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Singapore announces third stimulus package worth $3.6 billion to soften coronavirus impact
A food outlet in Singapore placed markers on selected tables to separate diners as authorities implement stricter social-distancing measures to combat the coronavirus outbreak.Suhaimi Abdullah | Getty ImagesSingapore on Monday announced another 5.1 billion Singapore dollars ($3.6 billion) in stimulus to soften the economic damage from the ongoing coronavirus outbreak.That’s the third stimulus package that…
A food outlet in Singapore placed markers on selected tables to separate diners as authorities implement stricter social-distancing measures to combat the coronavirus outbreak.
Suhaimi Abdullah | Getty Images
Singapore on Monday announced another 5.1 billion Singapore dollars ($3.6 billion) in stimulus to soften the economic damage from the ongoing coronavirus outbreak.
That's the third stimulus package that Singapore has announced since the outbreak. Together with the previous two packages, the Southeast Asian country has set aside 59.9 billion Singapore dollars ($41.7 billion), accounting for around 12% of the country's gross domestic product.
The latest stimulus was planned to help businesses and households tide through the coming month, during which stricter social-distancing measures — which include closing schools and shutting workplaces temporarily — will kick in starting Tuesday.
The measures announced by Deputy Prime Minister and Finance Minister Heng Swee Keat include the following:
- Greater wage subsidies for all companies in April
- Waivers on rental and foreign worker levies for businesses
- Cash payout of 600 Singapore dollars ($417.70) each for all adult Singaporeans
The additional spending will bring the country's annual budget deficit to 44.3 billion Singapore dollars ($30.8 billion) or 8.9% of GDP, said Heng. The minister said the government will draw an additional 4 billion Singapore dollars ($2.9 billion) from its reserves to fund the measures.
Singapore was one of the earliest countries outside China to report cases of the coronavirus disease, which is formally named COVID-19. Its response to the outbreak involves quickly isolating confirmed and possible cases, as well as tracing people they've come in close contact with — efforts that have won praise from experts around the world, including those from the World Health Organization.
Despite those efforts, the Southeast Asian country reported its biggest single-day jump in cases on Sunday, adding 120 new infections to bring its tally to 1,309 cases with six deaths, according to the Ministry of Health.
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