ASEAN
The Great Singapore Disinflation: Why MAS Will Stand Firm as a Global Storm Abates
Singapore’s core inflation fell to 0.7% in 2025. With price pressures receding, the MAS is expected to hold policy steady in January 2026, marking a new phase for the city-state’s economy.
The late afternoon sun slants through the canopy of the Tiong Bahru Market hawker centre, glinting off stainless steel steamers and the well-worn handles of kopi cups. Here, at the heart of Singapore’s quotidien life, the most consequential economic conversation of the year is being had, not in the jargon of central bankers, but in the simple calculus of daily purchases. An auntie considers the price of char siew before ordering; a taxi driver compares the cost of his teh tarik to last year’s. For the first time in nearly half a decade, that mental math is bringing a faint, collective sigh of relief. The fever of inflation—which spiked to a 14-year high in 2023—has broken. The Monetary Authority of Singapore (MAS), the nation’s powerful central bank, now faces a delicate new reality: not of battling runaway prices, but of navigating a return to profound price stability in a world still rife with uncertainty.
On January 29, 2026, the MAS will release its first semi-annual monetary policy statement of the year. All signs, confirmed by the latest data from the Singapore Department of Statistics (SingStat), point to a unanimous decision: the central bank will keep its exchange rate-centered policy settings unchanged. The full-year data for 2025 is now in, and it tells a story of remarkable disinflation. Core Inflation—the MAS’s preferred gauge, which excludes private transport and accommodation costs—came in at 0.7% for 2025, a dramatic decline from 2.8% in 2024 and 4.2% in 2023.

Headline inflation for the year was 0.9%. December’s figures showed both core and headline inflation holding steady at 1.2% year-on-year, indicating a stable plateau as the economy adjusts to a post-shock norm. This outcome, while slightly above the government’s earlier 2025 forecast of 0.5%, underscores a victory in the battle against imported global inflation. Economists widely anticipate that alongside its stand-pat decision, the MAS and the Ministry of Trade and Industry (MTI) will revise the official 2026 inflation forecast range upward, from the current 0.5–1.5% to a likely 1–2%. This adjustment would not signal a new tightening impulse, but rather a recognition of stabilizing domestic price pressures and base effects, framing a modestly more hawkish guardrail for the year ahead.
The Data Unpacked: A Return to Pre-Pandemic Normality
To appreciate the significance of the 0.7% core inflation print, one must view it through the corrective lens of recent history. Singapore, as a miniscule, trade-reliant economy, is a hyper-sensitive barometer of global price pressures. The supply-chain cataclysm of 2021-2022 and the energy shock following Russia’s invasion of Ukraine were transmitted directly into its domestic cost structure, amplified by robust post-pandemic domestic demand.
Table: Singapore Core Inflation (CPI-All Items ex. OOA & Private Road Transport)
| Year | Core Inflation Rate (%) | Key Driver |
|---|---|---|
| 2022 | 4.1 | Broad-based imported & domestic cost pressures |
| 2023 | 4.2 | Peak passthrough, tight labour market |
| 2024 | 2.8 | MAS tightening, global disinflation begins |
| 2025 | 0.7 | Sustained MAS policy, falling import costs |
| 2026F | 1.0 – 2.0 | Stabilising domestic wages, moderated global decline |
The journey down from the peak has been methodical, reflecting the calibrated tightening by the MAS. Since October 2021, the authority had undertaken five consecutive rounds of tightening, primarily by adjusting the slope, mid-point, and width of the Singapore Dollar Nominal Effective Exchange Rate (S$NEER) policy band. This unique framework, which uses the exchange rate as its primary tool, effectively imported disinflation by strengthening the Singapore dollar, making imports cheaper in local currency terms. The decision to pause this tightening cycle in July 2024 was the first signal that the worst was over.
The 2025 disinflation was broad-based. Key contributors included:
- Food Inflation: Eased significantly from 3.8% in 2024 to an average of 1.8% in 2025, as global supply chains normalized and commodity prices softened.
- Retail & Other Goods: Inflation turned negative in several quarters, reflecting lower imported goods prices and weaker discretionary spending.
- Services Inflation: Moderated but remained stickier, a testament to persistent domestic wage pressures in a tight labour market. However, even here, the pace decelerated markedly by year-end.
The slight overshoot of the 0.7% outcome relative to the official 0.5% forecast is statistically marginal but analytically noteworthy. It likely reflects the residual stickiness in domestic services costs and perhaps a firmer-than-anticipated trajectory for accommodation costs, which are excluded from the core measure but feed into overall economic sentiment.
The MAS Mandate in a New Phase: Vigilance Over Volatility
The MAS operates under a singular mandate: to ensure price stability conducive to sustainable economic growth. Unlike most central banks, it does not set an interest rate but manages the S$NEER. The current expectation of an unchanged policy stance is a statement of confidence that the existing level of the currency’s strength is sufficient to keep imported disinflation flowing while guarding against any premature loosening of financial conditions.
“The current rate of appreciation of the S$NEER policy band is sufficient to ensure medium-term price stability,” the MAS stated in its October 2025 review. The latest inflation data validates this assessment. Holding the policy band steady now achieves two objectives:
- It Anchors Expectations: It signals to businesses and unions that the central bank sees no need for further tightening, but is equally not prepared to risk its hard-won credibility by easing policy while core inflation, though low, is expected to rise modestly through 2026.
- It Provides a Buffer: A stable, moderately strong Singapore dollar acts as a shock absorber against potential renewed volatility in global energy and food prices, which remain susceptible to geopolitical flare-ups.
The anticipated upward revision of the 2026 forecast range to 1–2% is the key nuance in this meeting. This is not a hawkish pivot, but a realistic recalibration. It acknowledges several forward-looking dynamics:
- Base Effects: The very low inflation in late 2024 and early 2025 will create less favourable base effects for year-on-year comparisons in late 2026.
- Domestic Cost Pressures: Wage growth, while moderating, is expected to remain above pre-pandemic trends, supported by structural tightness in the local labour market and ongoing initiatives like the Progressive Wage Model.
- Policy-Driven Price Increases: The scheduled 1%-point GST increase to 10% in January 2026 will impart a one-time upward push to price levels, which the MAS will look through but must account for in its communications.
The Global and Comparative Lens: Singapore as a Bellwether
Singapore’s disinflation narrative is not occurring in a vacuum. It mirrors, and in some respects leads, trends in other small, advanced, open economies. A comparative view is instructive:
- Switzerland: Like Singapore, Switzerland has seen inflation return to target rapidly, aided by a strong currency (the Swiss Franc) and direct government interventions on energy prices. The Swiss National Bank has already shifted to a neutral stance, with discussions of easing emerging.
- Hong Kong: Linked to the US dollar via its currency peg, Hong Kong has had its monetary policy dictated by the Federal Reserve. Its disinflation path has been bumpier, complicated by its unique economic integration with mainland China and a slower post-pandemic recovery in domestic demand.
- New Zealand: The Reserve Bank of New Zealand has maintained a more hawkish stance, with inflation proving stickier due to a less open consumption basket and intense domestic capacity constraints. New Zealand’s cash rate remains restrictive.
Singapore’s experience stands out for the precision of its policy tool. The S$NEER framework allowed it to respond directly to the imported nature of the inflation shock. As Bloomberg Economics noted in a January 2026 analysis, “The MAS’s exchange-rate centered policy has acted as a targeted filter for global inflation, proving highly effective in the post-pandemic cycle.” This successful navigation has bolstered the authority’s international credibility and the Singapore dollar’s status as a regional safe-haven asset.
The Looming Risks: Why Complacency is Not an Option
The path to a sustained 2% inflation environment is not without its pitfalls. The MAS’s steady hand in January belies a watchful eye on several risk clouds:
- Geopolitical Supply Shocks: Any major escalation in the Middle East or renewed disruption in key trade lanes like the Straits of Malacca could trigger a sudden spike in global energy and freight costs. Singapore’s strategic petroleum reserves and diversified supply chains provide a buffer, but the inflationary impact would be swift.
- Wage-Price Spiral Precautions: The slope of Singapore’s Phillips Curve—the historical relationship between unemployment and inflation—has flattened but remains a concern. Robust wage settlements in 2026, if they significantly outstrip productivity growth, could embed inflation in the services sector, which is less sensitive to exchange rate policy.
- Global Monetary Policy Divergence: The timing and pace of interest rate cuts by the US Federal Reserve and the European Central Bank will cause significant currency and capital flow volatility. The MAS must ensure the S$NEER moves in an orderly fashion amidst this global repricing of risk.
- Climate Transition Costs: The green energy transition, while deflationary in the long term, may impose episodic cost pressures through carbon taxes, regulatory costs, and investments in new infrastructure. Singapore’s carbon tax is scheduled to rise significantly in the coming years.
As the Financial Times reported following the release of the 2025 data, analysts caution that “the last mile of disinflation—stabilising at the 2% sweet spot—is often the most treacherous.” The MAS is acutely aware that premature declarations of victory could unanchor inflation expectations.
Conclusion: The Steady Centre in a Churning World
As the hawker centre stalls begin to shutter for the evening, the economic reality they embody is one of cautious normalization. The MAS’s expected decision to hold policy unchanged is a powerful signal of this new phase. It is the policy equivalent of a skilled sailor easing the sails after successfully navigating a storm: the vessel is steady, the immediate danger has passed, but the horizon is still watched for the next shift in the wind.
The recalibration of the 2026 forecast to a 1–2% range is a masterclass in central bank communication—acknowledging progress while managing expectations upward from unsustainably low levels. It leaves the MAS with maximum optionality: it can maintain its stance through much of 2026 if inflation drifts toward the upper end of the band, but it is not locked into any pre-committed path.
For Singaporeans, the profound disinflation of 2025 offers tangible respite. For global investors and policymakers, Singapore’s trajectory serves as a compelling case study in the effective use of an unconventional monetary framework in a crisis. The nation has emerged from the global inflationary maelstrom not just with stable prices, but with reinforced confidence in the institutions that guard its economic stability. The challenge ahead is one of preservation, not conquest. And in that endeavour, a steady hand on the tiller is the most valuable tool of all.
Oil Crisis
The US$100 Barrel: Oil Shockwaves Hit South-east Asia — And Could Surge to $150
Oil shock Southeast Asia | Strait of Hormuz disruption | Stagflation risk Philippines Thailand | Fuel subsidy bills Asia 2026
Picture a Monday morning in Bangkok’s Chatuchak district. Nattapong, a 34-year-old motorcycle-taxi driver who normally hauls commuters through gridlocked sois for roughly 400 baht a day, is staring at a petrol pump display that has climbed the equivalent of 18% in eight days. He hasn’t raised his fares yet — the app won’t let him — but his margins have almost evaporated. “Before, I could fill up and still send money home,” he says quietly. “Now I’m not sure.”
Multiply Nattapong’s dilemma across 700 million people, eleven countries, and a dozen interconnected supply chains, and you begin to understand what the Strait of Hormuz crisis of March 2026 is doing to South-east Asia. On the morning of Monday, March 9, 2026, Brent crude futures spiked as high as $119.50 a barrel — a session high that will be branded into the memory of every finance minister from Manila to Jakarta — before settling around $110.56, still up nearly 40% in a single month. WTI posted its largest weekly gain in the entire history of the futures contract, a staggering 35.6%, a record stretching back to 1983.
The trigger: joint US-Israeli strikes on Iran beginning February 28, which escalated into a full war and brought Strait of Hormuz shipping to a near-total halt. The choke point — that narrow 33-kilometre-wide passage between Oman and Iran — carries roughly 20 million barrels of oil per day, about one-fifth of global supply. When Iran’s Revolutionary Guard declared the waterway effectively closed and warned vessels they would be targeted, the arithmetic was brutal and immediate. Iraq and Kuwait began cutting output after running out of storage. Qatar’s energy minister told the Financial Times that crude could reach $150 per barrel if tankers remain unable to transit the strait in coming weeks. At Kpler, lead crude analyst Homayoun Falakshahi was blunter: “If between now and end of March you don’t have an amelioration of traffic around the strait, we could go to $150 a barrel,” he told CNN.
For South-east Asia — a region that imports the overwhelming majority of its oil and whose economies run on cheap fuel the way a clock runs on a mainspring — this is not merely a commodity story. It is a cost-of-living crisis, a monetary policy dilemma, and a fiscal time bomb, all detonating simultaneously.
Oil Shock Southeast Asia: Why the Region Is Uniquely Exposed
The geography alone is damning. Japan and the Philippines source roughly 90% of their crude from the Persian Gulf; China and India import 38% and 46% of their oil from the region, respectively. South-east Asia as a whole, with the sole exception of Malaysia, runs a persistent deficit in oil and gas trade. When the Strait of Hormuz tightens, the region doesn’t just pay more — it scrambles for supply.
