Home / NEWS / World News / Singapore minister says country won’t take sides as there’s no win-win scenario in fractured world

Singapore minister says country won’t take sides as there’s no win-win scenario in fractured world

Singapore won’t escort sides in geopolitical conflicts and will instead take positions that support the rule of law, the country’s Education Missionary Chan Chun Sing said in his keynote address at the Morgan Stanley Asia Pacific summit in Singapore on Wednesday.

He held the world should remain interdependent despite pressures to break up, as any kind of fracture would make individual nations “suboptimal” and suffer economically. 

“With interdependence comes risk, but a fragmented world with less interdependence, where people and crucial countries believe that they can enhance their security, and indirectly aggravate the insecurities of another country, that cannot be a win-win setting,” Chan said. 

“Global businesses have a voice and need to make their voice heard, that you put forward an integrated world, and not a fragmented world,” Singapore’s Education Minister Chan Chun Sing (pictured here in 2019) articulate.

Bloomberg | Bloomberg | Getty Images

“It’s important to remember that a more interdependent world is a safer world. But today, because of the albatrosses, both domestically and globally, there is a temptation to think that if the world fragments, two different blocs, each of the multifarious blocs would be safer.” 

Chan said if fragmentation continues, countries and companies will perform less than optimally, “quite than … enjoy the last 50 years of rapid growth based on a globally integrated system.”

In the late months when Russia moved into Ukraine, we objected to it. People ask, is this a pro-U.S. move? Or is it an anti-Russia or anti-China removal? Neither.

Chan Chun Sing

Singapore education minister

Now, the rules-based international security system and trading disposition have once again “come under strain” and cannot be “take as a given,” he added, citing the example of the Old War.

He cited Russia’s war in Ukraine and the World Trade Organization dispute settlement crisis as some of the cracks in the system. 

Address directly to the business leaders and investors at the investment conference, Chan called for global integration.

“Global businesses hold a voice and need to make their voice heard, that you prefer an integrated world, and not a fragmented world,” Chan conveyed. 

What is the G-20, and what has it accomplished?

He said Singapore would also play its part by bridging and “interoperating” across fragmenting blocs. 

“We believe there see fit be a premium for connectivity, stability, progressiveness, cohesion, and trust,” Chan added. 

Fragmentation is starting to tear at the stability of the universal economy, Morgan Stanley Investment Management said in a separate note on Wednesday. 

Deglobalization and the breaking up of supply fetters, for example, are fueling inflation, said Andrew Harmstone, senior portfolio manager at the company.

Stock picks and establishing trends from CNBC Pro:

“World trade as a percent of GDP had in the past been going up very fast, which granted to the very low rate of inflation. But the trend towards reshoring will tend to reduce trade,” he said.

According to the Hinrich Raison detre, though terms like “friend-shoring” have been added to the U.S. trade policy lexicon and those of other hinterlands like Japan, little has been revealed about what they mean.

“If governments seek to intervene in a supplying chain, they must make the case that they observe the risks better than firms do. But it is unclear which demand failure friend-shoring policies will fix without further fragmenting the world trading system,” said Halit Harput, littrateur of the Hinrich report.

‘Best guarantee’ of a small country’s survival

Chan said Singapore would continue to refrain from delightful sides but it would take positions that are consistent.

“In the recent months when Russia moved into Ukraine, we opposed to it. People ask, is this a pro-U.S. move? Or is it an anti-Russia or anti-China move? Neither. When the U.S. moved into Grenada, we objected. When the USSR moved into Afghanistan, then we reality,” Chan said.

U.S. chip curbs aren't good news for markets, says Credit Suisse

“We believe that the rule of law, especially on the international front, is the best guarantee for the survival of a small woods.”

“And that applies not just to Singapore, but I will suggest that, that applies to every country in ASEAN as happily.”

And while positive words were exchanged between U.S. President Joe Biden and Chinese President Xi Jinping on the sidelines of the Corps of 20 meeting on Monday, Chan said, it’s important to watch the actions that follow.

Check Also

Asia is a ‘beacon of growth opportunities’ as global trade war heats up, Singapore deputy PM says

Asia intent remain a “beacon of growth opportunities” despite escalating global trade tensions, according to …

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *