Published: 20:14, December 31, 2020 | Updated: 06:30, June 5, 2023
S'pore sees uneven recovery in 2021 after worst-ever downturn
By Bloomberg

In this Oct 17, 2019 file photo, A full load vessel is seen docked at a container port terminal in Singapore. (ROSLAN RAHMAN / AFP)

After suffering its worst economic downturn since independence, Singapore is expecting to see a rebound in 2021, Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong said Thursday, echoing other top officials to caution that the recovery will be uneven.

“Economically, we are not yet out of the woods either, but we are beginning to see signs of stabilization,” with employment picking up and multinational firms making new investments, Lee said in a New Year’s address. “We look forward to a rebound in 2021, although the recovery will be uneven, and activity is likely to remain below pre-COVID-19 levels for some time.”

We look forward to a rebound in 2021, although the recovery will be uneven, and activity is likely to remain below pre-COVID-19 levels for some time.

Lee Hsien Loong, Singaporean prime minister

Singapore’s economy has been hammered by the global pandemic, which has slammed mainstays such as tourism and trade. Gross domestic product is expected to contract 6 percent to 6.5 percent this year, the Ministry of Trade and Industry said in November, before growing 4 percent to 6 percent in 2021.

Fourth-quarter and full-year GDP data due Monday will likely show that a recovery that began in the third quarter continued in the final three months of the year, according to economists surveyed by Bloomberg. Despite that, the full-year contraction is likely to be the most severe since the country’s independence in 1965.

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Singapore officials have said there’s still scope to provide more fiscal stimulus after pledging about S$100 billion (US$75.6 billion) in aid this year. Lee has said he sees the government running a budget deficit at least through early 2021, and perhaps longer, to support consumers and businesses. The next budget will be released Feb. 16.

This week, Singapore became one of the first countries in Asia to administer a COVID -19 vaccine. The country has moved quickly since securing and approving Pfizer Inc. and BioNTech SE’s vaccine and will start giving shots to health-care workers, with those age 70 and older set to be vaccinated from February. Singapore also eased some social restrictions this week.

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“We can now see ligh at the end of the tunnel,” Lee said in the speech. “But it will still take some time for enough people to be vaccinated before we are safe from another major uncontrolled outbreak.”