MUFG Research calculates that every US$10 per barrel increase in oil prices worsens the current account position of Asian economies by 0.2–0.9% of GDP, with Thailand, Singapore, Taiwan, India, and the Philippines taking the largest hits. From a starting price of roughly $60 per barrel in January 2026 to a current print north of $110, that’s a $50-per-barrel shock — implying current account deterioration of potentially 1–4.5% of GDP for the region’s most vulnerable economies. Run that number through to your household electricity bill, your bag of jasmine rice, your morning commute, and the pain becomes visceral.
Nomura’s research team, in a note that has become one of the most-cited documents in Asian trading rooms this week, identified Thailand, India, South Korea, and the Philippines as the most vulnerable economies in Asia. The bank’s reasoning is unforgiving: Thailand carries the largest net oil import bill in Asia at 4.7% of GDP, meaning every 10% oil price change worsens its current account by 0.5 percentage points. The Philippines runs a current account deficit that, at oil above $90 per barrel on a sustained basis, is likely to breach 4.5% of GDP. “In Asia, Thailand, India, Korea, and the Philippines are the most vulnerable to higher oil prices, due to their high import dependence,” Nomura wrote, “while Malaysia would be a relative beneficiary as an energy exporter.”
Country by Country: Winners, Losers, and the Ones Caught in the Middle
The Philippines: Worst in Class, No Cushion
If there is one country in the region for which this crisis reads like a worst-case scenario, it is the Philippines. Manila has nearly 90% of its oil imports sourced from the Middle East and, crucially, operates a largely market-driven fuel pricing mechanism with minimal subsidies. There is no state buffer absorbing the shock before it hits the pump. Retailers in Manila imposed over ₱1-per-liter increases for the tenth consecutive week as of early March, covering diesel, kerosene, and gasoline. The Philippine peso slid back through the ₱58-per-dollar mark on March 9, adding a currency depreciation multiplier to an already brutal import bill.
ING Group estimates the Philippines could see inflation rise by up to 0.4 percentage points for every 10% increase in oil prices. At Nomura, the estimate is 0.5pp per 10% rise — the highest pass-through in the region. Oil at $110 represents roughly an 80% increase over January’s $60 baseline, an inflationary impulse that Capital Economics pegs could push headline CPI well above the Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas’s 2–4% target. Manila has already announced plans to build a diesel stockpile as an emergency buffer — an admission that supply anxiety, not just price, has entered the conversation.
Thailand: The Biggest Structural Loser
Thailand’s problem isn’t just the size of its oil import bill — it’s the timing. The country is already wrestling with below-potential growth, persistent deflationary pressures in some sectors, and a tourism sector still finding its post-COVID footing. MUFG Research flags Thailand as one of the economies most sensitive to oil price increases from an inflation perspective, with CPI rising up to 0.8 percentage points per US$10/bbl increase — the highest reading in their Asian sensitivity matrix.
The government responded swiftly, announcing a suspension of petroleum exports to protect domestic stocks, an extraordinary measure that signals just how seriously Bangkok is treating supply security. The Thai baht, already vulnerable, has come under selling pressure alongside the Philippine peso, Korean won, and Indian rupee. For Thai factory workers supplying export goods to Western markets, higher transport and energy costs arrive precisely when global demand is wobbling under the weight of US tariffs. It is, as the textbook definition goes, a stagflationary shock — cost pressures rising while growth falters.
Indonesia: The Fiscal Tightrope
Indonesia occupies a peculiar position. It is technically a net importer of petroleum products — paradoxical for a country that was once an OPEC member — but it deploys a system of fuel subsidies (via state-owned Pertamina) that partially shields consumers from global price moves. The catch, of course, is that the shield is funded by the national treasury.
Indonesia’s government budget was built around an Indonesian Crude Price (ICP) assumption of $70 per barrel for 2026. With Brent at $110, that assumption looks almost quaint. Government simulations, according to Indonesia’s fiscal authority, show the state budget deficit could widen to 3.6% of GDP if crude averages $92 per barrel over the year — already above the 3% legal ceiling. At $110 sustained, the numbers are worse. Officials have acknowledged that raising domestic fuel prices — essentially passing the shock to consumers — could become a last resort. Nomura estimates a 10% oil price rise could worsen Indonesia’s fiscal balance by 0.2 percentage points via higher subsidy spending, breaching the 3% deficit ceiling at sufficiently elevated prices. President Prabowo Subianto, who swept to power partly on a cost-of-living platform, faces a politically combustible choice between fiscal discipline and popular anger at the pump.
Malaysia: The Region’s Unlikely Winner
Not everyone in South-east Asia is suffering equally. Malaysia, a net oil and gas exporter and home to Petronas — one of Asia’s most profitable energy companies — finds itself on the rare right side of an oil shock. MUFG Research identifies Malaysia as the only net oil and gas exporter in the region, likely to see a small benefit to its trade balance from higher prices. The ringgit, which has been strengthening as a commodity-linked currency, provides a further buffer.
The complexity lies in Malaysia’s domestic subsidy architecture. Kuala Lumpur has been in the process of a painstaking, politically fraught RON95 fuel subsidy reform — targeting the top income tiers first — which was already reshaping the fiscal landscape before the current crisis. Higher global prices actually make the reform argument easier: the subsidy bill would explode if oil stays elevated, giving Prime Minister Anwar Ibrahim political cover to accelerate rationalization. For Malaysia’s treasury, $110 oil is a revenue windfall and a subsidy headache simultaneously.
Singapore: The Price-Setter That Cannot Escape
Singapore imports everything, including every drop of fuel, but its role as a regional refining and trading hub makes it a price-setter rather than merely a price-taker. The city-state’s commuters are already feeling it: transport costs have risen sharply, and the government’s careful cost-of-living management is under renewed pressure. MUFG’s analysis ranks Singapore among the economies with the highest current account sensitivity to oil price increases, even though its GDP per capita provides a far larger fiscal cushion than its regional neighbours.
Stagflation Risk: The Word Nobody Wanted to Hear
The word “stagflation” is being whispered — and in some trading rooms, shouted — across Asia this week. Nomura’s note explicitly warns of a “stagflationary shock”: the simultaneous combination of rising inflation (from fuel and food cost pass-through) and slowing growth (from weakening consumer purchasing power and export competitiveness). It is the worst of both monetary worlds, leaving central banks without a clean tool. Cut rates to support growth, and you risk stoking inflation. Hold rates to fight inflation, and you choke a slowing economy.
ING Group notes the impact is far from uniform, with several economies partially shielded by subsidies or regulated pricing — but for the Philippines, the stronger inflation hit from market-driven fuel prices creates direct pressure on the BSP to hold rates. Capital Economics, while not abandoning its rate-cut forecasts for the Philippines and Thailand, has flagged that central banks may pause if oil hits and holds above $100 — as it already has. The ripple effects move quickly: higher fuel costs push up food prices (fertilisers, transport, cold chains), which push up core inflation, which pushes up wage demands, which erode manufacturer competitiveness. The chain is well-known. The speed this time is not.
Travel and Tourism: The Invisible Casualty
The oil shock has an airborne dimension that tends to get buried beneath the more immediate news of pump prices and fiscal deficits. Jet fuel — which tracks closely with crude — has surged in lockstep with Brent. Airlines operating regional routes out of Singapore’s Changi, Bangkok’s Suvarnabhumi, and Manila’s NAIA are facing fuel costs that represent 25–35% of operating expenses at normal prices. At current Brent levels, that share rises materially. The consequences are already filtering through: several Gulf carriers have partially resumed flights from Dubai International Airport after earlier disruptions, but route uncertainty and insurance premiums for Gulf overflight remain elevated.
For South-east Asia’s tourism recovery — Bali, Chiang Mai, Phuket, and Palawan were all expecting strong 2026 visitor numbers after several lean post-pandemic years — the arithmetic is uncomfortable. Higher jet fuel costs translate, with a lag of weeks rather than months, into higher airfares. Budget carriers such as AirAsia and Cebu Pacific, which built their business models around cheap fuel enabling cheap tickets, have the least pricing power and the thinnest margins. The traveller contemplating a Bangkok city break or a Bali retreat in Q2 2026 may find the price tag has quietly risen 10–20% since they first searched. That is not a crisis. But it is a headwind — and a reminder that in a globalised economy, no leisure industry is fully insulated from a Persian Gulf conflict.
Could Oil Really Hit $150? The Scenarios
The $150 question is no longer a fringe analyst talking point. Qatar’s energy minister said it publicly. Kpler’s lead crude analyst said it on record. Goldman Sachs wrote to clients that prices are likely to exceed $100 next week if no resolution emerges — a forecast already overtaken by events.
Three scenarios shape the trajectory:
Scenario 1 — Rapid de-escalation (30 days). The US brokers a ceasefire, Hormuz reopens to traffic with naval escorts, and oil retraces toward $80–85. This is the “fast war, fast recovery” template. The damage to South-east Asia is real but contained — a quarter or two of elevated inflation, some current account deterioration, minor growth drag.
Scenario 2 — Prolonged blockade (60–90 days). Tanker insurance remains unavailable or prohibitively expensive, shipping companies stay out, and the physical supply disruption persists. JPMorgan’s Natasha Kaneva has modelled production cuts approaching 6 million barrels per day under this scenario. Brent in the $120–130 range becomes the base case. For South-east Asia, this means inflation breaching targets in the Philippines and Thailand, subsidy bills in Indonesia threatening fiscal rules, and a genuine monetary policy bind across the region.
Scenario 3 — Escalation with infrastructure damage. Further strikes on Gulf energy facilities — as already seen against Iranian oil infrastructure and Qatari and Saudi installations — reduce physical capacity for months, not weeks. $150 becomes plausible. The 1970s-style shock, feared but never fully materialised in the 2022 Ukraine episode, arrives in earnest. South-east Asian growth forecasts get ripped up. The IMF’s 2026 regional outlook, cautiously optimistic as recently as January, would require emergency revision.
The G7 finance ministers were meeting Monday to discuss coordinated strategic reserve releases; the Trump administration announced a $20 billion tanker insurance programme, though shipping companies remain hesitant to transit the region. These measures can dampen prices at the margin. They cannot substitute for an open strait.
Policy Responses and the Green Energy Accelerant
Governments across the region are not waiting passively. Thailand’s petroleum export suspension, Manila’s emergency diesel stockpiling, Indonesia’s scenario planning for domestic fuel price adjustments — these are the short-term reflexes of policymakers who have been through oil shocks before and know that the first 72 hours matter.
The more interesting question is whether this crisis, like previous energy shocks, accelerates structural energy transition. Malaysia’s Petronas has been expanding LNG capacity and renewable partnerships. Indonesia’s vast geothermal resources — the world’s second-largest — have long been under-utilised relative to their potential. The Philippines, which currently imports nearly all its energy, has been pushing solar and wind development under the Clean Energy Act framework. The calculus that kept governments cautious about rapid transition — cheap imported fossil fuels were easy and politically manageable — has just shifted violently.
As ING’s analysis notes, energy makes up a large share of consumer inflation baskets across emerging Asia, meaning the political pain of oil shocks is both immediate and democratically legible. Leaders who endure it once tend to invest in insulation against the next one. The 1973 oil shock gave Japan its world-class energy efficiency. The 2022 Ukraine crisis gave Europe its renewable acceleration. Whether 2026’s Hormuz crisis becomes South-east Asia’s inflection point toward genuine energy security remains the region’s most consequential open question.
The Bottom Line
Brent at $110 and rising is not a number — it is a sentence, handed down to 700 million people who had little say in the conflict that produced it. For the Philippines, it means inflation at the upper edge of tolerance and monetary policy frozen in place when the economy needs easing. For Thailand, it is a stagflationary pressure on a growth story that was already fragile. For Indonesia, it is a fiscal arithmetic problem that risks breaching the legal deficit ceiling. For Malaysia, it is a windfall tempered by subsidy obligations and political exposure. For Singapore, it is a cost-management challenge that tests the city-state’s well-earned reputation for economic resilience.
The $150 scenario is not inevitable. But it is no longer implausible. And in a region that runs on imported energy, the difference between $110 and $150 is not merely financial. It is the cost of a week’s groceries for a Manila family. It is whether a Thai factory orders its next shift. It is whether Nattapong, Bangkok’s motorcycle-taxi driver, can still afford to fill his tank and send money home.
That is the oil shock South-east Asia is living through, right now, in real time.
