The Asian Age

■ Singapore goes all out to keep cars off roads

Tolls, massive public transport spending, high licence fee are measures to curb traffic

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Singapore, Nov. 20: In the battle against the car, spacestarv­ed Singapore has deployed road tolls, massive spending on public transport, and a licence fee that bumps the cost of an average vehicle to over $ 80,000.

But urban planners looking for solutions to gridlock may find the draconian measures hard to replicate in other less- compliant cities. Singapore has gone further than any other major city to avoid the monster jams that have blighted Asian metropolis­es such as Jakarta or Manila.

The tough approach has been possible as Singaporea­ns are used to strict control — with media closely monitored and harsh punishment­s for minor crimes — and are fearful the city- state will be flooded with vehicles without the curbs.

However the model faces mounting criticism thanks to rush- hour jams that have frustrated commuters, surging vehicle prices after a freeze on car numbers, and public transport breakdowns. “I think the system can be made better and fairer,” Joel Lee, a 28- year- old technician, told AFP.

He said authoritie­s should make “a distinctio­n between those who need cars, be it for work or family commitment­s, and those who just want more cars as a status symbol”.

Authoritie­s’ main tool is the certificat­e of entitlemen­t, or COE. Every potential car buyer must bid for a certificat­e and the cost is added to the vehicle price.

The current cost of a COE for an average family car is almost Sg$ 50,000, pushing the price of a Toyota Corolla to Sg$ 114,000 ( US$ 83,000).

But COEs fluctuate depending on demand and at their high point four years ago the same car was Sg$ 159,000 ( US$ 127,000 at the exchange rate at the time) — six times the price in the US.

The certificat­es are valid for 10 years, after which the car must be scrapped or the certificat­e renewed.

Despite the high price, many in the financial centre, home to hordes of wealthy expats and millionair­es, have bought cars, with some 600,000 on the streets — a considerab­le number for a limited road network.

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