Written Answer

Singaporeans Below 35 on Social Welfare in 2016

Speakers

Summary

This question concerns the number of young Singaporeans on social welfare and government strategies to address their underlying challenges. Mr Sitoh Yih Pin inquired about trends, with Minister Tan Chuan-Jin noting that households under 35 receiving ComCare Short-to-Medium Term Assistance grew from 4,016 in FY2012 to 5,644 in FY2015. Minister Tan Chuan-Jin explained this resulted from revised income criteria and improved access via Social Service Offices, even as the group's share of total cases dipped. Assistance includes job placement through workforce agencies and social support for complex needs like divorce or incarceration through Family Service Centres. Upstream initiatives like financial literacy, marriage preparation, and the KidSTART pilot further target long-term stability for vulnerable families and their children.

Transcript

22 Mr Sitoh Yih Pin asked the Minister for Social and Family Development (a) what is the number of Singaporeans below the age of 35 who are on social welfare in 2016; (b) whether this has been an increasing trend in the past 10 years; and (c) what are the plans to deal with the underlying issues and problems for such a group of persons.

Mr Tan Chuan-Jin: The number of households with main applicant aged below 35 that received ComCare Short-to-Medium Term Assistance (SMTA) increased from 4,016 in financial year (FY) 2012 to 5,644 in FY2015. As a proportion of households receiving ComCare SMTA, this dipped slightly from 19.5% in FY2012 to 19.1% in FY2015. More households had received assistance due to the revised income criteria. More families can also access assistance through the network of 24 Social Service Offices (SSOs) island wide.

Some younger applicants may be temporarily unemployed and searching for a job. Besides providing financial assistance, our SSOs partner Workforce Singapore (WSG) and the Employment and Employability Institute (e2i) to provide the client with employment assistance to improve his or her employability and secure stable employment.

Other families may have more complex needs, for example, family issues, such as divorce, health issues or incarceration. To address these, our SSOs work with community partners, such as Family Service Centres, to help these families strengthen their family ties and develop resilience. To support the needs of different couples, including young couples, the Ministry of Social and Family Development (MSF) partners community agencies to provide marriage preparation and support programmes. MSF also works with other agencies to enhance preventive and upstream strategies for low-income groups, such as financial literacy, employment and housing support.

We are also expanding upstream efforts to support vulnerable families and their children. To this end, the Early Childhood Development Agency has piloted the KidSTART programme in July last year to enable children aged six and below from low-income and vulnerable families to have a good start in life.