Analysis
Singapore’s Bold Economic Bet: Why the City-State Must Learn to Fail
Singapore stands at an inflection point. For decades, the city-state has built its prosperity on precision, predictability, and prudent risk management—the very qualities that transformed a resource-poor island into one of the world’s wealthiest nations. But on January 29, 2026, Deputy Prime Minister Gan Kim Yong delivered a message that would have seemed heretical a generation ago: Singapore must learn to embrace failure.
The Singapore Economic Strategy Review 2026 mid-term update, unveiled after months of consultation with businesses and workers, marks a striking departure from the nation’s traditional playbook. At its core lies a fundamental recognition that in an era of geopolitical fragmentation, artificial intelligence disruption, and climate imperatives, playing it safe is the riskiest strategy of all. The question now is whether a society built on stability can genuinely cultivate the “spirit of risk-taking” its leaders insist is essential for survival.
A Changed World Demands Changed Thinking
“Today’s crisis is very different,” DPM Gan told reporters at the briefing. “It is going to be a different world that we are going to emerge from. We are never going to go back to where we were.” His words carried unusual weight, spoken by a minister who has spent decades navigating Singapore through economic turbulence—from the Asian financial crisis to the global pandemic.
The seven recommendations emerging from the five Economic Strategy Review committees read less like incremental policy adjustments and more like a cultural manifesto. Developed through over 60 engagements with stakeholders, they acknowledge uncomfortable truths: achieving economic growth will be challenging, and growth can no longer be assumed to generate jobs. The twin objectives—sustaining growth at the higher end of 2-3% annually over the next decade while creating good jobs for Singaporeans—require a fundamentally different approach.
What makes this Singapore ESR risk-taking agenda particularly striking is not just what it proposes, but what it admits. Singapore must move beyond simply attracting multinational corporations and instead nurture enterprises that “dream big and take risks.” The phrase appears repeatedly in committee documents—a deliberate rhetorical choice in a nation where failure has historically carried deep stigma. As Acting Minister Jeffrey Siow emphasized during the briefing, the global economy is being reshaped by forces Singapore cannot control: major power rivalry, security concerns supplanting free trade, and technological advancement that renders traditional comparative advantages obsolete within years rather than decades.
The Seven Pillars of Singapore’s Economic Reinvention
What Are the 7 ESR Recommendations?
The ESR recommendations Singapore announced on January 29 form an interconnected strategy to position the nation for a more volatile future:
1. Establish Global Leadership in Key Growth Sectors
Singapore aims to transform its manufacturing prowess in semiconductors, healthcare, specialty chemicals, and aerospace through aggressive investment in AI, automation, and emissions-reducing technologies. But ambition extends beyond making existing industries more efficient—the goal is “best-in-class and sustainable operations” that serve as global benchmarks. The recommendation includes directing national-level R&D resources toward securing leadership positions rather than merely participating in high-value industries.
2. Pursue Emerging Opportunities to Create New Economic Engines
This represents perhaps the boldest cultural shift. The ESR committees are urging Singapore to place bets on frontier technologies—quantum computing, decarbonization technologies, space exploration—where outcomes remain deeply uncertain. Committee member Lim Hock Heng, former vice-president of British pharmaceutical giant GSK, captured the ambition: “Singapore can be more than just a regional hub. We have the chance to become the global benchmark for advanced manufacturing and modern services, a place where the future of the industry takes shape.”
3. Position Singapore as an AI Leader with an AI-Empowered Economy
Building on the National AI Strategies launched in recent years, this recommendation pushes for Singapore to become “a location of choice for companies and talent to come together to develop, test, deploy, and scale innovative and impactful AI solutions.” Crucially, it emphasizes AI adoption across the entire economy to drive productivity, not just in elite tech sectors. This Singapore AI leader strategy recognizes that AI will reshape every industry—and nations that hesitate will be left behind.
4. Strengthen Connectivity and Support Firms to Internationalize
Rather than relying solely on its position as a regional hub, Singapore must actively help local firms expand abroad. The recommendation calls for enhanced transport links, deeper trade networks, and support for Singaporean companies pursuing international ventures—a recognition that in an age of protectionism, market access cannot be taken for granted.
5. Broaden the Range of Good Jobs
This tackles a more sensitive issue: the concentration of high-quality employment in a narrow band of sectors. The review proposes expanding opportunities in skilled trades, care services, and emerging fields created by AI and frontier technologies. It’s an acknowledgment that Singapore innovation growth 2026 must translate into broad-based prosperity, not just elite prosperity.
6. Make Lifelong Learning Practical
Workers will need to become more agile, acquiring new skills throughout their careers through flexible pathways that blend training and work. The proposal includes developing a national AI workforce strategy to build literacy and fluency across the workforce—not just among data scientists and engineers.
7. Enable Businesses to Navigate Transitions
Companies will receive support to assess their health, plan pivots, and reposition themselves for new opportunities. In a restructuring economy, this amounts to acknowledging that not all businesses will survive—and providing mechanisms to help those that can adapt do so successfully.
The Cultural Chasm: Can Singapore Truly Embrace Failure?
Here’s where theory meets the hard ground of cultural reality. Singapore’s success has been built on the opposite of the risk-embracing, failure-tolerant culture now being advocated. Students face intense pressure to excel in standardized exams. Civil servants advance through proven competence rather than bold experimentation. The bankruptcy laws, though reformed, still carry social stigma. Even the vaunted startup ecosystem tends to favor proven business models over moonshots.
The Singapore economy embrace failure message will require more than policy changes—it demands a generational shift in mindset. When ESR committees urge the government to “go beyond attracting multinational corporations and nurture a new generation of enterprises and start-ups that dream big and take risks,” they’re essentially asking Singapore to become something it has never been: comfortable with ambitious failure.
Consider the contrast with other innovation economies. Israel’s “Startup Nation” culture actively celebrates pivots and failures as learning experiences. Silicon Valley treats bankruptcy as a badge of honor, evidence that you swung for the fences. China’s tech giants grew by launching dozens of products simultaneously, killing the failures quickly. Singapore’s approach has historically been more like Japan’s: careful, consensus-driven, risk-averse.
Yet there are reasons for optimism. Singapore has demonstrated remarkable adaptability before—pivoting from entrepôt trade to manufacturing to financial services to tech hub within two generations. The government’s willingness to convene this review and publicly acknowledge the need for risk-taking is itself significant. As DPM Gan noted, the recommendations and measures being considered “have to be quite different from what we were doing before” precisely because the environment has fundamentally changed.
The AI Gambit: Singapore’s Biggest Bet Yet
If there’s one area where the Singapore economic update risk appetite is most evident, it’s artificial intelligence. The ESR committees are proposing that Singapore position itself as a global AI leader—not just in deployment, but in development and governance.
This is audacious. Singapore lacks the vast data lakes of China, the venture capital ecosystem of the United States, or the deep bench of AI researchers in London or Toronto. What it can offer is something potentially more valuable: a trusted regulatory environment where AI can be tested, deployed, and scaled with both innovation and accountability.
The proposal to create “a location of choice” for AI companies recognizes that geography matters less than governance in the AI era. If Singapore can establish itself as the jurisdiction where controversial applications get fair, intelligent oversight—where privacy, safety, and innovation are balanced—it could capture an outsized share of AI value creation. The Republic has form here: it did something similar with biotech in the 2000s, building Biopolis and attracting pharmaceutical giants through intelligent regulation and infrastructure investment.
But the AI strategy goes beyond attraction. The push for economy-wide AI adoption—helping SMEs integrate AI into operations, building AI literacy across the workforce—addresses a hard truth: the countries that thrive won’t be those with the most AI researchers, but those where AI amplifies human productivity most broadly.
The Global Context: Singapore’s Gamble in Historical Perspective
Singapore’s pivot toward risk-taking arrives at a peculiar moment in global economic history. The post-Cold War consensus that favored open trade, mobile capital, and integrated supply chains—the very system Singapore mastered—is fracturing. Countries are “reconfiguring trade networks and supply chains in the name of resilience and security”, Prime Minister Lawrence Wong warned in December. These aren’t temporary disruptions but “permanent features of a fragmented world.”
The irony is rich: just as protectionism makes Singapore’s traditional strengths less valuable, the ESR is urging the nation to double down on openness and risk-taking. It’s a calculated gamble that in a balkanized world economy, there will be even more value in being the trusted intermediary, the neutral ground where Chinese and American companies can still do business, the place willing to try things others won’t.
History suggests this could work. Small, trade-dependent nations have often thrived during periods of great power competition by becoming indispensable to all sides. The Netherlands did it during the religious wars of the 16th century. Switzerland managed it through two world wars. Singapore itself prospered during the Cold War by maintaining relationships with both camps.
But there’s a crucial difference: those historical examples involved managing existing strengths, not cultivating new ones. Singapore is attempting something harder—transforming its risk culture while maintaining the stability and trust that made it successful in the first place. It’s trying to become both the safe harbor and the daring adventurer simultaneously.
The Uncomfortable Questions
The ESR mid-term update raises questions that deserve frank examination. First, can a government engineer a culture of risk-taking, or is such a culture necessarily organic? Singapore’s top-down approach has worked brilliantly for infrastructure, education, and industrial policy. But risk-taking and innovation may be different beasts—less amenable to five-year plans and committee recommendations.
Second, is Singapore being realistic about the trade-offs? A genuine failure-tolerant culture means accepting that some high-profile bets will fail spectacularly and publicly. It means entrepreneurs will squander government grants. It means brilliant researchers will pursue dead ends. Singapore’s electorate, accustomed to efficiency and accountability, may find this difficult to stomach.
Third, can Singapore compete with economies that have natural advantages in risk-taking cultures? The United States produces more failed startups than successful ones—but it also produces Google, Amazon, and Tesla. China’s tech giants emerged from chaotic, under-regulated environments where failure was ubiquitous and cheap. Singapore cannot replicate either model even if it wanted to.
Perhaps the answer lies not in becoming Silicon Valley or Shenzhen, but in creating a distinctly Singaporean model: calculated risk-taking, not reckless gambling. Failure tolerance within guardrails. Innovation with governance. The ESR’s emphasis on supporting “high-potential, fast-growing start-ups” to scale globally suggests this middle path—identifying promising ventures early and backing them intelligently rather than throwing money at everything.
What Success Looks Like—And What It Costs
If the ESR succeeds, Singapore in 2035 will look different from Singapore in 2025. The economy will be more diversified, with clusters of globally competitive companies in quantum computing, space technology, and climate tech alongside the traditional strengths in finance and manufacturing. Workers will move fluidly between roles and sectors, armed with AI skills and comfortable with career pivots. The startup ecosystem will have produced a handful of global champions—companies valued in the tens of billions that choose to keep their headquarters in Singapore even as they expand worldwide.
The Singapore innovation growth 2026 trajectory will have created not just GDP expansion but meaningful social mobility. The “good jobs” the ESR promises will span a wider range of sectors and skill levels. Care workers and skilled tradespeople will earn professional wages. AI will have automated drudgery without devastating employment, because the workforce adapted fast enough.
But this optimistic scenario requires Singapore to overcome its hardest challenge: accepting that some bets won’t pay off. The quantum computing company that burns through billions before pivoting. The space venture that launches satellites into the wrong orbit. The AI startup whose promising technology fails to find product-market fit. These aren’t policy failures to be avoided—they’re the inevitable price of ambition.
As the government prepares its formal response to the ESR recommendations at Budget 2026 in February, the crucial test will be whether it’s willing to embrace this reality. Will ministers defend failed ventures as necessary learning experiences, or will they retreat to safe, incremental bets at the first sign of trouble?
The Verdict: A Necessary Gamble
The Singapore Economic Strategy Review 2026 represents either a courageous reimagining of what Singapore can become or a risky departure from proven success formulas—possibly both. What’s certain is that standing still isn’t an option. In DPM Gan’s phrasing, doing “more of the same” in a fundamentally changed world guarantees decline.
The review’s power lies not in any single recommendation but in its cumulative message: Singapore must transform its relationship with uncertainty. That means celebrating ambitious failure as much as steady success, supporting companies that dream big over those that play it safe, and accepting that 2-3% GDP growth in a volatile world represents triumph, not mediocrity.
Whether Singapore’s leaders and citizens are truly ready for this psychological shift remains the great unanswered question. The next decade will reveal whether a nation built on calculated prudence can learn to dance with risk—or whether the call to “embrace failure” will itself become a failure to embrace.
For now, Singapore is placing its bet. The world will be watching to see if a 728-square-kilometer city-state can write a new playbook for economic success in the 21st century—one where taking the leap matters more than landing perfectly every time.
