Speech by Minister Indranee Rajah at the Launch of SMU LSEI
Opening
1.
Good morning everyone. Warm welcome to the 17th World Ageing Festival and
I want to thank Ageing Asia and the Singapore Management University (“SMU”)
for bringing us here together today.
2.
This is a topic of some interest to me. The reason is my mother lived till
102 and she passed away last year but she enjoyed her life, right up to
about two weeks before she passed. The last two weeks were affected by
ill health but before that, I think she really did enjoy it. So up to about
three weeks before she passed away, she got to enjoy her favourite food
from Tiong Bahru market, including the “cai tao kway” and “chwee kueh”.
And it’s just a reminder of how even as you age, it’s so important to make
sure that people can continue to enjoy their life and live it to the fullest.
And that’s why this festival is important. Over the years, this festival
has established itself as a leading regional platform for exchanging perspectives
on healthy longevity and the silver economy. I am really heartened by the
strong international participation this year, with representation from
over 40 countries spanning government, industry, academia,
and the healthcare and social sectors.
3.
This breadth of participation reflects how ageing is a global and multi-dimensional
issue that requires individuals, governments and the whole of society to
work together. Platforms like this bring together stakeholders to exchange
best practices and deepen our understanding of how societies can adapt
to ageing.
Singapore’s Demographic Realities
4. These conversations on ageing come at a pivotal moment for Singapore. We are experiencing two major demographic shifts.
a. The first is our falling fertility rate. In 2015, our Total Fertility rate was 1.24. Last year, our Total Fertility Rate was 0.87, a historic low. At this rate, for every 100 residents today, we will have just 44 children, and a mere 19 grandchildren.
b. The second is life expectancy. Our seniors are living longer. In 1990, Singapore’s life expectancy at birth was about 75 years. Today, it is 83 years.
c. An outcome of these two trends is a rapidly ageing
population. Just 10 years ago, about 1 in 8 Singaporeans was aged 65 and
above. Today, it is about 1 in 5.
i. And this trend will continue.
ii. By the turn of the next decade, it will be
about 1 in 4.
iii. And in 15 years or so, about 1 in every 3
seniors will be 80 years old or older.
5.
Singapore is not alone in experiencing these shifts. Across Asia, fertility
rates have also fallen sharply. By 2050, about a quarter of the population
in the Asia-Pacific region is expected to be aged 60 and above — nearly
1.3 billion seniors. This will have significant implications on labour
markets, healthcare systems and social support structures.
6.
To address these challenges, we are continuing to strengthen support for
Singaporeans in their marriage and parenthood journey, to build up and
invest in the next generation of young Singaporeans.
7.
At the same time, we want to enable our seniors and help them use their
longer lifespans well, to stay active and healthy, and continue participating
in society.
a. First, we are moving beyond “lifespan” to focus on
“healthspan”, which is the number of years lived in good health. To support
this, we have invested in preventive health through Healthier SG, to help
Singaporeans to take proactive steps to manage their health and prevent
the onset of chronic diseases. We are also strengthening aged care systems
through Age Well SG, such as by improving neighbourhood infrastructure
to support seniors to age in their own home environments.
b. Second, we are championing productive longevity.
Our seniors represent a valuable source of talent and experience. To support
this, we are providing upskilling and reskilling opportunities through
SkillsFuture. In addition, by 2030, we are raising the retirement age to
65 and reemployment age to 70. This way, seniors can continue to contribute
meaningfully to our workforce.
c. Third, we are providing opportunities for seniors
to continue contributing actively in their community. For example, under
the Team Nila Silver Champions and the Silver Guardian programmes, seniors
can help out at Active Ageing Centres and support community programmes.
d. Finally, the government is working with employers
to support more flexible work arrangements. As Singaporeans live longer
lives, flexibility will become increasingly important. This will help support
our people to manage the various demands of work, caregiving, lifelong
learning and other pursuits, at different stages of life.
Building a Longevity Society
8.
We have taken a few important steps to prepare for an ageing society, but
there is more to be done as our demographics continue to change. More people
are expected to live longer, even past the age of 100. Today, Singapore
is home to about 1,800 centenarians, up from about just 700 in 2010. So,
we need to redesign societies that allow people to remain active, purposeful
and connected throughout longer lives.
9.
In effect, we need to prepare for a “longevity” society, not an ageing
population. This means that the traditional three-stage model of education,
work and retirement may no longer hold. Instead, life may involve multiple
phases of learning, working, caregiving and contribution. For example,
a person may step away from work to care for young children or ageing parents,
and later return.
