Institute at the University of
North Carolina at Chapel Hill.
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