Wan
Zaleha smiles as the smell of freshly-brewed coffee permeates the air at a
non-profit centre caring for low-income and needy people in Singapore.
For the last six years, from Mondays to
Saturdays, the 72-year-old has served as a volunteer, making tea and coffee for
residents living in one-room apartments in the neighbourhood.
She lives in one of the one-room apartments -
which average 30 sq.m and cost S$23 ($19, £12) to S$205 ($165, £104) a month to
rent from the government depending on household income.
She is not employed and receives groceries
worth S$70 from individual donors every month.
Singapore's Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong
said in an interview at the World Economic Forum in Davos recently that
although it was ''no fun'' being poor in Singapore, people were still ''less
badly off'' than the poor in other countries, including the US.
The government ensures that ''everybody starts
with some chips'' and not at zero, he added, through education, health care and
public housing.
He has also promised more help for low-income
households in this year's budget, to be delivered at a parliament sitting on
Friday.
The thought of poor people in Singapore may
seem a disconnect with its reputation as an Asian financial hub, shoppers'
haunt and food haven.
And there is truth to what the PM said, social
workers, volunteers and professionals told the BBC, albeit with a hint of
discomfort.
If one compares the poor in Singapore to those
in countries such as India and China, or even the homeless in the US, it is
indeed true that the situation here is not as dire, they said.
''But there are still many people in Singapore
who need help,'' said Huang Jing Jing, an active community service volunteer
for 30 years. ''Some of them are really struggling. You have to see it for
yourself to know.''
''Certainly, poverty is not in your face
here,'' said Mr Laurence Lien, chief executive officer of the non-profit
National Volunteer & Philanthropy Centre and a newly-appointed Nominated
Member of Parliament. ''But yes, it is happening here.''
His friend, a teacher at a primary school in a
low-income neighbourhood, told him that on the first day of school half the
class of six and seven-year-olds showed up without textbooks because their
parents could not afford them.
Healthy
income?
In Singapore, however, there is no national
poverty line.
In response to a question raised in parliament
in November 2011, the Acting Minister for Community Development, Youth and
Sports (MCYS) said that the help that the ministry provides ''typically cover
the bottom 20th percentile of households, with the flexibility to go beyond if
the family's circumstances merit consideration''.
Based on a study published by the Department
of Statistics in 2011, the average monthly household income, where at least one
member was employed, for the bottom 10th percentile was S$1,581. That of those
in the 11th to 20th percentile was S$3,135.
The poorest 1.4 billion people in the world
lived on $1.25 or less a day in 2005, according to World Bank estimates
published in 2008.
A US Census Bureau report said the lowest
quintile of the population had an annual household income of less than $20,000
in 2010. That is comparable to Singapore's numbers.
The US measures poverty using thresholds in
dollar value - if a family's income is less than its threshold, then everyone
in that family would be considered ''in poverty''.
Based on data at least, the poor in Singapore
does come across as being better off than those in other countries. However,
the realities on the ground paint a different picture.
Public
and social assistance
On paper, Ng Siew Teen has a household income
of more than S$2,000. But she said her husband, who works as a driver, had only
taken home a month's salary in the last three months. They have two daughters,
ages five and four, and are also supporting his 12-year-old daughter from a
previous marriage.
Ms Ng suffers from a hereditary skin condition
and was only able to undergo surgery recently when a donor paid her medical
bill. Her husband lost his previous job after he was hospitalised for an
operation in October 2011.
In her one-room apartment she fished out
unpaid bills, including one for more than S$400 owed in school fees.
''I just want a simple life. But who doesn't
want to have money in their pocket?'' she said. ''We didn't even have money to
celebrate Chinese New Year.''
Families such as Ms Ng's can apply for aid
from a series of public assistance schemes administered by the MCYS. These
include subsidies for education as well as financial help for the elderly or
disabled who are unable to work.
The ComCare Fund, established in 2005, has
helped more than 190,000 through the various schemes. The fund recorded a
balance of S$811m in March 2011 and received an additional S$500m in May.
Social assistance is also available, in the
form of social services for vulnerable and needy individuals and families.
Low-income workers can also tap on wage supplement schemes and job training
programmes.
''Singapore has an extensive social safety
net,'' said a ministry spokesman. ''Singaporeans enjoy subsidised housing,
healthcare and education.''
The challenge, though, lies in getting the
help to those who need it the most.
They are often unaware of the aid they can
get, or unsure of the process to apply for help, said Zulaiha Bakar,
co-ordinator at the non-profit Sunlove Marsiling centre that looks after the
needs of about 500 low-income and needy people.
Her job also involves assisting them with
phone calls and paperwork. ''Some people may not want to be seen receiving help
so they don't come to us,'' she added.
'Still
a struggle'
Apart from the ministry, there are a host of
non-profit, civil and religious organisations, as well as charitable
individuals offering services and donations.
But one group that can fall through the
cracks, though, are the low-wage-earners who are not eligible for public
assistance.
The Singapore government has always maintained
its message of ''self-reliance'' and stressed that it cannot adopt a welfare-state
system.
Unemployment is low, at 2% and a record
14-year low last year, according to data released last month by the Ministry of
Manpower (MOM). But a public housing survey in 2008 showed that a third of
one-room apartment residents have no earned income.
The MOM data shows that income for the lowest
quintile have increased 11% over the last five years, after taking inflation
into account.
But it is still critical to address wage
issues, said Mr Lien, as Singapore is ''not a cheap place to live in''.
''You can have a home; you can have shelter,''
he said. ''But it's still a struggle.''
Rebecca Lim
BBC News, Singapore
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