Analysis
Singapore’s Bold Economic Bet: Why the City-State Must Learn to Fail
Singapore stands at an inflection point. For decades, the city-state has built its prosperity on precision, predictability, and prudent risk management—the very qualities that transformed a resource-poor island into one of the world’s wealthiest nations. But on January 29, 2026, Deputy Prime Minister Gan Kim Yong delivered a message that would have seemed heretical a generation ago: Singapore must learn to embrace failure.
The Singapore Economic Strategy Review 2026 mid-term update, unveiled after months of consultation with businesses and workers, marks a striking departure from the nation’s traditional playbook. At its core lies a fundamental recognition that in an era of geopolitical fragmentation, artificial intelligence disruption, and climate imperatives, playing it safe is the riskiest strategy of all. The question now is whether a society built on stability can genuinely cultivate the “spirit of risk-taking” its leaders insist is essential for survival.
A Changed World Demands Changed Thinking
“Today’s crisis is very different,” DPM Gan told reporters at the briefing. “It is going to be a different world that we are going to emerge from. We are never going to go back to where we were.” His words carried unusual weight, spoken by a minister who has spent decades navigating Singapore through economic turbulence—from the Asian financial crisis to the global pandemic.
The seven recommendations emerging from the five Economic Strategy Review committees read less like incremental policy adjustments and more like a cultural manifesto. Developed through over 60 engagements with stakeholders, they acknowledge uncomfortable truths: achieving economic growth will be challenging, and growth can no longer be assumed to generate jobs. The twin objectives—sustaining growth at the higher end of 2-3% annually over the next decade while creating good jobs for Singaporeans—require a fundamentally different approach.
What makes this Singapore ESR risk-taking agenda particularly striking is not just what it proposes, but what it admits. Singapore must move beyond simply attracting multinational corporations and instead nurture enterprises that “dream big and take risks.” The phrase appears repeatedly in committee documents—a deliberate rhetorical choice in a nation where failure has historically carried deep stigma. As Acting Minister Jeffrey Siow emphasized during the briefing, the global economy is being reshaped by forces Singapore cannot control: major power rivalry, security concerns supplanting free trade, and technological advancement that renders traditional comparative advantages obsolete within years rather than decades.
The Seven Pillars of Singapore’s Economic Reinvention
What Are the 7 ESR Recommendations?
The ESR recommendations Singapore announced on January 29 form an interconnected strategy to position the nation for a more volatile future:
1. Establish Global Leadership in Key Growth Sectors
Singapore aims to transform its manufacturing prowess in semiconductors, healthcare, specialty chemicals, and aerospace through aggressive investment in AI, automation, and emissions-reducing technologies. But ambition extends beyond making existing industries more efficient—the goal is “best-in-class and sustainable operations” that serve as global benchmarks. The recommendation includes directing national-level R&D resources toward securing leadership positions rather than merely participating in high-value industries.
2. Pursue Emerging Opportunities to Create New Economic Engines
This represents perhaps the boldest cultural shift. The ESR committees are urging Singapore to place bets on frontier technologies—quantum computing, decarbonization technologies, space exploration—where outcomes remain deeply uncertain. Committee member Lim Hock Heng, former vice-president of British pharmaceutical giant GSK, captured the ambition: “Singapore can be more than just a regional hub. We have the chance to become the global benchmark for advanced manufacturing and modern services, a place where the future of the industry takes shape.”
3. Position Singapore as an AI Leader with an AI-Empowered Economy
Building on the National AI Strategies launched in recent years, this recommendation pushes for Singapore to become “a location of choice for companies and talent to come together to develop, test, deploy, and scale innovative and impactful AI solutions.” Crucially, it emphasizes AI adoption across the entire economy to drive productivity, not just in elite tech sectors. This Singapore AI leader strategy recognizes that AI will reshape every industry—and nations that hesitate will be left behind.
4. Strengthen Connectivity and Support Firms to Internationalize
Rather than relying solely on its position as a regional hub, Singapore must actively help local firms expand abroad. The recommendation calls for enhanced transport links, deeper trade networks, and support for Singaporean companies pursuing international ventures—a recognition that in an age of protectionism, market access cannot be taken for granted.
5. Broaden the Range of Good Jobs
This tackles a more sensitive issue: the concentration of high-quality employment in a narrow band of sectors. The review proposes expanding opportunities in skilled trades, care services, and emerging fields created by AI and frontier technologies. It’s an acknowledgment that Singapore innovation growth 2026 must translate into broad-based prosperity, not just elite prosperity.
6. Make Lifelong Learning Practical
Workers will need to become more agile, acquiring new skills throughout their careers through flexible pathways that blend training and work. The proposal includes developing a national AI workforce strategy to build literacy and fluency across the workforce—not just among data scientists and engineers.
7. Enable Businesses to Navigate Transitions
Companies will receive support to assess their health, plan pivots, and reposition themselves for new opportunities. In a restructuring economy, this amounts to acknowledging that not all businesses will survive—and providing mechanisms to help those that can adapt do so successfully.
The Cultural Chasm: Can Singapore Truly Embrace Failure?
Here’s where theory meets the hard ground of cultural reality. Singapore’s success has been built on the opposite of the risk-embracing, failure-tolerant culture now being advocated. Students face intense pressure to excel in standardized exams. Civil servants advance through proven competence rather than bold experimentation. The bankruptcy laws, though reformed, still carry social stigma. Even the vaunted startup ecosystem tends to favor proven business models over moonshots.
The Singapore economy embrace failure message will require more than policy changes—it demands a generational shift in mindset. When ESR committees urge the government to “go beyond attracting multinational corporations and nurture a new generation of enterprises and start-ups that dream big and take risks,” they’re essentially asking Singapore to become something it has never been: comfortable with ambitious failure.
Consider the contrast with other innovation economies. Israel’s “Startup Nation” culture actively celebrates pivots and failures as learning experiences. Silicon Valley treats bankruptcy as a badge of honor, evidence that you swung for the fences. China’s tech giants grew by launching dozens of products simultaneously, killing the failures quickly. Singapore’s approach has historically been more like Japan’s: careful, consensus-driven, risk-averse.
Yet there are reasons for optimism. Singapore has demonstrated remarkable adaptability before—pivoting from entrepôt trade to manufacturing to financial services to tech hub within two generations. The government’s willingness to convene this review and publicly acknowledge the need for risk-taking is itself significant. As DPM Gan noted, the recommendations and measures being considered “have to be quite different from what we were doing before” precisely because the environment has fundamentally changed.
The AI Gambit: Singapore’s Biggest Bet Yet
If there’s one area where the Singapore economic update risk appetite is most evident, it’s artificial intelligence. The ESR committees are proposing that Singapore position itself as a global AI leader—not just in deployment, but in development and governance.
This is audacious. Singapore lacks the vast data lakes of China, the venture capital ecosystem of the United States, or the deep bench of AI researchers in London or Toronto. What it can offer is something potentially more valuable: a trusted regulatory environment where AI can be tested, deployed, and scaled with both innovation and accountability.
The proposal to create “a location of choice” for AI companies recognizes that geography matters less than governance in the AI era. If Singapore can establish itself as the jurisdiction where controversial applications get fair, intelligent oversight—where privacy, safety, and innovation are balanced—it could capture an outsized share of AI value creation. The Republic has form here: it did something similar with biotech in the 2000s, building Biopolis and attracting pharmaceutical giants through intelligent regulation and infrastructure investment.
But the AI strategy goes beyond attraction. The push for economy-wide AI adoption—helping SMEs integrate AI into operations, building AI literacy across the workforce—addresses a hard truth: the countries that thrive won’t be those with the most AI researchers, but those where AI amplifies human productivity most broadly.
The Global Context: Singapore’s Gamble in Historical Perspective
Singapore’s pivot toward risk-taking arrives at a peculiar moment in global economic history. The post-Cold War consensus that favored open trade, mobile capital, and integrated supply chains—the very system Singapore mastered—is fracturing. Countries are “reconfiguring trade networks and supply chains in the name of resilience and security”, Prime Minister Lawrence Wong warned in December. These aren’t temporary disruptions but “permanent features of a fragmented world.”
The irony is rich: just as protectionism makes Singapore’s traditional strengths less valuable, the ESR is urging the nation to double down on openness and risk-taking. It’s a calculated gamble that in a balkanized world economy, there will be even more value in being the trusted intermediary, the neutral ground where Chinese and American companies can still do business, the place willing to try things others won’t.
History suggests this could work. Small, trade-dependent nations have often thrived during periods of great power competition by becoming indispensable to all sides. The Netherlands did it during the religious wars of the 16th century. Switzerland managed it through two world wars. Singapore itself prospered during the Cold War by maintaining relationships with both camps.
But there’s a crucial difference: those historical examples involved managing existing strengths, not cultivating new ones. Singapore is attempting something harder—transforming its risk culture while maintaining the stability and trust that made it successful in the first place. It’s trying to become both the safe harbor and the daring adventurer simultaneously.
The Uncomfortable Questions
The ESR mid-term update raises questions that deserve frank examination. First, can a government engineer a culture of risk-taking, or is such a culture necessarily organic? Singapore’s top-down approach has worked brilliantly for infrastructure, education, and industrial policy. But risk-taking and innovation may be different beasts—less amenable to five-year plans and committee recommendations.
Second, is Singapore being realistic about the trade-offs? A genuine failure-tolerant culture means accepting that some high-profile bets will fail spectacularly and publicly. It means entrepreneurs will squander government grants. It means brilliant researchers will pursue dead ends. Singapore’s electorate, accustomed to efficiency and accountability, may find this difficult to stomach.
Third, can Singapore compete with economies that have natural advantages in risk-taking cultures? The United States produces more failed startups than successful ones—but it also produces Google, Amazon, and Tesla. China’s tech giants emerged from chaotic, under-regulated environments where failure was ubiquitous and cheap. Singapore cannot replicate either model even if it wanted to.
Perhaps the answer lies not in becoming Silicon Valley or Shenzhen, but in creating a distinctly Singaporean model: calculated risk-taking, not reckless gambling. Failure tolerance within guardrails. Innovation with governance. The ESR’s emphasis on supporting “high-potential, fast-growing start-ups” to scale globally suggests this middle path—identifying promising ventures early and backing them intelligently rather than throwing money at everything.
What Success Looks Like—And What It Costs
If the ESR succeeds, Singapore in 2035 will look different from Singapore in 2025. The economy will be more diversified, with clusters of globally competitive companies in quantum computing, space technology, and climate tech alongside the traditional strengths in finance and manufacturing. Workers will move fluidly between roles and sectors, armed with AI skills and comfortable with career pivots. The startup ecosystem will have produced a handful of global champions—companies valued in the tens of billions that choose to keep their headquarters in Singapore even as they expand worldwide.
The Singapore innovation growth 2026 trajectory will have created not just GDP expansion but meaningful social mobility. The “good jobs” the ESR promises will span a wider range of sectors and skill levels. Care workers and skilled tradespeople will earn professional wages. AI will have automated drudgery without devastating employment, because the workforce adapted fast enough.
But this optimistic scenario requires Singapore to overcome its hardest challenge: accepting that some bets won’t pay off. The quantum computing company that burns through billions before pivoting. The space venture that launches satellites into the wrong orbit. The AI startup whose promising technology fails to find product-market fit. These aren’t policy failures to be avoided—they’re the inevitable price of ambition.
As the government prepares its formal response to the ESR recommendations at Budget 2026 in February, the crucial test will be whether it’s willing to embrace this reality. Will ministers defend failed ventures as necessary learning experiences, or will they retreat to safe, incremental bets at the first sign of trouble?
The Verdict: A Necessary Gamble
The Singapore Economic Strategy Review 2026 represents either a courageous reimagining of what Singapore can become or a risky departure from proven success formulas—possibly both. What’s certain is that standing still isn’t an option. In DPM Gan’s phrasing, doing “more of the same” in a fundamentally changed world guarantees decline.
The review’s power lies not in any single recommendation but in its cumulative message: Singapore must transform its relationship with uncertainty. That means celebrating ambitious failure as much as steady success, supporting companies that dream big over those that play it safe, and accepting that 2-3% GDP growth in a volatile world represents triumph, not mediocrity.
Whether Singapore’s leaders and citizens are truly ready for this psychological shift remains the great unanswered question. The next decade will reveal whether a nation built on calculated prudence can learn to dance with risk—or whether the call to “embrace failure” will itself become a failure to embrace.
For now, Singapore is placing its bet. The world will be watching to see if a 728-square-kilometer city-state can write a new playbook for economic success in the 21st century—one where taking the leap matters more than landing perfectly every time.
