• IP addresses are NOT logged in this forum so there's no point asking. Please note that this forum is full of homophobes, racists, lunatics, schizophrenics & absolute nut jobs with a smattering of geniuses, Chinese chauvinists, Moderate Muslims and last but not least a couple of "know-it-alls" constantly sprouting their dubious wisdom. If you believe that content generated by unsavory characters might cause you offense PLEASE LEAVE NOW! Sammyboy Admin and Staff are not responsible for your hurt feelings should you choose to read any of the content here.

    The OTHER forum is HERE so please stop asking.

Singaporean youth less likely than older generations to have seen their social status rise: IPS study

SBFNews

Alfrescian
Loyal
www.todayonline.com

Singaporean youth less likely than older generations to have seen their social status rise: IPS study​

SINGAPORE — Younger people between the ages 21 and 34 are less likely to have seen their social status rise, compared to those who are older, a study by the Institute of Policy Studies (IPS) released on Monday (Jan 16) showed.
Youth in Singapore.
Raj Nadarajan/TODAY
Youth in Singapore.
Follow us on Instagram and Tiktok, and join our Telegram channel for the latest updates.
  • A study by IPS showed that people between the ages 21 and 34 are less likely to have seen their social status rise than those who are older
  • Researchers said that this could be because young people have had less time to accumulate wealth compared to the older generation
  • However, slowing social mobility is still a concern here, with perceptions that it is more difficult for young people to accumulate wealth compared to the older generations

Published January 16, 2023

SINGAPORE — Younger people between the ages 21 and 34 are less likely to have seen their social status rise, compared to those who are older, a study by the Institute of Policy Studies (IPS) released on Monday (Jan 16) showed.

The study, titled "Survey on Singapore workforce’s preparedness for the future of work, their work aspirations and perceptions of social mobility", showed that respondents aged 55 and above are more likely to have seen a rise in their social status.

Seven in 10 among this group do so, compared to 61 per cent of those aged between 35 and 54, and 52 per cent of those aged 21 to 34.

The study, which surveyed 1,010 working adult Singaporeans aged between 21 and 84 in October last year, took stock of social mobility in an effort to understand "how Singaporeans are likely to fare in jobs of tomorrow and where vulnerabilities may lie", a press release on the study said.

Social mobility and inequality in Singapore have been hot-button issues in recent years.

Read also​

Younger workers less willing to accept lower pay for benefit of family or personal life: IPS survey

In 2018, then-Deputy Prime Minister Tharman Shanmugaratnam urged Singaporeans to keep the “escalator” of social mobility moving. He warned that once it stops, those caught in the middle will be steeped in “pervasive anxiety” of not only trailing those advancing further, but also looking over their shoulder at those who are catching up.

A report by the World Economic Forum in 2020 on social mobility found that despite outperforming its Southeast Asian neighbours, Singapore ranks 20th out of 82 countries surveyed.

20230113-sw-jomobility-classperception.jpg
Infographic: Samuel Woo

HOW IPS TRACKED SOCIAL MOBILITY​

The researchers used what is known as MacArthur’s Social Status Scale or MacArthur’s Ladder, where respondents were presented with an image of a ladder with 10 rungs and asked to imagine that it represents their society.

"The top rung (10) represents people with the most wealth, education and respected jobs, while the bottom rung (1) represents the most impoverished and least educated with the least respected or no jobs," IPS said.

Respondents were then asked to rank themselves on this ladder.

First, they were asked to recall their childhood circumstances at age 18 or earlier and provide a ranking, and then were asked to consider their present circumstance and provide a current ranking.

"An increase in 'ladder scores' from childhood to present circumstances suggests upward social mobility, and vice versa for a decrease in 'ladder scores'," IPS said.

Read also​

Ethnic self-help groups still relevant for Singapore, especially as social mobility gets 'tougher to sustain': PM Lee

The study found that overall, six in 10 respondents reported higher scores now, meaning that they experienced upward social mobility compared to childhood. This compared to 24 per cent who reported no change in scores, and 16 per cent who reported a decrease in scores.

The results were also broken down by age, and the breakdown showed that younger respondents are less likely to have seen upward mobility than older folk.

Dr Chew Han Ei, a senior research fellow at IPS and a co-author of the study, said: "The simple explanation is that (older respondents) have had more time to accumulate wealth, and also we know that in the past 50 years, Singapore has undergone massive improvements in mobility."
However, it may not be only time that makes it more difficult for young people to accumulate wealth compared to the older generations.
Deputy Prime Minister Lawrence Wong noted last year that among the concerns that Singapore faces is that social mobility is slowing, with people who have done well pulling further ahead of the rest due to their entrenched advantages.

Agreeing, Mr Ang Yew Shen, a 33-year-old director of sales at a wealth management firm, said that young people can still climb the social ladder.

Read also​

Meritocracy is under siege. Here are three ways Singapore can overcome its limitations

They can succeed by thinking out of the box and knowing how to market themselves or their products through sales and on social media, for instance.

