BEIJING â" Immigration is a hot-button issue nearly everywhere in the world, though the contours of the debate vary from place to place. In the United States, sweeping changes to the law may offer legal residency for millions of people who have entered the country illegally, my colleague Ashley Parker reports.
Here in Asia, in the nation of Singapore, the debate looks somewhat different: The government plans to increase the population from just over five million to a possible high of nearly seven million by 2030, via regulated, legal immigration. Itâs provoking opposition.
So much so that on Saturday, about 3,000 people turned out for what some commentators said was one of the biggest demonstrations in the nationâs history. (If the number seems small, it reflects the tight political control exerted over Singapore life by the Peopleâs Action Party, which has run the country for aout half a century and discourages public protest.)
What are the contours of the debate in Singapore
Concern over booming immigration, often focused on new arrivals from increasingly rich China, has been simmering in the nation, with many feeling that the immigrants donât play by the same rules, that their manners are poor and that they are pushing up prices. That feeling crystallized last year when a wealthy Chinese man driving a Ferrari at high speed killed three people (including himself) in a nighttime accident.
(Similar sentiments are found in Hong Kong, as my colleagues Bettina Wassener and Gerry Mullany wrote.)
Vividly illustrating the resentment, Singaporeans sometimes call the wealt! hy immigrants ârich Chinese locusts,â according to an article in the Economic Observerâs Worldcrunch.
Less controversially, the article quoted Peng Hui, a professor of sociology at National Singapore University, as saying: âSingaporeans do not discriminate against the Chinese. On the contrary, they very much identify with their Chinese ancestry.â (Of course, rich Chinese are not the only new immigrants, but they are a major group, many commentators have pointed out.) âWhat the local people do not appreciate is the fact that Chinese people talk loudly in public, eat on the subway and like to squeeze through in a crowd or grab things,â Mr. Peng was quoted as saying.
So the Singapore governmentâs Population White Paper that passed in Parliament earlier this month, just before Chinese New Year, was bound to stir things up.
The government is presenting the rise in immigration as a target that is needed if Singapore, where immigrants already make up about 40 percent of the population, and which has the highest concentration of millionaires in the world, is to continue to flourish, reports said. Singaporeans just arenât having enough children, said the prime minister, Lee Hsien Loong.
âIn my view, in 2030, I think 6 million will not be enough to meet Singaporeansâ needs as our population ages because of this problem of the baby boomers and bulge of aging people,â Mr. Lee said in Parliament, adding that 6.9 million was not a target but a number to be used to help plan for infrastructure.
âDo we really need to increase our population by that muchâ wrote a person called Chang Wei Meng in a letter to The Straits Times, according to Reuters. âWhat happened to achieving the Swiss standard of livingâ
Gilbert Goh, a main organizer of the rally Saturday at Singaporeâs Speakerâs Corner in a public park, said the protesters had a message: âThey want to tell the government, please reconsider this policy. The turnout is a testimony that this policy is flawed and unpopular on the ground,â The Associated Press quoted Mr. Goh as saying.
Yet amid the familiar rhetoric about immigrants, heard around the world - they donât fit in, theyâre rude, theyâre different - might something more important be going on here
In a blog post on , Nicole Seah, a politician who has run for Parliament and comments on social issues, wrote: âAlong with many other Singaporeans, I oppose the White Paper.â
Why She is looking for âa society that lives in harmony, rather than tense and overcrowded conditions,â she writes.
âNot the Singapore Inc. that has been aggressively forced down our throats the past few years - a Singapore which is in danger of becoming a transient state where people from all over, come, make their fortunes, and leave.â
Not âa Singapore that has become a playground for the rich and the people who can afford it. A Singapore where the middle class is increasingly drowned out because they do not have the social clout or sufficient representatives in Parliament to voice their concerns.â
Ms. Seahâs statements raise an interesting question: Is this part of! a phenom! enon that the columnist Chrystia Freeland has written about so ably for this newspaper, the ascendancy of a wealthy, âplutocratâ class and the slipping status of the middle class
As Ms. Freeland wrote last week: âThe most important fact about the United States in this century is that middle-class incomes are stagnating. The financial crisis has revealed an equally stark structural problem in much of Europe.â Is it hitting Asia, too, and does Singaporeâs protest speak, at least in part, to this Hong Kongâs dissatisfaction too