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ASEAN
The Great Singapore Disinflation: Why MAS Will Stand Firm as a Global Storm Abates
Singapore’s core inflation fell to 0.7% in 2025. With price pressures receding, the MAS is expected to hold policy steady in January 2026, marking a new phase for the city-state’s economy.
The late afternoon sun slants through the canopy of the Tiong Bahru Market hawker centre, glinting off stainless steel steamers and the well-worn handles of kopi cups. Here, at the heart of Singapore’s quotidien life, the most consequential economic conversation of the year is being had, not in the jargon of central bankers, but in the simple calculus of daily purchases. An auntie considers the price of char siew before ordering; a taxi driver compares the cost of his teh tarik to last year’s. For the first time in nearly half a decade, that mental math is bringing a faint, collective sigh of relief. The fever of inflation—which spiked to a 14-year high in 2023—has broken. The Monetary Authority of Singapore (MAS), the nation’s powerful central bank, now faces a delicate new reality: not of battling runaway prices, but of navigating a return to profound price stability in a world still rife with uncertainty.
On January 29, 2026, the MAS will release its first semi-annual monetary policy statement of the year. All signs, confirmed by the latest data from the Singapore Department of Statistics (SingStat), point to a unanimous decision: the central bank will keep its exchange rate-centered policy settings unchanged. The full-year data for 2025 is now in, and it tells a story of remarkable disinflation. Core Inflation—the MAS’s preferred gauge, which excludes private transport and accommodation costs—came in at 0.7% for 2025, a dramatic decline from 2.8% in 2024 and 4.2% in 2023.

Headline inflation for the year was 0.9%. December’s figures showed both core and headline inflation holding steady at 1.2% year-on-year, indicating a stable plateau as the economy adjusts to a post-shock norm. This outcome, while slightly above the government’s earlier 2025 forecast of 0.5%, underscores a victory in the battle against imported global inflation. Economists widely anticipate that alongside its stand-pat decision, the MAS and the Ministry of Trade and Industry (MTI) will revise the official 2026 inflation forecast range upward, from the current 0.5–1.5% to a likely 1–2%. This adjustment would not signal a new tightening impulse, but rather a recognition of stabilizing domestic price pressures and base effects, framing a modestly more hawkish guardrail for the year ahead.
The Data Unpacked: A Return to Pre-Pandemic Normality
To appreciate the significance of the 0.7% core inflation print, one must view it through the corrective lens of recent history. Singapore, as a miniscule, trade-reliant economy, is a hyper-sensitive barometer of global price pressures. The supply-chain cataclysm of 2021-2022 and the energy shock following Russia’s invasion of Ukraine were transmitted directly into its domestic cost structure, amplified by robust post-pandemic domestic demand.
Table: Singapore Core Inflation (CPI-All Items ex. OOA & Private Road Transport)
| Year | Core Inflation Rate (%) | Key Driver |
|---|---|---|
| 2022 | 4.1 | Broad-based imported & domestic cost pressures |
| 2023 | 4.2 | Peak passthrough, tight labour market |
| 2024 | 2.8 | MAS tightening, global disinflation begins |
| 2025 | 0.7 | Sustained MAS policy, falling import costs |
| 2026F | 1.0 – 2.0 | Stabilising domestic wages, moderated global decline |
The journey down from the peak has been methodical, reflecting the calibrated tightening by the MAS. Since October 2021, the authority had undertaken five consecutive rounds of tightening, primarily by adjusting the slope, mid-point, and width of the Singapore Dollar Nominal Effective Exchange Rate (S$NEER) policy band. This unique framework, which uses the exchange rate as its primary tool, effectively imported disinflation by strengthening the Singapore dollar, making imports cheaper in local currency terms. The decision to pause this tightening cycle in July 2024 was the first signal that the worst was over.
The 2025 disinflation was broad-based. Key contributors included:
- Food Inflation: Eased significantly from 3.8% in 2024 to an average of 1.8% in 2025, as global supply chains normalized and commodity prices softened.
- Retail & Other Goods: Inflation turned negative in several quarters, reflecting lower imported goods prices and weaker discretionary spending.
- Services Inflation: Moderated but remained stickier, a testament to persistent domestic wage pressures in a tight labour market. However, even here, the pace decelerated markedly by year-end.
The slight overshoot of the 0.7% outcome relative to the official 0.5% forecast is statistically marginal but analytically noteworthy. It likely reflects the residual stickiness in domestic services costs and perhaps a firmer-than-anticipated trajectory for accommodation costs, which are excluded from the core measure but feed into overall economic sentiment.
The MAS Mandate in a New Phase: Vigilance Over Volatility
The MAS operates under a singular mandate: to ensure price stability conducive to sustainable economic growth. Unlike most central banks, it does not set an interest rate but manages the S$NEER. The current expectation of an unchanged policy stance is a statement of confidence that the existing level of the currency’s strength is sufficient to keep imported disinflation flowing while guarding against any premature loosening of financial conditions.
“The current rate of appreciation of the S$NEER policy band is sufficient to ensure medium-term price stability,” the MAS stated in its October 2025 review. The latest inflation data validates this assessment. Holding the policy band steady now achieves two objectives:
- It Anchors Expectations: It signals to businesses and unions that the central bank sees no need for further tightening, but is equally not prepared to risk its hard-won credibility by easing policy while core inflation, though low, is expected to rise modestly through 2026.
- It Provides a Buffer: A stable, moderately strong Singapore dollar acts as a shock absorber against potential renewed volatility in global energy and food prices, which remain susceptible to geopolitical flare-ups.
The anticipated upward revision of the 2026 forecast range to 1–2% is the key nuance in this meeting. This is not a hawkish pivot, but a realistic recalibration. It acknowledges several forward-looking dynamics:
- Base Effects: The very low inflation in late 2024 and early 2025 will create less favourable base effects for year-on-year comparisons in late 2026.
- Domestic Cost Pressures: Wage growth, while moderating, is expected to remain above pre-pandemic trends, supported by structural tightness in the local labour market and ongoing initiatives like the Progressive Wage Model.
- Policy-Driven Price Increases: The scheduled 1%-point GST increase to 10% in January 2026 will impart a one-time upward push to price levels, which the MAS will look through but must account for in its communications.
The Global and Comparative Lens: Singapore as a Bellwether
Singapore’s disinflation narrative is not occurring in a vacuum. It mirrors, and in some respects leads, trends in other small, advanced, open economies. A comparative view is instructive:
- Switzerland: Like Singapore, Switzerland has seen inflation return to target rapidly, aided by a strong currency (the Swiss Franc) and direct government interventions on energy prices. The Swiss National Bank has already shifted to a neutral stance, with discussions of easing emerging.
- Hong Kong: Linked to the US dollar via its currency peg, Hong Kong has had its monetary policy dictated by the Federal Reserve. Its disinflation path has been bumpier, complicated by its unique economic integration with mainland China and a slower post-pandemic recovery in domestic demand.
- New Zealand: The Reserve Bank of New Zealand has maintained a more hawkish stance, with inflation proving stickier due to a less open consumption basket and intense domestic capacity constraints. New Zealand’s cash rate remains restrictive.
Singapore’s experience stands out for the precision of its policy tool. The S$NEER framework allowed it to respond directly to the imported nature of the inflation shock. As Bloomberg Economics noted in a January 2026 analysis, “The MAS’s exchange-rate centered policy has acted as a targeted filter for global inflation, proving highly effective in the post-pandemic cycle.” This successful navigation has bolstered the authority’s international credibility and the Singapore dollar’s status as a regional safe-haven asset.
The Looming Risks: Why Complacency is Not an Option
The path to a sustained 2% inflation environment is not without its pitfalls. The MAS’s steady hand in January belies a watchful eye on several risk clouds:
- Geopolitical Supply Shocks: Any major escalation in the Middle East or renewed disruption in key trade lanes like the Straits of Malacca could trigger a sudden spike in global energy and freight costs. Singapore’s strategic petroleum reserves and diversified supply chains provide a buffer, but the inflationary impact would be swift.
- Wage-Price Spiral Precautions: The slope of Singapore’s Phillips Curve—the historical relationship between unemployment and inflation—has flattened but remains a concern. Robust wage settlements in 2026, if they significantly outstrip productivity growth, could embed inflation in the services sector, which is less sensitive to exchange rate policy.
- Global Monetary Policy Divergence: The timing and pace of interest rate cuts by the US Federal Reserve and the European Central Bank will cause significant currency and capital flow volatility. The MAS must ensure the S$NEER moves in an orderly fashion amidst this global repricing of risk.
- Climate Transition Costs: The green energy transition, while deflationary in the long term, may impose episodic cost pressures through carbon taxes, regulatory costs, and investments in new infrastructure. Singapore’s carbon tax is scheduled to rise significantly in the coming years.
As the Financial Times reported following the release of the 2025 data, analysts caution that “the last mile of disinflation—stabilising at the 2% sweet spot—is often the most treacherous.” The MAS is acutely aware that premature declarations of victory could unanchor inflation expectations.
Conclusion: The Steady Centre in a Churning World
As the hawker centre stalls begin to shutter for the evening, the economic reality they embody is one of cautious normalization. The MAS’s expected decision to hold policy unchanged is a powerful signal of this new phase. It is the policy equivalent of a skilled sailor easing the sails after successfully navigating a storm: the vessel is steady, the immediate danger has passed, but the horizon is still watched for the next shift in the wind.
The recalibration of the 2026 forecast to a 1–2% range is a masterclass in central bank communication—acknowledging progress while managing expectations upward from unsustainably low levels. It leaves the MAS with maximum optionality: it can maintain its stance through much of 2026 if inflation drifts toward the upper end of the band, but it is not locked into any pre-committed path.
For Singaporeans, the profound disinflation of 2025 offers tangible respite. For global investors and policymakers, Singapore’s trajectory serves as a compelling case study in the effective use of an unconventional monetary framework in a crisis. The nation has emerged from the global inflationary maelstrom not just with stable prices, but with reinforced confidence in the institutions that guard its economic stability. The challenge ahead is one of preservation, not conquest. And in that endeavour, a steady hand on the tiller is the most valuable tool of all.
Oil Crisis
The US$100 Barrel: Oil Shockwaves Hit South-east Asia — And Could Surge to $150
Oil shock Southeast Asia | Strait of Hormuz disruption | Stagflation risk Philippines Thailand | Fuel subsidy bills Asia 2026
Picture a Monday morning in Bangkok’s Chatuchak district. Nattapong, a 34-year-old motorcycle-taxi driver who normally hauls commuters through gridlocked sois for roughly 400 baht a day, is staring at a petrol pump display that has climbed the equivalent of 18% in eight days. He hasn’t raised his fares yet — the app won’t let him — but his margins have almost evaporated. “Before, I could fill up and still send money home,” he says quietly. “Now I’m not sure.”
Multiply Nattapong’s dilemma across 700 million people, eleven countries, and a dozen interconnected supply chains, and you begin to understand what the Strait of Hormuz crisis of March 2026 is doing to South-east Asia. On the morning of Monday, March 9, 2026, Brent crude futures spiked as high as $119.50 a barrel — a session high that will be branded into the memory of every finance minister from Manila to Jakarta — before settling around $110.56, still up nearly 40% in a single month. WTI posted its largest weekly gain in the entire history of the futures contract, a staggering 35.6%, a record stretching back to 1983.
The trigger: joint US-Israeli strikes on Iran beginning February 28, which escalated into a full war and brought Strait of Hormuz shipping to a near-total halt. The choke point — that narrow 33-kilometre-wide passage between Oman and Iran — carries roughly 20 million barrels of oil per day, about one-fifth of global supply. When Iran’s Revolutionary Guard declared the waterway effectively closed and warned vessels they would be targeted, the arithmetic was brutal and immediate. Iraq and Kuwait began cutting output after running out of storage. Qatar’s energy minister told the Financial Times that crude could reach $150 per barrel if tankers remain unable to transit the strait in coming weeks. At Kpler, lead crude analyst Homayoun Falakshahi was blunter: “If between now and end of March you don’t have an amelioration of traffic around the strait, we could go to $150 a barrel,” he told CNN.
For South-east Asia — a region that imports the overwhelming majority of its oil and whose economies run on cheap fuel the way a clock runs on a mainspring — this is not merely a commodity story. It is a cost-of-living crisis, a monetary policy dilemma, and a fiscal time bomb, all detonating simultaneously.
Oil Shock Southeast Asia: Why the Region Is Uniquely Exposed
The geography alone is damning. Japan and the Philippines source roughly 90% of their crude from the Persian Gulf; China and India import 38% and 46% of their oil from the region, respectively. South-east Asia as a whole, with the sole exception of Malaysia, runs a persistent deficit in oil and gas trade. When the Strait of Hormuz tightens, the region doesn’t just pay more — it scrambles for supply.
