Rating: Not rated
Tags: Political Science, Political Process, Leadership, Biography & Autobiography, Historical, History, Asia, General, Lang:en
Publisher: Marshall Cavendish Editions
Added: November 19, 2020
Modified: November 5, 2021
Summary
Few gave tiny Singapore much chance of survival when
independence was thrust upon it in 1965. Today the former
British trading post is a thriving Asian metropolis with one
of the world’s highest per capita income. The story of
that transformation is told here by Singapore’s
charismatic, controversial founding father Lee Kuan Yew. From
Third World To First continues where the best-selling first
volume, The Singapore Story, left off, and brings up to date
the story of Singapore’s dramatic rise. It was first
published in 2000. Delving deep into his own meticulous notes
and previously unpublished papers and cabinet records, Lee
details the extraordinary efforts it took for an island
city-state in Southeast Asia to survive, with just “a
razor’s edge” to manoeuvre in, as Albert
Winsemius, Singapore’s economic advisor in the 1960s,
put it.We read how a young man of 42 and his cabinet
colleagues finished off the communist threat to the fledging
state’s security, and began the long, hard work of
building a nation: creating an army from scratch, stamping
out corruption, providing mass public housing, and
masterminding a national airline and airport. Lee writes
frankly about his trenchant approach to political opponents
and his often unorthodox views on human rights, democracy and
inherited intelligence, aiming always “to be correct,
not politically correct”. Nothing about Singapore
escaped his watchful eye: whether choosing shrubs for
roadsides, restoring the romance of historic Raffles Hotel of
persuading young men to marry women as well-educated as
themselves. Today’s safe, tidy Singapore certainly
bears his stamp, but as he writes, “If this is a nanny
state, I am proud to have fostered one.”