10. This means that we
will have to rethink how we organise work, communities and support systems
for individuals to navigate multiple transitions, as they move in and out
of work across different life stages. Fresh ideas are needed. To echo Professor
Lily Kong and her Straits Times commentary last month, ageing is also a
test of imagination – asking whether we can design societies that recognise
people across the full arc of longer lives.
11. We will also need
strong partnerships across government, academia, industry and the community,
for a whole-of-society approach to longevity.
Introduction of LSEI
12. Today, we welcome
the establishment of the Longevity Societies and Economies Institute (“LSEI”)
at SMU.
a. SMU has long been at the forefront of ageing research
through the Centre for Research on Successful Ageing (“ROSA”) and its predecessors
since 2014. This includes the Singapore Life Panel, which has tracked the
overall well-being of the older population in Singapore, with data of over
12,000 Singaporeans aged 50 and above since 2015.
b. While ROSA helped us understand how individuals age
well, LSEI will go one step further, asking how entire societies must evolve
as people live much longer lives. This reflects a crucial shift in focus,
from ageing as a life stage, to longevity as a structural transformation,
that will profoundly reshape societies and provide new opportunities for
all.
13. Through strong data
and interdisciplinary perspectives, LSEI will translate research and fresh
insights into practical solutions that help redesign work, policy, communities,
and systems for a longer-lived society.
a. SMU has committed $10 million over five years, together
with plans to secure further external support, to help seed and anchor
the institute. LSEI’s focus is also well aligned with Singapore’s national
RIE (Research, Innovation and Enterprise) 2030 agenda to advance research
and innovation on healthy longevity.
b. LSEI’s launch at this World Ageing Festival also
signals its international outlook and intent to contribute meaningfully
to global discourse while remaining grounded in Singapore's context.
14. What makes LSEI distinctive
is its multidisciplinary approach anchored on two pillars: building longevity
economies and strengthening holistic well-being. This helps us see longevity
not just in terms of physical health, but also social, mental and financial
well-being. This can help societies harness the opportunities of longevity,
rather than simply reacting to its challenges.
a. Consider LSEI’s research on retirement for example.
While both men and women tend to be more socially active after retirement,
retired men may be more at risk of feeling a reduced sense of meaningful
contribution. Such insights highlight opportunities for targeted policy
and community interventions.
Institutional Commitment and Partnerships
15. However, generating
ideas alone is only the first step. The challenge lies in translating and
scaling them into actionable solutions. Often, the technology works. But
adoption stalls because questions remain about acceptance and cost-effectiveness.
16. As LSEI develops,
there will be scope to explore new business and financing models, strengthen
regulatory frameworks, and address governance considerations such as privacy,
cybersecurity, and societal acceptance. Only then can we move from small
pilots to sustained, scaled, society-wide impact.
17. Partnerships will
therefore be critical. I am encouraged that LSEI will work closely with
partners across government, industry, the community, as well as global
collaborators. These partnerships demonstrate strong collaboration to co-develop
and scale solutions for longevity.
a. For example, SMU partnered Ageing Asia on the 2026-2030
Silver Economy Report, which maps the region’s longevity market potential
and emerging opportunities over the next 5 years, and this partnership
will be helmed by LSEI going forward.
18. I also welcome the
five MOUs being signed by the LSEI today – with Workforce Singapore, Agency
for Integrated Care, Singlife, Lions Befrienders and St Luke’s Eldercare.
This development also reflects how critical it is for partners to work
together as an ecosystem to address the various elements of longevity.
a. Let me touch briefly on one of them: LSEI's MOU with
Workforce Singapore, which focuses on addressing productive longevity.
Workforce Singapore will work with employers to better recognise the value
of senior talent and deploy more senior-friendly employment practices.
b. In tandem, the LSEI will delve into the research
to support the design, implementation and evaluation of these efforts.
And together, this can help build a practical system that allows seniors
to contribute for longer.
Closing
19. The demographic transition
reshaping Singapore and many other countries is real, and it is accelerating.
The task ahead of us is not simply to manage ageing, but to rethink how
societies can thrive across longer lives.
20. The establishment
of LSEI, the partnerships being formed today, and platforms like the World
Ageing Festival are important steps to better support all countries to
tackle this issue. So I do encourage you to engage openly and actively
across the World Ageing Festival, share your ideas and experiences, and
forge partnerships that can drive meaningful impact.
21. Thank you, and I look
forward to the rich discussions ahead.