MUFG Research calculates that every US$10 per barrel increase in oil prices worsens the current account position of Asian economies by 0.2–0.9% of GDP, with Thailand, Singapore, Taiwan, India, and the Philippines taking the largest hits. From a starting price of roughly $60 per barrel in January 2026 to a current print north of $110, that’s a $50-per-barrel shock — implying current account deterioration of potentially 1–4.5% of GDP for the region’s most vulnerable economies. Run that number through to your household electricity bill, your bag of jasmine rice, your morning commute, and the pain becomes visceral.
Nomura’s research team, in a note that has become one of the most-cited documents in Asian trading rooms this week, identified Thailand, India, South Korea, and the Philippines as the most vulnerable economies in Asia. The bank’s reasoning is unforgiving: Thailand carries the largest net oil import bill in Asia at 4.7% of GDP, meaning every 10% oil price change worsens its current account by 0.5 percentage points. The Philippines runs a current account deficit that, at oil above $90 per barrel on a sustained basis, is likely to breach 4.5% of GDP. “In Asia, Thailand, India, Korea, and the Philippines are the most vulnerable to higher oil prices, due to their high import dependence,” Nomura wrote, “while Malaysia would be a relative beneficiary as an energy exporter.”
Country by Country: Winners, Losers, and the Ones Caught in the Middle
The Philippines: Worst in Class, No Cushion
If there is one country in the region for which this crisis reads like a worst-case scenario, it is the Philippines. Manila has nearly 90% of its oil imports sourced from the Middle East and, crucially, operates a largely market-driven fuel pricing mechanism with minimal subsidies. There is no state buffer absorbing the shock before it hits the pump. Retailers in Manila imposed over ₱1-per-liter increases for the tenth consecutive week as of early March, covering diesel, kerosene, and gasoline. The Philippine peso slid back through the ₱58-per-dollar mark on March 9, adding a currency depreciation multiplier to an already brutal import bill.
ING Group estimates the Philippines could see inflation rise by up to 0.4 percentage points for every 10% increase in oil prices. At Nomura, the estimate is 0.5pp per 10% rise — the highest pass-through in the region. Oil at $110 represents roughly an 80% increase over January’s $60 baseline, an inflationary impulse that Capital Economics pegs could push headline CPI well above the Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas’s 2–4% target. Manila has already announced plans to build a diesel stockpile as an emergency buffer — an admission that supply anxiety, not just price, has entered the conversation.
Thailand: The Biggest Structural Loser
Thailand’s problem isn’t just the size of its oil import bill — it’s the timing. The country is already wrestling with below-potential growth, persistent deflationary pressures in some sectors, and a tourism sector still finding its post-COVID footing. MUFG Research flags Thailand as one of the economies most sensitive to oil price increases from an inflation perspective, with CPI rising up to 0.8 percentage points per US$10/bbl increase — the highest reading in their Asian sensitivity matrix.
The government responded swiftly, announcing a suspension of petroleum exports to protect domestic stocks, an extraordinary measure that signals just how seriously Bangkok is treating supply security. The Thai baht, already vulnerable, has come under selling pressure alongside the Philippine peso, Korean won, and Indian rupee. For Thai factory workers supplying export goods to Western markets, higher transport and energy costs arrive precisely when global demand is wobbling under the weight of US tariffs. It is, as the textbook definition goes, a stagflationary shock — cost pressures rising while growth falters.
Indonesia: The Fiscal Tightrope
Indonesia occupies a peculiar position. It is technically a net importer of petroleum products — paradoxical for a country that was once an OPEC member — but it deploys a system of fuel subsidies (via state-owned Pertamina) that partially shields consumers from global price moves. The catch, of course, is that the shield is funded by the national treasury.
Indonesia’s government budget was built around an Indonesian Crude Price (ICP) assumption of $70 per barrel for 2026. With Brent at $110, that assumption looks almost quaint. Government simulations, according to Indonesia’s fiscal authority, show the state budget deficit could widen to 3.6% of GDP if crude averages $92 per barrel over the year — already above the 3% legal ceiling. At $110 sustained, the numbers are worse. Officials have acknowledged that raising domestic fuel prices — essentially passing the shock to consumers — could become a last resort. Nomura estimates a 10% oil price rise could worsen Indonesia’s fiscal balance by 0.2 percentage points via higher subsidy spending, breaching the 3% deficit ceiling at sufficiently elevated prices. President Prabowo Subianto, who swept to power partly on a cost-of-living platform, faces a politically combustible choice between fiscal discipline and popular anger at the pump.
Malaysia: The Region’s Unlikely Winner
Not everyone in South-east Asia is suffering equally. Malaysia, a net oil and gas exporter and home to Petronas — one of Asia’s most profitable energy companies — finds itself on the rare right side of an oil shock. MUFG Research identifies Malaysia as the only net oil and gas exporter in the region, likely to see a small benefit to its trade balance from higher prices. The ringgit, which has been strengthening as a commodity-linked currency, provides a further buffer.
The complexity lies in Malaysia’s domestic subsidy architecture. Kuala Lumpur has been in the process of a painstaking, politically fraught RON95 fuel subsidy reform — targeting the top income tiers first — which was already reshaping the fiscal landscape before the current crisis. Higher global prices actually make the reform argument easier: the subsidy bill would explode if oil stays elevated, giving Prime Minister Anwar Ibrahim political cover to accelerate rationalization. For Malaysia’s treasury, $110 oil is a revenue windfall and a subsidy headache simultaneously.
Singapore: The Price-Setter That Cannot Escape
Singapore imports everything, including every drop of fuel, but its role as a regional refining and trading hub makes it a price-setter rather than merely a price-taker. The city-state’s commuters are already feeling it: transport costs have risen sharply, and the government’s careful cost-of-living management is under renewed pressure. MUFG’s analysis ranks Singapore among the economies with the highest current account sensitivity to oil price increases, even though its GDP per capita provides a far larger fiscal cushion than its regional neighbours.
Stagflation Risk: The Word Nobody Wanted to Hear
The word “stagflation” is being whispered — and in some trading rooms, shouted — across Asia this week. Nomura’s note explicitly warns of a “stagflationary shock”: the simultaneous combination of rising inflation (from fuel and food cost pass-through) and slowing growth (from weakening consumer purchasing power and export competitiveness). It is the worst of both monetary worlds, leaving central banks without a clean tool. Cut rates to support growth, and you risk stoking inflation. Hold rates to fight inflation, and you choke a slowing economy.
ING Group notes the impact is far from uniform, with several economies partially shielded by subsidies or regulated pricing — but for the Philippines, the stronger inflation hit from market-driven fuel prices creates direct pressure on the BSP to hold rates. Capital Economics, while not abandoning its rate-cut forecasts for the Philippines and Thailand, has flagged that central banks may pause if oil hits and holds above $100 — as it already has. The ripple effects move quickly: higher fuel costs push up food prices (fertilisers, transport, cold chains), which push up core inflation, which pushes up wage demands, which erode manufacturer competitiveness. The chain is well-known. The speed this time is not.
Travel and Tourism: The Invisible Casualty
The oil shock has an airborne dimension that tends to get buried beneath the more immediate news of pump prices and fiscal deficits. Jet fuel — which tracks closely with crude — has surged in lockstep with Brent. Airlines operating regional routes out of Singapore’s Changi, Bangkok’s Suvarnabhumi, and Manila’s NAIA are facing fuel costs that represent 25–35% of operating expenses at normal prices. At current Brent levels, that share rises materially. The consequences are already filtering through: several Gulf carriers have partially resumed flights from Dubai International Airport after earlier disruptions, but route uncertainty and insurance premiums for Gulf overflight remain elevated.
For South-east Asia’s tourism recovery — Bali, Chiang Mai, Phuket, and Palawan were all expecting strong 2026 visitor numbers after several lean post-pandemic years — the arithmetic is uncomfortable. Higher jet fuel costs translate, with a lag of weeks rather than months, into higher airfares. Budget carriers such as AirAsia and Cebu Pacific, which built their business models around cheap fuel enabling cheap tickets, have the least pricing power and the thinnest margins. The traveller contemplating a Bangkok city break or a Bali retreat in Q2 2026 may find the price tag has quietly risen 10–20% since they first searched. That is not a crisis. But it is a headwind — and a reminder that in a globalised economy, no leisure industry is fully insulated from a Persian Gulf conflict.
Could Oil Really Hit $150? The Scenarios
The $150 question is no longer a fringe analyst talking point. Qatar’s energy minister said it publicly. Kpler’s lead crude analyst said it on record. Goldman Sachs wrote to clients that prices are likely to exceed $100 next week if no resolution emerges — a forecast already overtaken by events.
Three scenarios shape the trajectory:
Scenario 1 — Rapid de-escalation (30 days). The US brokers a ceasefire, Hormuz reopens to traffic with naval escorts, and oil retraces toward $80–85. This is the “fast war, fast recovery” template. The damage to South-east Asia is real but contained — a quarter or two of elevated inflation, some current account deterioration, minor growth drag.
Scenario 2 — Prolonged blockade (60–90 days). Tanker insurance remains unavailable or prohibitively expensive, shipping companies stay out, and the physical supply disruption persists. JPMorgan’s Natasha Kaneva has modelled production cuts approaching 6 million barrels per day under this scenario. Brent in the $120–130 range becomes the base case. For South-east Asia, this means inflation breaching targets in the Philippines and Thailand, subsidy bills in Indonesia threatening fiscal rules, and a genuine monetary policy bind across the region.
Scenario 3 — Escalation with infrastructure damage. Further strikes on Gulf energy facilities — as already seen against Iranian oil infrastructure and Qatari and Saudi installations — reduce physical capacity for months, not weeks. $150 becomes plausible. The 1970s-style shock, feared but never fully materialised in the 2022 Ukraine episode, arrives in earnest. South-east Asian growth forecasts get ripped up. The IMF’s 2026 regional outlook, cautiously optimistic as recently as January, would require emergency revision.
The G7 finance ministers were meeting Monday to discuss coordinated strategic reserve releases; the Trump administration announced a $20 billion tanker insurance programme, though shipping companies remain hesitant to transit the region. These measures can dampen prices at the margin. They cannot substitute for an open strait.
Policy Responses and the Green Energy Accelerant
Governments across the region are not waiting passively. Thailand’s petroleum export suspension, Manila’s emergency diesel stockpiling, Indonesia’s scenario planning for domestic fuel price adjustments — these are the short-term reflexes of policymakers who have been through oil shocks before and know that the first 72 hours matter.
The more interesting question is whether this crisis, like previous energy shocks, accelerates structural energy transition. Malaysia’s Petronas has been expanding LNG capacity and renewable partnerships. Indonesia’s vast geothermal resources — the world’s second-largest — have long been under-utilised relative to their potential. The Philippines, which currently imports nearly all its energy, has been pushing solar and wind development under the Clean Energy Act framework. The calculus that kept governments cautious about rapid transition — cheap imported fossil fuels were easy and politically manageable — has just shifted violently.
As ING’s analysis notes, energy makes up a large share of consumer inflation baskets across emerging Asia, meaning the political pain of oil shocks is both immediate and democratically legible. Leaders who endure it once tend to invest in insulation against the next one. The 1973 oil shock gave Japan its world-class energy efficiency. The 2022 Ukraine crisis gave Europe its renewable acceleration. Whether 2026’s Hormuz crisis becomes South-east Asia’s inflection point toward genuine energy security remains the region’s most consequential open question.
The Bottom Line
Brent at $110 and rising is not a number — it is a sentence, handed down to 700 million people who had little say in the conflict that produced it. For the Philippines, it means inflation at the upper edge of tolerance and monetary policy frozen in place when the economy needs easing. For Thailand, it is a stagflationary pressure on a growth story that was already fragile. For Indonesia, it is a fiscal arithmetic problem that risks breaching the legal deficit ceiling. For Malaysia, it is a windfall tempered by subsidy obligations and political exposure. For Singapore, it is a cost-management challenge that tests the city-state’s well-earned reputation for economic resilience.
The $150 scenario is not inevitable. But it is no longer implausible. And in a region that runs on imported energy, the difference between $110 and $150 is not merely financial. It is the cost of a week’s groceries for a Manila family. It is whether a Thai factory orders its next shift. It is whether Nattapong, Bangkok’s motorcycle-taxi driver, can still afford to fill his tank and send money home.
That is the oil shock South-east Asia is living through, right now, in real time.
