23 June 2025

Can Canberra be the Singapore of Australia?

| By Ian Bushnell
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Singapore is a world away but it could give Canberra something to aspire to. Photo: Meric Dagli.

It was unashamedly aspirational and probably needed to come from a relative outsider, but it had a certain ring to it and was designed to make the audience stop and think about what Canberra could become in the decades ahead.

Canberra should be the Singapore of Australia, Canberra Business Chamber CEO Greg Harford declared at the RSM Leading Cities event at Old Parliament House on a freezing Friday morning.

“It’s time Canberra believed in itself a little bit more,” he said in his opening remarks.

“It seems to be an innate view from some of our decision-makers that we can’t or that we shouldn’t compete vigorously to be, for example, the Singapore of Australia.

“But I’d argue that should be precisely our ambition.”

READ ALSO Productivity reform also means tax reform, Treasurer suggests

A Kiwi who has been in the national capital for a couple of years, Mr Harford is impressed with what he has found and with an outsider’s perspective has laid down a challenge for Canberrans and those who govern us, both federally and locally.

“We really need to be working very hard to get policy settings right, help businesses start, attract firms here and most importantly help them grow in scale,” he said.

Putting aside the polar opposite weather of the two cities and Singapore’s historically strategic location, there is enough common ground for Mr Harford’s bold call not to be that far-fetched.

Like Singapore, Canberra is a small land mass with few natural resources to rely on for revenue and, of course, its origins had some strategic imperatives. Some will quip that the ACT is also a one-party state

Singapore has developed from a trading post to a global financial centre with a reputation for innovation. While government is Canberra’s key activity, the ACT has also looked to innovation to diversify its economy, highlighting education, renewable energy, tourism and technology, including cyber security.

Both emphasise liveability as a key asset, although the debate will rage over just how many towers Canberra can tolerate.

CEO Canberra Business Chamber CEO Greg Harford: Get the policy settings right. Photo: Michelle Kroll.

In both places the role of government is pivotal but the days of being only a public service town are long gone with a thriving business sector working in concert with government and sometimes in spite of government.

Although at present some businesses are doing it tough, and Mr Harford says 40 per cent say they won’t make a profit this year.

For Mr Harford it is a question of government getting policy settings right to encourage the kind of business and skills growth that will create an even more prosperous city state.

The event heard how the three Rs – regulation, red tape, and a risk averse bureaucracy more intent on saying no than yes – are holding back the dynamism that will drive Canberra forward.

RSM economist Devika Shivadekar said the other big driver should be skills-based immigration, overseas and domestic, including attracting and retaining the brightest and best students with the promise of well-paid jobs.

“So a good way to do that is naturally to invest more in the universities that we have here, some of the best ones,” she said.

“You show them what Canberra has to offer and they stay. They choose Canberra over Sydney. They choose Canberra over Melbourne.

“The only way to do that is to target them young, target them when they’re in the universities, and then give them opportunities to stay in the city.”

Canberra Airport boss Stephen Byron is naturally outward facing and has been looking to link Canberra internationally for years. That will happen he says, another step towards Canberra becoming a global city

RSM’s report Canberra Rising: Shaping a connected and sustainable capital presents the huge potential of the city and how to meet the challenges before us.

More and better housing, including for students; skills, business support; building a business to business market; keeping procurement local, especially for growth industries; and exploit advantages in sustainability and innovation.

It’s a vision not that far removed from the government but in practice business often faces high costs, some as a result of regulation, but also taxes and charges like payroll tax.

Singapore, of course, is low-tax honey pot for businesses and while Australia is a different environment, there should be room for some innovative incentives to foster, attract and retain new businesses that are the right fit for Canberra, as well as reach policy objectives.

Master Builders CEO Anna Neelagama talked about lower charges that create more volume and drive better revenue than would otherwise be collected.

Revenue is a major challenge for the ACT Government with its narrow tax base, something that deters it from reducing the tax burden. Population growth can drive growth but also add to budget pressures.

This is where the Federal Government needs to step in and recognise the special status of the national capital and its role servicing government and the Australian people, and relieve the ACT of some of its more burdensome responsibilities, such as health which absorbs about a third of the local budget.

The type of business growth that befits the knowledge capital and centre of government – say in technology, research and defence – accrue benefits to the rest of Australia not just Canberra.

So yes, Canberra could be Australia’s Singapore, a cooler version in more ways than one.

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HiddenDragon9:35 pm 23 Jun 25

“Some will quip that the ACT is also a one-party state.”

There is something to that, but the crucial difference is that the Singapore government uses the resultant freedom of action to pursue far-sighted entrepreneurial pragmatism while the ACT government squanders its authority on inward-looking dogmatism and the funding and defence of a wasteful public sector.

A better source of overseas ideas and inspiration might be small/medium Eastern European cities which have been notably successful in making their way in the world after the fall of the Iron Curtain and the consequent imperative of succeeding when detached from the public teat.

The people behind some of Canberra’s most successful businesses, particularly those which are focused on national and international markets, may well offer similar insights if they were consulted directly, rather than through the comfy corporatist channels which the ACT government tends to prefer.

Intriguing (and unlikely) as it may be, the suggestion above that the federal government should “relieve the ACT of some of its more burdensome responsibilities, such as health” would leave Canberra with a city council even more obsessed with and captive to the property sector and thus even less conducive to the growth of outward-looking businesses.

“The event heard how the three Rs – regulation, red tape, and a risk averse bureaucracy more intent on saying no than yes – are holding back the dynamism that will drive Canberra forward.”

and there you have it. In a word, for Canberra to pull this off, it’d need to be much more to the Right, and yet the chances of that happening any time soon are likely to be slim.

The result: Canberra will compete with San Francisco, L.A and Portland for the title of the best homeless drug addicts’ paradise, while grown ups like Singapore do their thing (i.e. say yes and no to the things that ought to be said yes and no to, unlike like Canberra which has got it upside down)

That this Harford guy could think otherwise is amazing.

I retract what I said here while still maintaining that Canberra is largely upside down and riddled with problems

Zaphod Beetlebrox1:04 pm 23 Jun 25

The picture says it all. Radical change is impossible in Canberra. Canberra is conservative. The Federal Government are largely indifferent to the ACT Government suggestions. NCA is defined by tradition and heritage. Canberra is often described as a big country town, and many in Canberra seem to like it that way. Middle density housing is still controversial – NIMBY – what otherwise in Melbourne and Sydney is long accepted. In urban innovation comes from bigger Australian cities as do the consultants. Canberra does not lead innovation in Australia, it follows. To be honest, the ACT Government seems to like it that way.

Yes! Instead of trying to put a football stadium on the lake (with the unsolvable traffic & parking issues), build a massive green house on the Acton side of the bridge to have an indoor garden to rival Singapore’s botanic gardens (will allow more exotic species to survive Canberra winters). Then convince the Commonwealth government to allow permanent flower beds and more extensive landscaping of Commonwealth Park for Floriade so they can highlight outside gardens and have it run for a longer period. This would combine wonderfully with the National Botanic Gardens and its different habitats representing different parts of Australia’s ecosystems; and the Arboretum, preserving endangered species from all over the world. It would turn Canberra into a must-visit destination for gardeners and ecologists from all over the world. And for those who want to party and/or dine they can incorporate cafes, restaurants, bars & an outdoor cinema so people can eat, drink, dance & party in a beautiful environment.

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