Section 3: Road to Merger Flashcards
list the reasons for merger
SINGAPORE
dont elaborate
political + economical
list the reasons for merger
MALAYA
dont elaborate
political, economical can be argued
POLITICAL: political independence / security
SINGAPORE
merger was a means of gaining independence
* The British would only grant Singapore independence if it merged with anti-communist states like Malaya, thus a merger was deemed necessary for political independence
* convince British that Singapore would be able to maintain political security
why were the british afraid to allow singapore full self-government?
POLITICAL: political independence / security
- In the midst of her constitutional changes, the Communists had succeeded to incite civil and industrial unrest.
- The PAP knew that since Singapore was still strategically important to the British and that the British would continue to maintain its control over external affairs, defense and internal security as they did not trust Singapore to be capable enough in maintaining political security, allowing only for full self-government under merger
- As long as the Communist remains a threat, the PAP government would find it difficult to win full independence.
- Malaya however had successfully contained the communist insurgents in their country through a jungle war and its emergency measures from 1948. Malaya could ward off communist threat in Singapore and serve as an opportunity to remove the leftist faction, maintaining political security.
POLITICAL: breakaway from pro-communist faction
SINGAPORE
merger was a strategy to break away from the pro-communists faction that had become a threat to the PAP
context
POLITICAL: breakaway from pro-communist faction
- PAP worked with the pro-communists towards the 1959 election victory with their shared goal of eradicating colonial rule
- PAP worked with them for their practical value since they were popular among the majority of the Chinese (strategic and practical approach in retaining popular appeal).
the leftists gained support from them due to the exploit of this deep sense of Chinese chauvinism the Chinese identifies with. due to the loyalties of the Chinese majority for the radicals, the PAP recognised that they would have to work and collaborate with them UNTIL they built a **strong enough moderate base **
why did the PAP not trust the radicals
POLITICAL: breakaway from pro-communist faction
PAP knew the radical faction were loyal not to them but the goals of the illegal party - Malayan Communist Party
* given that the fundamental goal of the MCP was to seize power through subversion and armed revolution, it follows that its supporters would do the same
* working with the leftists carried a serious risk but the PAP could not simply flush out the pro-communists YET as then they would alienate the majority of the Chinese residents whose views still gravitated to those who appealed to their sense of Chinese chauvinism
evidence that the pro-communists were working against people’s interest
POLITICAL: breakaway from pro-communist faction
- CHALLENGE TO PAP
- OPPOSITION TO MERGER: Barisan Sosialis was only opposing merger to ensure their own survival. merger would weaken BS credibility and hold over the people, retaining LKY’s hold over the PAP and guaranteeing his position as the PM
SIGNIFICANCE
POLITICAL: breakaway from pro-communist faction
Breaking away from the pro-communist faction through the merger was imperative for Singapore to ensure its national security, political stability, and long-term governance stability, while distancing itself from radical elements and focusing on its own interests and development.
ECONOMY: economic survival and common market
SINGAPORE
Singapore could not survive canonically without a merger.
evidence of singapore’s unpromising economic future
ECONOMY: economic survival and common market
- it lacked natural resources and had a rapidly growing population in need of a job (unemployment was close to 9%)
- facing a decline in entrepôt trade (neighbors became independent, so directed their exports through their own ports, reducing Singapore’s importance as regional trading port)
common market could fix trade between malaya and singapore
ECONOMY: economic survival and common market
- the British in separating Singapore, after it granted independence to Malaya, had in effect cut Singapore off from her lifeline as Malaya had served as an hinterland area that supplied Singapore with resources
- the Malayan government had introduced tariffs in the 1950s on good trade with Singapore, making goods entering Malaya from Singapore more expensive and thus less desirable to customers in Malaya; this reduced the amount of trade between Malaya and Singapore
- if a common market could be established through the merger, the malayan base would create a larger demand for Singapore’s manufactured goods. no tariffs applied on goods means benefitting on a larger market base, trade would increase and more jobs created
POLITICAL: Tunku’s disinterest in merger
MALAYA
- the issue of racial imbalance (loss of power)
- fear of communist threat
context of racial imbalance
POLITICAL: Tunku’s disinterest in merger
- Singapore has about one million (100,000) Chinese and the inclusion of this one million into the Federation will upset the racial balance of power in the Federation
- changes to the racial makeup
tunku’s concern about racial imbalance?
POLITICAL: Tunku’s disinterest in merger
- There was an imbalance of percentage of Malays with Chinese in a merged Singapore and Malaya. Singapore would upset the racial balance, with Chinese now majority in the merged entity, outnumbering the Malays
- The predominantly Chinese in Singapore might be reluctant to accept the Malaya customs (Malay Sultan as their Head of State, Malay as national language, Islam as state religion)
- they would threaten the political dominance of the Malay ruling elite since a larger Chinese electorate may then vote in favor of Chinese candidates which means a potential loss of Malay political power