Analysis
Singapore’s Bold Economic Bet: Why the City-State Must Learn to Fail
Singapore stands at an inflection point. For decades, the city-state has built its prosperity on precision, predictability, and prudent risk management—the very qualities that transformed a resource-poor island into one of the world’s wealthiest nations. But on January 29, 2026, Deputy Prime Minister Gan Kim Yong delivered a message that would have seemed heretical a generation ago: Singapore must learn to embrace failure.
The Singapore Economic Strategy Review 2026 mid-term update, unveiled after months of consultation with businesses and workers, marks a striking departure from the nation’s traditional playbook. At its core lies a fundamental recognition that in an era of geopolitical fragmentation, artificial intelligence disruption, and climate imperatives, playing it safe is the riskiest strategy of all. The question now is whether a society built on stability can genuinely cultivate the “spirit of risk-taking” its leaders insist is essential for survival.
A Changed World Demands Changed Thinking
“Today’s crisis is very different,” DPM Gan told reporters at the briefing. “It is going to be a different world that we are going to emerge from. We are never going to go back to where we were.” His words carried unusual weight, spoken by a minister who has spent decades navigating Singapore through economic turbulence—from the Asian financial crisis to the global pandemic.
The seven recommendations emerging from the five Economic Strategy Review committees read less like incremental policy adjustments and more like a cultural manifesto. Developed through over 60 engagements with stakeholders, they acknowledge uncomfortable truths: achieving economic growth will be challenging, and growth can no longer be assumed to generate jobs. The twin objectives—sustaining growth at the higher end of 2-3% annually over the next decade while creating good jobs for Singaporeans—require a fundamentally different approach.
What makes this Singapore ESR risk-taking agenda particularly striking is not just what it proposes, but what it admits. Singapore must move beyond simply attracting multinational corporations and instead nurture enterprises that “dream big and take risks.” The phrase appears repeatedly in committee documents—a deliberate rhetorical choice in a nation where failure has historically carried deep stigma. As Acting Minister Jeffrey Siow emphasized during the briefing, the global economy is being reshaped by forces Singapore cannot control: major power rivalry, security concerns supplanting free trade, and technological advancement that renders traditional comparative advantages obsolete within years rather than decades.
The Seven Pillars of Singapore’s Economic Reinvention
What Are the 7 ESR Recommendations?
The ESR recommendations Singapore announced on January 29 form an interconnected strategy to position the nation for a more volatile future:
1. Establish Global Leadership in Key Growth Sectors
Singapore aims to transform its manufacturing prowess in semiconductors, healthcare, specialty chemicals, and aerospace through aggressive investment in AI, automation, and emissions-reducing technologies. But ambition extends beyond making existing industries more efficient—the goal is “best-in-class and sustainable operations” that serve as global benchmarks. The recommendation includes directing national-level R&D resources toward securing leadership positions rather than merely participating in high-value industries.
2. Pursue Emerging Opportunities to Create New Economic Engines
This represents perhaps the boldest cultural shift. The ESR committees are urging Singapore to place bets on frontier technologies—quantum computing, decarbonization technologies, space exploration—where outcomes remain deeply uncertain. Committee member Lim Hock Heng, former vice-president of British pharmaceutical giant GSK, captured the ambition: “Singapore can be more than just a regional hub. We have the chance to become the global benchmark for advanced manufacturing and modern services, a place where the future of the industry takes shape.”
3. Position Singapore as an AI Leader with an AI-Empowered Economy
Building on the National AI Strategies launched in recent years, this recommendation pushes for Singapore to become “a location of choice for companies and talent to come together to develop, test, deploy, and scale innovative and impactful AI solutions.” Crucially, it emphasizes AI adoption across the entire economy to drive productivity, not just in elite tech sectors. This Singapore AI leader strategy recognizes that AI will reshape every industry—and nations that hesitate will be left behind.
4. Strengthen Connectivity and Support Firms to Internationalize
Rather than relying solely on its position as a regional hub, Singapore must actively help local firms expand abroad. The recommendation calls for enhanced transport links, deeper trade networks, and support for Singaporean companies pursuing international ventures—a recognition that in an age of protectionism, market access cannot be taken for granted.
5. Broaden the Range of Good Jobs
This tackles a more sensitive issue: the concentration of high-quality employment in a narrow band of sectors. The review proposes expanding opportunities in skilled trades, care services, and emerging fields created by AI and frontier technologies. It’s an acknowledgment that Singapore innovation growth 2026 must translate into broad-based prosperity, not just elite prosperity.
6. Make Lifelong Learning Practical
Workers will need to become more agile, acquiring new skills throughout their careers through flexible pathways that blend training and work. The proposal includes developing a national AI workforce strategy to build literacy and fluency across the workforce—not just among data scientists and engineers.
7. Enable Businesses to Navigate Transitions
Companies will receive support to assess their health, plan pivots, and reposition themselves for new opportunities. In a restructuring economy, this amounts to acknowledging that not all businesses will survive—and providing mechanisms to help those that can adapt do so successfully.
The Cultural Chasm: Can Singapore Truly Embrace Failure?
Here’s where theory meets the hard ground of cultural reality. Singapore’s success has been built on the opposite of the risk-embracing, failure-tolerant culture now being advocated. Students face intense pressure to excel in standardized exams. Civil servants advance through proven competence rather than bold experimentation. The bankruptcy laws, though reformed, still carry social stigma. Even the vaunted startup ecosystem tends to favor proven business models over moonshots.
The Singapore economy embrace failure message will require more than policy changes—it demands a generational shift in mindset. When ESR committees urge the government to “go beyond attracting multinational corporations and nurture a new generation of enterprises and start-ups that dream big and take risks,” they’re essentially asking Singapore to become something it has never been: comfortable with ambitious failure.
Consider the contrast with other innovation economies. Israel’s “Startup Nation” culture actively celebrates pivots and failures as learning experiences. Silicon Valley treats bankruptcy as a badge of honor, evidence that you swung for the fences. China’s tech giants grew by launching dozens of products simultaneously, killing the failures quickly. Singapore’s approach has historically been more like Japan’s: careful, consensus-driven, risk-averse.
Yet there are reasons for optimism. Singapore has demonstrated remarkable adaptability before—pivoting from entrepôt trade to manufacturing to financial services to tech hub within two generations. The government’s willingness to convene this review and publicly acknowledge the need for risk-taking is itself significant. As DPM Gan noted, the recommendations and measures being considered “have to be quite different from what we were doing before” precisely because the environment has fundamentally changed.
The AI Gambit: Singapore’s Biggest Bet Yet
If there’s one area where the Singapore economic update risk appetite is most evident, it’s artificial intelligence. The ESR committees are proposing that Singapore position itself as a global AI leader—not just in deployment, but in development and governance.
This is audacious. Singapore lacks the vast data lakes of China, the venture capital ecosystem of the United States, or the deep bench of AI researchers in London or Toronto. What it can offer is something potentially more valuable: a trusted regulatory environment where AI can be tested, deployed, and scaled with both innovation and accountability.
The proposal to create “a location of choice” for AI companies recognizes that geography matters less than governance in the AI era. If Singapore can establish itself as the jurisdiction where controversial applications get fair, intelligent oversight—where privacy, safety, and innovation are balanced—it could capture an outsized share of AI value creation. The Republic has form here: it did something similar with biotech in the 2000s, building Biopolis and attracting pharmaceutical giants through intelligent regulation and infrastructure investment.
But the AI strategy goes beyond attraction. The push for economy-wide AI adoption—helping SMEs integrate AI into operations, building AI literacy across the workforce—addresses a hard truth: the countries that thrive won’t be those with the most AI researchers, but those where AI amplifies human productivity most broadly.
The Global Context: Singapore’s Gamble in Historical Perspective
Singapore’s pivot toward risk-taking arrives at a peculiar moment in global economic history. The post-Cold War consensus that favored open trade, mobile capital, and integrated supply chains—the very system Singapore mastered—is fracturing. Countries are “reconfiguring trade networks and supply chains in the name of resilience and security”, Prime Minister Lawrence Wong warned in December. These aren’t temporary disruptions but “permanent features of a fragmented world.”
The irony is rich: just as protectionism makes Singapore’s traditional strengths less valuable, the ESR is urging the nation to double down on openness and risk-taking. It’s a calculated gamble that in a balkanized world economy, there will be even more value in being the trusted intermediary, the neutral ground where Chinese and American companies can still do business, the place willing to try things others won’t.
History suggests this could work. Small, trade-dependent nations have often thrived during periods of great power competition by becoming indispensable to all sides. The Netherlands did it during the religious wars of the 16th century. Switzerland managed it through two world wars. Singapore itself prospered during the Cold War by maintaining relationships with both camps.
But there’s a crucial difference: those historical examples involved managing existing strengths, not cultivating new ones. Singapore is attempting something harder—transforming its risk culture while maintaining the stability and trust that made it successful in the first place. It’s trying to become both the safe harbor and the daring adventurer simultaneously.
The Uncomfortable Questions
The ESR mid-term update raises questions that deserve frank examination. First, can a government engineer a culture of risk-taking, or is such a culture necessarily organic? Singapore’s top-down approach has worked brilliantly for infrastructure, education, and industrial policy. But risk-taking and innovation may be different beasts—less amenable to five-year plans and committee recommendations.
Second, is Singapore being realistic about the trade-offs? A genuine failure-tolerant culture means accepting that some high-profile bets will fail spectacularly and publicly. It means entrepreneurs will squander government grants. It means brilliant researchers will pursue dead ends. Singapore’s electorate, accustomed to efficiency and accountability, may find this difficult to stomach.
Third, can Singapore compete with economies that have natural advantages in risk-taking cultures? The United States produces more failed startups than successful ones—but it also produces Google, Amazon, and Tesla. China’s tech giants emerged from chaotic, under-regulated environments where failure was ubiquitous and cheap. Singapore cannot replicate either model even if it wanted to.
Perhaps the answer lies not in becoming Silicon Valley or Shenzhen, but in creating a distinctly Singaporean model: calculated risk-taking, not reckless gambling. Failure tolerance within guardrails. Innovation with governance. The ESR’s emphasis on supporting “high-potential, fast-growing start-ups” to scale globally suggests this middle path—identifying promising ventures early and backing them intelligently rather than throwing money at everything.
What Success Looks Like—And What It Costs
If the ESR succeeds, Singapore in 2035 will look different from Singapore in 2025. The economy will be more diversified, with clusters of globally competitive companies in quantum computing, space technology, and climate tech alongside the traditional strengths in finance and manufacturing. Workers will move fluidly between roles and sectors, armed with AI skills and comfortable with career pivots. The startup ecosystem will have produced a handful of global champions—companies valued in the tens of billions that choose to keep their headquarters in Singapore even as they expand worldwide.
The Singapore innovation growth 2026 trajectory will have created not just GDP expansion but meaningful social mobility. The “good jobs” the ESR promises will span a wider range of sectors and skill levels. Care workers and skilled tradespeople will earn professional wages. AI will have automated drudgery without devastating employment, because the workforce adapted fast enough.
But this optimistic scenario requires Singapore to overcome its hardest challenge: accepting that some bets won’t pay off. The quantum computing company that burns through billions before pivoting. The space venture that launches satellites into the wrong orbit. The AI startup whose promising technology fails to find product-market fit. These aren’t policy failures to be avoided—they’re the inevitable price of ambition.
As the government prepares its formal response to the ESR recommendations at Budget 2026 in February, the crucial test will be whether it’s willing to embrace this reality. Will ministers defend failed ventures as necessary learning experiences, or will they retreat to safe, incremental bets at the first sign of trouble?
The Verdict: A Necessary Gamble
The Singapore Economic Strategy Review 2026 represents either a courageous reimagining of what Singapore can become or a risky departure from proven success formulas—possibly both. What’s certain is that standing still isn’t an option. In DPM Gan’s phrasing, doing “more of the same” in a fundamentally changed world guarantees decline.
The review’s power lies not in any single recommendation but in its cumulative message: Singapore must transform its relationship with uncertainty. That means celebrating ambitious failure as much as steady success, supporting companies that dream big over those that play it safe, and accepting that 2-3% GDP growth in a volatile world represents triumph, not mediocrity.
Whether Singapore’s leaders and citizens are truly ready for this psychological shift remains the great unanswered question. The next decade will reveal whether a nation built on calculated prudence can learn to dance with risk—or whether the call to “embrace failure” will itself become a failure to embrace.
For now, Singapore is placing its bet. The world will be watching to see if a 728-square-kilometer city-state can write a new playbook for economic success in the 21st century—one where taking the leap matters more than landing perfectly every time.
