The terms “First World” was coined at the beginning of
the Cold War, and referred to countries that were aligned with the United
States. The Warsaw Pact nations and the
Communist bloc were “Second World”, and the non-aligned nations lead by
countries such as Indonesia and the former Yugoslavia, were “Third World”.
Politically, Singapore was officially Third World, in
that it belonged to the Non-Aligned Movement, and has been a member since 1970.
This was also because ASEAN sought to be
neutral in the superpower conflict. In
reality, in terms of defence policy, trade agreements and voting record,
Singapore was always very much part of the First World.
After the end of the Cold War, the term changed
meaning, to refer generally to nations that were democracies, capitalist
economies and stable states. In that sense, Singapore is very much First World.
It is a developed nation, and has been
classified as such, by some supranational organisations, since the 1980s. Singapore scores very high on the Human
Development Index. It is the only
developed nation in Southeast Asia.
Some commentators have noted that Singapore is not
part of the OECD. Membership of the OECD
is not a prerequisite to being a developed nation. Whilst every one of the 36 members of the OECD
are considered developed nations - some of them barely - not every developed
nation is part of the OECD.
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