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Government Will Always Uphold Fiscal Responsibility: PM Wong
The Straits Times
|March 01, 2025
He says this means keeping finances healthy, spending within Govt's means
The PAP Government will never take risks with Singaporeans' lives and their future – this means ensuring that it keeps public finances healthy year after year and spending within its means, said Prime Minister Lawrence Wong.
PM Wong also cautioned against attempts to portray a healthy surplus as somehow detrimental to Singaporeans as he addressed criticism from opposition MPs about poor budget marksmanship.
"Let's try not to put a wedge between the Government and the people... A strong fiscal position for Singapore is not at the expense of Singaporeans," he said. "In fact, it benefits Singaporeans in so many ways, because we are able to invest more in Singaporeans."
In an hour-long speech wrapping up the Budget debate on Feb 28, he also responded to the opposition's suggestion that the Government had raised the goods and services tax earlier than it needed to, given an expected surplus of $6.4 billion for financial year 2024, compared with the $778 million that had earlier been projected.
Singapore is in a strong fiscal position today precisely because it took the necessary steps early in this term of government to raise revenues ahead of expected structural spending needs as the population ages, said PM Wong.
While the Republic was fighting the Covid-19 pandemic, it could already foresee spending needs going up on the horizon.
"This was 2020, 2021 – we had no way of knowing when the pandemic would end, how the virus would mutate, how many more new waves of infection would we face, how many more restrictions we have to impose, and how much deeper a fiscal hole we would end up with," PM Wong said.
The authorities made the decision to proceed with the GST increase in Budget 2022, accompanied by enhancements to a package to delay the increase for most Singaporean households, when there were signs that the economy had stabilised.
This story is from the March 01, 2025 edition of The Straits Times.
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