Analysis
Singapore’s Bold Economic Bet: Why the City-State Must Learn to Fail
Singapore stands at an inflection point. For decades, the city-state has built its prosperity on precision, predictability, and prudent risk management—the very qualities that transformed a resource-poor island into one of the world’s wealthiest nations. But on January 29, 2026, Deputy Prime Minister Gan Kim Yong delivered a message that would have seemed heretical a generation ago: Singapore must learn to embrace failure.
The Singapore Economic Strategy Review 2026 mid-term update, unveiled after months of consultation with businesses and workers, marks a striking departure from the nation’s traditional playbook. At its core lies a fundamental recognition that in an era of geopolitical fragmentation, artificial intelligence disruption, and climate imperatives, playing it safe is the riskiest strategy of all. The question now is whether a society built on stability can genuinely cultivate the “spirit of risk-taking” its leaders insist is essential for survival.
A Changed World Demands Changed Thinking
“Today’s crisis is very different,” DPM Gan told reporters at the briefing. “It is going to be a different world that we are going to emerge from. We are never going to go back to where we were.” His words carried unusual weight, spoken by a minister who has spent decades navigating Singapore through economic turbulence—from the Asian financial crisis to the global pandemic.
The seven recommendations emerging from the five Economic Strategy Review committees read less like incremental policy adjustments and more like a cultural manifesto. Developed through over 60 engagements with stakeholders, they acknowledge uncomfortable truths: achieving economic growth will be challenging, and growth can no longer be assumed to generate jobs. The twin objectives—sustaining growth at the higher end of 2-3% annually over the next decade while creating good jobs for Singaporeans—require a fundamentally different approach.
What makes this Singapore ESR risk-taking agenda particularly striking is not just what it proposes, but what it admits. Singapore must move beyond simply attracting multinational corporations and instead nurture enterprises that “dream big and take risks.” The phrase appears repeatedly in committee documents—a deliberate rhetorical choice in a nation where failure has historically carried deep stigma. As Acting Minister Jeffrey Siow emphasized during the briefing, the global economy is being reshaped by forces Singapore cannot control: major power rivalry, security concerns supplanting free trade, and technological advancement that renders traditional comparative advantages obsolete within years rather than decades.
The Seven Pillars of Singapore’s Economic Reinvention
What Are the 7 ESR Recommendations?
The ESR recommendations Singapore announced on January 29 form an interconnected strategy to position the nation for a more volatile future:
1. Establish Global Leadership in Key Growth Sectors
Singapore aims to transform its manufacturing prowess in semiconductors, healthcare, specialty chemicals, and aerospace through aggressive investment in AI, automation, and emissions-reducing technologies. But ambition extends beyond making existing industries more efficient—the goal is “best-in-class and sustainable operations” that serve as global benchmarks. The recommendation includes directing national-level R&D resources toward securing leadership positions rather than merely participating in high-value industries.
2. Pursue Emerging Opportunities to Create New Economic Engines
This represents perhaps the boldest cultural shift. The ESR committees are urging Singapore to place bets on frontier technologies—quantum computing, decarbonization technologies, space exploration—where outcomes remain deeply uncertain. Committee member Lim Hock Heng, former vice-president of British pharmaceutical giant GSK, captured the ambition: “Singapore can be more than just a regional hub. We have the chance to become the global benchmark for advanced manufacturing and modern services, a place where the future of the industry takes shape.”
3. Position Singapore as an AI Leader with an AI-Empowered Economy
Building on the National AI Strategies launched in recent years, this recommendation pushes for Singapore to become “a location of choice for companies and talent to come together to develop, test, deploy, and scale innovative and impactful AI solutions.” Crucially, it emphasizes AI adoption across the entire economy to drive productivity, not just in elite tech sectors. This Singapore AI leader strategy recognizes that AI will reshape every industry—and nations that hesitate will be left behind.
4. Strengthen Connectivity and Support Firms to Internationalize
Rather than relying solely on its position as a regional hub, Singapore must actively help local firms expand abroad. The recommendation calls for enhanced transport links, deeper trade networks, and support for Singaporean companies pursuing international ventures—a recognition that in an age of protectionism, market access cannot be taken for granted.
5. Broaden the Range of Good Jobs
This tackles a more sensitive issue: the concentration of high-quality employment in a narrow band of sectors. The review proposes expanding opportunities in skilled trades, care services, and emerging fields created by AI and frontier technologies. It’s an acknowledgment that Singapore innovation growth 2026 must translate into broad-based prosperity, not just elite prosperity.
6. Make Lifelong Learning Practical
Workers will need to become more agile, acquiring new skills throughout their careers through flexible pathways that blend training and work. The proposal includes developing a national AI workforce strategy to build literacy and fluency across the workforce—not just among data scientists and engineers.
7. Enable Businesses to Navigate Transitions
Companies will receive support to assess their health, plan pivots, and reposition themselves for new opportunities. In a restructuring economy, this amounts to acknowledging that not all businesses will survive—and providing mechanisms to help those that can adapt do so successfully.
The Cultural Chasm: Can Singapore Truly Embrace Failure?
Here’s where theory meets the hard ground of cultural reality. Singapore’s success has been built on the opposite of the risk-embracing, failure-tolerant culture now being advocated. Students face intense pressure to excel in standardized exams. Civil servants advance through proven competence rather than bold experimentation. The bankruptcy laws, though reformed, still carry social stigma. Even the vaunted startup ecosystem tends to favor proven business models over moonshots.
The Singapore economy embrace failure message will require more than policy changes—it demands a generational shift in mindset. When ESR committees urge the government to “go beyond attracting multinational corporations and nurture a new generation of enterprises and start-ups that dream big and take risks,” they’re essentially asking Singapore to become something it has never been: comfortable with ambitious failure.
Consider the contrast with other innovation economies. Israel’s “Startup Nation” culture actively celebrates pivots and failures as learning experiences. Silicon Valley treats bankruptcy as a badge of honor, evidence that you swung for the fences. China’s tech giants grew by launching dozens of products simultaneously, killing the failures quickly. Singapore’s approach has historically been more like Japan’s: careful, consensus-driven, risk-averse.
Yet there are reasons for optimism. Singapore has demonstrated remarkable adaptability before—pivoting from entrepôt trade to manufacturing to financial services to tech hub within two generations. The government’s willingness to convene this review and publicly acknowledge the need for risk-taking is itself significant. As DPM Gan noted, the recommendations and measures being considered “have to be quite different from what we were doing before” precisely because the environment has fundamentally changed.
The AI Gambit: Singapore’s Biggest Bet Yet
If there’s one area where the Singapore economic update risk appetite is most evident, it’s artificial intelligence. The ESR committees are proposing that Singapore position itself as a global AI leader—not just in deployment, but in development and governance.
This is audacious. Singapore lacks the vast data lakes of China, the venture capital ecosystem of the United States, or the deep bench of AI researchers in London or Toronto. What it can offer is something potentially more valuable: a trusted regulatory environment where AI can be tested, deployed, and scaled with both innovation and accountability.
The proposal to create “a location of choice” for AI companies recognizes that geography matters less than governance in the AI era. If Singapore can establish itself as the jurisdiction where controversial applications get fair, intelligent oversight—where privacy, safety, and innovation are balanced—it could capture an outsized share of AI value creation. The Republic has form here: it did something similar with biotech in the 2000s, building Biopolis and attracting pharmaceutical giants through intelligent regulation and infrastructure investment.
But the AI strategy goes beyond attraction. The push for economy-wide AI adoption—helping SMEs integrate AI into operations, building AI literacy across the workforce—addresses a hard truth: the countries that thrive won’t be those with the most AI researchers, but those where AI amplifies human productivity most broadly.
The Global Context: Singapore’s Gamble in Historical Perspective
Singapore’s pivot toward risk-taking arrives at a peculiar moment in global economic history. The post-Cold War consensus that favored open trade, mobile capital, and integrated supply chains—the very system Singapore mastered—is fracturing. Countries are “reconfiguring trade networks and supply chains in the name of resilience and security”, Prime Minister Lawrence Wong warned in December. These aren’t temporary disruptions but “permanent features of a fragmented world.”
The irony is rich: just as protectionism makes Singapore’s traditional strengths less valuable, the ESR is urging the nation to double down on openness and risk-taking. It’s a calculated gamble that in a balkanized world economy, there will be even more value in being the trusted intermediary, the neutral ground where Chinese and American companies can still do business, the place willing to try things others won’t.
History suggests this could work. Small, trade-dependent nations have often thrived during periods of great power competition by becoming indispensable to all sides. The Netherlands did it during the religious wars of the 16th century. Switzerland managed it through two world wars. Singapore itself prospered during the Cold War by maintaining relationships with both camps.
But there’s a crucial difference: those historical examples involved managing existing strengths, not cultivating new ones. Singapore is attempting something harder—transforming its risk culture while maintaining the stability and trust that made it successful in the first place. It’s trying to become both the safe harbor and the daring adventurer simultaneously.
The Uncomfortable Questions
The ESR mid-term update raises questions that deserve frank examination. First, can a government engineer a culture of risk-taking, or is such a culture necessarily organic? Singapore’s top-down approach has worked brilliantly for infrastructure, education, and industrial policy. But risk-taking and innovation may be different beasts—less amenable to five-year plans and committee recommendations.
Second, is Singapore being realistic about the trade-offs? A genuine failure-tolerant culture means accepting that some high-profile bets will fail spectacularly and publicly. It means entrepreneurs will squander government grants. It means brilliant researchers will pursue dead ends. Singapore’s electorate, accustomed to efficiency and accountability, may find this difficult to stomach.
Third, can Singapore compete with economies that have natural advantages in risk-taking cultures? The United States produces more failed startups than successful ones—but it also produces Google, Amazon, and Tesla. China’s tech giants emerged from chaotic, under-regulated environments where failure was ubiquitous and cheap. Singapore cannot replicate either model even if it wanted to.
Perhaps the answer lies not in becoming Silicon Valley or Shenzhen, but in creating a distinctly Singaporean model: calculated risk-taking, not reckless gambling. Failure tolerance within guardrails. Innovation with governance. The ESR’s emphasis on supporting “high-potential, fast-growing start-ups” to scale globally suggests this middle path—identifying promising ventures early and backing them intelligently rather than throwing money at everything.
What Success Looks Like—And What It Costs
If the ESR succeeds, Singapore in 2035 will look different from Singapore in 2025. The economy will be more diversified, with clusters of globally competitive companies in quantum computing, space technology, and climate tech alongside the traditional strengths in finance and manufacturing. Workers will move fluidly between roles and sectors, armed with AI skills and comfortable with career pivots. The startup ecosystem will have produced a handful of global champions—companies valued in the tens of billions that choose to keep their headquarters in Singapore even as they expand worldwide.
The Singapore innovation growth 2026 trajectory will have created not just GDP expansion but meaningful social mobility. The “good jobs” the ESR promises will span a wider range of sectors and skill levels. Care workers and skilled tradespeople will earn professional wages. AI will have automated drudgery without devastating employment, because the workforce adapted fast enough.
But this optimistic scenario requires Singapore to overcome its hardest challenge: accepting that some bets won’t pay off. The quantum computing company that burns through billions before pivoting. The space venture that launches satellites into the wrong orbit. The AI startup whose promising technology fails to find product-market fit. These aren’t policy failures to be avoided—they’re the inevitable price of ambition.
As the government prepares its formal response to the ESR recommendations at Budget 2026 in February, the crucial test will be whether it’s willing to embrace this reality. Will ministers defend failed ventures as necessary learning experiences, or will they retreat to safe, incremental bets at the first sign of trouble?
The Verdict: A Necessary Gamble
The Singapore Economic Strategy Review 2026 represents either a courageous reimagining of what Singapore can become or a risky departure from proven success formulas—possibly both. What’s certain is that standing still isn’t an option. In DPM Gan’s phrasing, doing “more of the same” in a fundamentally changed world guarantees decline.
The review’s power lies not in any single recommendation but in its cumulative message: Singapore must transform its relationship with uncertainty. That means celebrating ambitious failure as much as steady success, supporting companies that dream big over those that play it safe, and accepting that 2-3% GDP growth in a volatile world represents triumph, not mediocrity.
Whether Singapore’s leaders and citizens are truly ready for this psychological shift remains the great unanswered question. The next decade will reveal whether a nation built on calculated prudence can learn to dance with risk—or whether the call to “embrace failure” will itself become a failure to embrace.
For now, Singapore is placing its bet. The world will be watching to see if a 728-square-kilometer city-state can write a new playbook for economic success in the 21st century—one where taking the leap matters more than landing perfectly every time.
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