PRESS RELEASE

In response to the National Population and Talent Division (NPTD)’s invitation for public feedback on improving Singapore’s birth rate, AWARE has submitted our recommendations for population-related policies that pertain to Singapore’s Total Fertility Rate (TFR) and measures to encourage parenthood.

TFR and parenthood are issues that are inextricably linked to perceptions about the quality of life in Singapore. If citizens do not have a sense of well-being and security, they will not be inclined to take on additional responsibilities of parenting and caregiving. It is therefore necessary to address all policies that affect our citizens’ quality of life, including those on education, health, housing, employment and retirement.

The following are some of the recommendations that we have submitted to the NPTD:

Approach the TFR issue holistically

If the issue that we are concerned about is that of an ageing population and shrinking workforce, it may not be cost – effective to try to reverse the declining TFR. The TFR has been below replacement since 1975, despite the numerous schemes and incentives offered to individuals. Studies indicate that increasing the TFR from 1.2 to 1.85 (a highly ambitious target) will only ameliorate the situation marginally.

The State should consider alternative solutions that are more cost- effective in ameliorating the issue of an ageing population and shrinking workforce. Utmost priority should be given to maximizing the latent talent we have in Singapore by:

  • Ensuring that children are not prematurely excluded from our talent pool before they receive adequate education
  • Providing more supportive conditions of work and life so that women who leave the workforce to be caregivers are able to return later

Prioritise gender equality

Current state policies, such as the 16-week mandatory paid maternity leave and no mandated paid paternity leave for fathers, place issues of fertility firmly in the realm of women. This model perpetuates a familial form that is premised on the traditional role of men as breadwinners and women as caregivers, and is neither realistic nor fair, given the aspirations and talents of our well-educated women and men.

  • Make gender equality a core value in all policies aimed at supporting families, and dispel gendered stereotypes about parenting roles
  • Legislate at least two weeks of paid paternity leave, with the cost shared between the employer and the State.
  • Convert four weeks of the 16-week maternity leave to parental leave to be taken by either spouse.

Provide more support for all types of families
The State has addressed the issue of care-giving at the level of individual families – for example, offering maternity leave, baby bonuses, tax reliefs and the choice to hire domestic help – rather than at the public level, i.e. providing universally accessible childcare support in various forms to all families. To build a truly inclusive society, policies should not differentiate between citizens along socioeconomic or other lines.

A more inclusive approach should consider:

  • Facilitating flexible working arrangements and support from employers for a healthy work-life balance
  • The expansion and improvement of childcare facilities
  • The provision of more anti-discrimination protection for mothers in the workplace, particularly with regards to the unfair dismissal of pregnant women

Fairer distribution of benefits and support

  • Review the current overarching policy that limits the definition of family to married parents.
  • Widen access to childcare subsidies, motherhood benefits and housing benefits to include all mothers, without discriminating against unwed mothers.
  • Discard the Parents Tax Rebate and Working Mothers Child Relief policies that are biased in favour of working mothers (but not stay-at-home mothers) and higher-paid working women.
  • Grant rights of citizenship to foreign mothers of Singaporean children so that their families are able to remain intact. This is increasingly significant; in 2008, around 30% of all Singaporean children had one non-citizen parent, an increase from about 22% in 1998. Seventy percent of these had non-citizen mothers.

Provide more support for women who want to have their children later

The declining TFR has been attributed to people getting married later. But even if declining TFR is caused by later marriage, given the high cost of living, the emphasis on education and work, and the national ethos to be self-reliant, it may not be possible or cost-effective to try to reverse this trend.

AWARE urges the State to support and promote the use of technologies that enable older women to have babies. Increase the subsidies for in-vitro fertilization and maintain the same level for subsidy for subsequent treatments. Such support is extremely targeted at women who desire to have kids and who need this financial support as in-vitro treatment is expensive.

For the full text of our submission, please refer to:
http://www.aware.org.sg/wp-content/uploads/Suggestions-to-NPTD_update_24-July.pdf

About AWARE

AWARE’S mission is to remove all gender-based barriers so as to allow individuals in Singapore to develop their potential to the fullest and realise their personal visions and hopes through:

  • Research and advocacy
  • Education and training
  • Support services

AWARE believes in the rights of women and men to make informed and responsible choices about their lives and to have equal opportunities in education, marriage and employment, and in the right of women to control their own bodies, particularly with regard to sexual and reproductive rights.

AWARE is dedicated to removing gender-based barriers.

These barriers apply to both women and men, but because of the way human society has evolved, it is women who are more likely to come up against these barriers. These barriers, whether structural, attitudinal, or self-imposed, prevent individuals in Singapore from developing their potential to the fullest and realising their personal visions and hopes.

 

You May Also Like

工人党费沙质问 总统哈莉玛对储备金知多少?

工人党阿裕尼集选区议员莫哈末费沙质问,总统哈莉玛是否获得有关国家储备金的充足资讯? 在早前参与国会“坚毅向前”附加预算案致词,费沙就指出,要动用储备金,需得到总统的同意。政府需要向总统提供详细信息,总统则咨询总统顾问理事会成员,是否批准动用储备金的决策。 早前,对于新加坡的第四个抗疫预算案,哈莉玛总统原则上支持再度动用国家储备。 但费沙认为,总统对于国家储备金有多少余额,是否知情?这对于总统作出正确决策至关重要。 王瑞杰:总统对储备金完全知情 对此,副总理王瑞杰则强调,总统哈莉玛是在对储备金充分知情的情况下,同意动用储备金;也指宪法第22F也阐明,总统有权知道任何与储备金相关的资讯,以行使其在宪法下赋予的权力。 回溯过去,新加坡首任民选总统、开国以来第五任总统王鼎昌,就曾追问储备金事宜,对政府施压,要他们完成保护储备金的程序。 他曾指出,民选总统应该要保护国家储备,但其任期首五年,没人告诉他该保护的事物是什么。  

New Senior Minister of State Edwin Tong: Overall public trust in PAP Govt remains healthy

In the long interview with Channel News Asia which was published today…

Indonesian Army Chief says he did not apologise to S'pore

Controversy over the naming of two marines by Indonesia has again erupted…

Foreign workers organised sit-down protest at CBD, demanding unpaid salaries of nearly S$300,000

On Wednesday (March 6), over 30 foreign workers participated in a sit-down…