Page 7 - Education Change and Economic Development: The Case of Singapore Dr. Goh Chor Boon National Institute of Education, Nanyang Technological University
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Education Change and Economic Development: The Case of Singaporec67
shortage of local expertise in the field of science and technology. In 1970, it was
estimated that Singapore would remain short of about 450 to 500 engineers each
year over the period 1970 to 1975 - despite the government’s effort to increase
the annual output of engineers from the then University of Singapore from 80
5
to 210 by 1974. The shortage of management personnel and technicians was
equally worrisome, the former by about 200 a year over the next three years and
6
the latter by as many as 1,500 to 2,000 each year over the next two years.
In the late 1970s, it became clear that as countries in Southeast Asia began
to compete effectively for foreign investments in low-skilled, labour-intensive
industries, Singapore’s previous comparative advantage in labour-intensive
manufactured products was gradually being eroded. The economic planners now
launched an economic restructuring strategy to shift from low-skilled, labour-
intensive to technology-led, capital-intensive industrialization. The government
had assumed a crucial role in raising the Singapore worker’s knowledge and
skills to accelerate industrial restructuring. A new education system was needed.
During the “survival-driven” phase of education change in the 1960s
and 1970s, the priority was to create jobs, so that the people and the country
could survive. The strategy was to expand quickly the accessibility to primary
education for all Singaporeans. This would at least create a young labor
force with basic education to support the labor-intensive factories provided
for by largely foreign companies. Besides, rapid construction of schools and
recruitment of teachers would also provide employment opportunities. However,
up to the 1970s, while the rapid construction of schools and training cohorts of
5 Goh Keng Swee, The Economics of Modernization (Singapore: Asia Pacific Press,
1972), p. 273.
6 Ibid., p. 274.