Conclusions and Relevance The development of the national financial sector was not only
stipulated in the financial development policy, but also considered as a key driver of Singapore’s
economic growth. The financial sector progressed as the off-shore banking center and international
financial center evolved and the national economic competitiveness was maintained after
industrialization was over amid
the small scale of economy,
limited domestic market, and
unavailable natural resources.
© Publishing
house FINANCE and CREDIT, 2015
References
1. Mirkin Ya.M., Kudinova M.M., Levchenko A.V., Bakhtaraeva K.B., Zhukova T.V.
Finansovye strategii
modernizatsii ekonomiki: mirovaya praktika: monografiya [Financial strategies for economic modernization:
global practices: a monograph]. Moscow, Magistr Publ., 2014, 496 p.
2. Lee K.Ye.
Singapurskaya istoriya. 1965–2000 gg. Iz tret’ego mira – v pervyi [The Singapore Story: 1965–
2000: From Third World to First]. Moscow, Mann, Ivanov i Ferber Publ., 2013, 576 p.
3. Chia S.Y. The Singapore Model of Industrial Policy: Past Evolution and Current Thinking. 2005. Available
at: http://www.researchgate.net/publication/254421304_The_Singapore_Model_of_Industrial_Policy_Past_
Evolution_and_Current_Thinking.
4. Mauzy D.K., Milne R.S. Singapore Politics under the People’s Action Party. London, New York, Routledge,
2002, 270 p.
5. Tan A. Official Efforts to Attract FDI: Case of Singapore’s EDB. 1999. Available at: http://www.fas.nus.
edu.sg/ecs/pub/wp/previous/AHTAN2.pdf.
6. Zeti Akhtar Aziz. Developments in Government External Debt in the SEACEN Countries.
Staff Paper, 1985,
no. 7. Available at: http://www.seacen.org/GUI/pdf/publications/staff_paper/1985/SP07.pdf.
7. Husain A.M. Determinants of Private Saving in Singapore. In: Singapore: A Case Study in Rapid Development.
Washington,
International Monetary Fund, 1995, 64 p.
13
http://www.fin-izdat.ru/journal/fc/
39 (2015)
Финансы и
кредит
Finance
and Credit
2–13
8. Lee S.Y. The Monetary and Banking Development of Singapore and Malaysia. Singapore, NUS Press, 1990,
318 p.
9. Lan C.-W. Singapore’s Export Promotion Strategy and Economic Growth (1965–84). 2001. Available at:
http://www.bartlett.ucl.ac.uk/dpu/latest/publications/dpu-working-papers/wp116.pdf.
10. Kong W.H., Hian T.H. Assessing Export Platforms: The Case of Singapore.
CAER II Discussion Paper,
2000, no. 72, 46 p.
11. Garling R. Fiscal and Monetary Policies. In: Singapore: A Case Study in Rapid Development. Washington,
International
Monetary Fund, 1995, 64 p.
12. Dekle R., Pradhan M. Financial Liberalization and Money Demand in ASEAN Countries: Implications for
Monetary Policy.
IMF Working Paper, 1997, no. 36. Available at: http://www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/wp/
wp9736.pdf.
13. Tee O.C. An Exchange-Rate-Centred Monetary Policy System: Singapore’s Experience.
BIS Papers, 2013,
no. 73. Available at: http://www.bis.org/publ/bppdf/bispap73w.pdf.
14. Yeow Q.W., Wu Y. A Quasi-Sterilisation Model for Singapore. 2007. Available at: http://wenku.baidu.com/
view/01a508f9fab069dc502201cb.html.
15. Tee O.C. Singapore’s Policy of Non-Internationalisation of the Singapore Dollar and the Asian Dollar Market.
BIS Papers, 2003, no. 15. Available at: http://www.bis.org/publ/bppdf/bispap15l.pdf.
16. Ngiam K.J. Singapore as a Financial Center: New Developments, Challenges, and Prospect. In: Financial
Deregulation
and Integration in East Asia, NBER-EASE.
University of Chicago Press, 1996, vol. 5,
pp. 359–386.
17. Tan C.H. Singapore Financial and Business Sourcebook. Singapore: Singapore University Press, 2002.
706 p.
18. Tan K.G., Chen K. Singapore’s Dichotomized Financial System. In: A Study of Financial Markets Summary,
1999. Available at: http://citeseerx.ist.psu.edu/viewdoc/summary?doi=10.1.1.200.5966.