"Sometimes it's not about the time, it's about the person — whether they are willing to take on and seek opportunities out there," he said.

20230113-sw-jomobility-socialmobility.jpg
Infographic: Samuel Woo

DIFFERENT PERCEPTIONS OF SOCIAL CLASS OVER TIME​

The rungs on the ladder were divided into different brackets:
  • Rungs one to four were classified as the lower social status bracket
  • Rungs five to seven were the middle bracket
  • Rungs eight to 10 represented the upper class
The study found that for those who put their childhood social status in the lower bracket, about nine in 10 reported higher scores for their lives now, compared to just half from the middle brackets and 13 per cent from the upper-class brackets.

More respondents also placed themselves in the middle and upper social class brackets now.

About half of the respondents reported that they were in the middle social class, while 11 per cent were in the upper class when they were children. However, in their current lives, about seven in 10 said that they were in the middle social class and 19 per cent were in the upper class.

Read also​

Social mobility: Singapore tops Southeast Asia but ranks 20th overall in global study

Conversely, 38 per cent of respondents reported being in the lower social class as children, but only 12 per cent stated that they have remained there.

Keep the ‘escalator’ of social mobility going, or risk anxiety of those in the middle: Tharman

 

borom

Alfrescian (Inf)
Asset
Asnwer is very simple=PAP's favorite foreign talents, PR's and new citizens whom we must also risk our lives serving NS to defend .
 

laksaboy

Alfrescian (Inf)
Asset
Forget social status or 'reaching retirement goals'... I'll be surprised if many of them managed to stay alive. :sneaky:
 

mojito

Alfrescian
Loyal
Oic so it is social economic problem not FT problem. Haha I knew it PAP is doing its best for Singapore. :smile:
 

Willamshakespear

Alfrescian
Loyal
As the study did admit, it is ONLY a PERCEPTION, and perceptions can deceive if one MERELY looks at today & past issues based upon current lenses.

Some Singaporeans youths will never realize the blessings they have today, & our todays are the efforts, courage & hardwork of so many, so many Founding & Forefathers since our independence. No doubt Singapore had been a port city since time immemorial, but it only benefitted the colonizers. Many citizens had to work hard & smart to achieve mere sustenance for loved ones. Colonizers never cared about us, but it changed after independence, by our Founding & Forefathers.

At that era, most citizens had little or no education, which are opportunities to succeed in life. They struggled to feed loved ones, & most were only drawing salaries of $300/mth. Times changed. Today, the average salary is $3k to $5k. With the amount of wealth generated since 1965, social expenditure had been increased thru tax revenues, as well as political will to UPGRADE skills of every citizen to earn more for decades. None was left behind.

Singapore's emphasis rightly had been to support the family, as such are the building blocks of civilization, & most if not all were no longer living in slums but in public co-funded HDB homes. It costs est $15K for a 3 room flat back then, but today, it is worth $500K in valuable land areas. It is an inheritance, a legacy left for today's foolish self-centered youths whom thought their forefathers had it easy, whom earned only a miserly $300/mth salary back then, & work really hard, with little opportunities & education, to give their kids opportunity of today, of which the youths of today can look forward to a starting salary of min $1.7k with no academic qualifications, & those that do with $3K?. If such opportunities are still little, then why are foreigners, whom boast of ability to buy homes at well below $100k in their homeland, clamouring to come here not just to work, but be citizens as well?

Furthermore, with many more citizens orientated policies from free & fair elected leaders - such as oversight on foreign labor reliance, skills upgrading, etc which leaves no one behind, policies of which their forefathers never had at independence, what more will convince the youths of today to take up opportunities to upgrade themselves that forefathers & adult tax payers had been giving to them?

 
Last edited:

Singapore Dancing Spirit

Alfrescian
Loyal
Yes, Institute of Policy Studies (IPS) is located Cluny Road. It is not a curry road though it was headed by an Indian diaspora DEVAN, JANADAS
贾纳达斯蒂凡 for his Think Tank to work as a bridge between SG public. and Government.

Most of the policies are coming from this brain but he sounds obsolete to me. Like IPSOS of Google, IPS of SG is also do things privately in a close room and then send their opinions as if they are originated from Citizens of Singapore. To me they are following tricks and magics of Google at IPS.

Devan Hanadas speaks but it may NOT sound relevant to us. That is what think tank all about. Think something and talk non-sense as they are unrelated to Singapore and Singaporeans but may be only close to PAP and Government as they are ass lickers and boot lickers of PAP. That is why Singapore Job, market especially IT sector is fully controlled by CECA (foreigners) in Singapore.



It supposed tio be generating public policy ideas in Singapore. IPS and to be autonomous research center of the Lee Kuan Yew School of Public Policy at the National University of Singapore in 2008. Today, IPS says it analyzes public policy, build bridges Unfortunately IPS does not engage its Citizens, but IPS seem conducting closed door meeting with Private sectors. SMEs especially CECA in closed doors. That is dangerous for Singaporeans and Singapore as Government Policies do not help any Citizens to its core/
 
Last edited:
Top