Loosening state controls in Singapore: the emergence of local capital as a political force

There has been a diminution in state capacity to control social forces in Singapore as rapid economic growth during the last two decades has created sizeable middle and capitalist classes. State autonomy from social pressure has declined, and processes of class formation are increasingly changing s...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Chalmers, Ian
Format: Book Chapter
Published: Ashgate Publishing 2001
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/16138
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author Chalmers, Ian
author_facet Chalmers, Ian
author_sort Chalmers, Ian
building Curtin Institutional Repository
collection Online Access
description There has been a diminution in state capacity to control social forces in Singapore as rapid economic growth during the last two decades has created sizeable middle and capitalist classes. State autonomy from social pressure has declined, and processes of class formation are increasingly changing state corporatist institutions. The politics of business development policy indicates that the `consultative decision-making' of the mid-1980s was initially a response to international economic developments. However, the national business class has since become more politically influential. The Singapore state has become susceptible to pressure group activity more generally, increasing strains on its dominant ideology of dirigisme.
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spelling curtin-20.500.11937-161382017-01-30T11:53:59Z Loosening state controls in Singapore: the emergence of local capital as a political force Chalmers, Ian Singapore International politics There has been a diminution in state capacity to control social forces in Singapore as rapid economic growth during the last two decades has created sizeable middle and capitalist classes. State autonomy from social pressure has declined, and processes of class formation are increasingly changing state corporatist institutions. The politics of business development policy indicates that the `consultative decision-making' of the mid-1980s was initially a response to international economic developments. However, the national business class has since become more politically influential. The Singapore state has become susceptible to pressure group activity more generally, increasing strains on its dominant ideology of dirigisme. 2001 Book Chapter http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/16138 Ashgate Publishing restricted
spellingShingle Singapore
International politics
Chalmers, Ian
Loosening state controls in Singapore: the emergence of local capital as a political force
title Loosening state controls in Singapore: the emergence of local capital as a political force
title_full Loosening state controls in Singapore: the emergence of local capital as a political force
title_fullStr Loosening state controls in Singapore: the emergence of local capital as a political force
title_full_unstemmed Loosening state controls in Singapore: the emergence of local capital as a political force
title_short Loosening state controls in Singapore: the emergence of local capital as a political force
title_sort loosening state controls in singapore: the emergence of local capital as a political force
topic Singapore
International politics
url http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/16138