Dr.Phil,
Devaluation of the SGD makes no sense in this environment. It did in 1997 when Western demand for Asian exports was strong. The problem right now is that demand from the West has collapsed. So devaluing the currency will not make much of a difference in terms of spurring exports.
What the SG gov’t needs to do is implement temporary relief measures in the budget (tax rebates, government hiring, worker retraining, HDB assistance) to ride out this storm until whatever replaces the old model emerges.
I am very nervous about USD and now have very little sitting in USD cash. Since I intend to remain in Singapore for at least the next 2 years I am comfortable in sitting on SGD cash instead.
Yes I agree. That is indeed a smart budget.
All countries will see exports fall as international trade falls and attempts to stimulate export demand by devaluing can backfire. I believe business want confidence first and foremost and this means a stable country and currency, a peaceful environment, a smart population fluent in Engliah (and Mandarin) etc. Singapore had all of that and more but recent inflation in the property sector shook confidence and has tarnished Singapore. The many suffer for the few.
Now proposals for a deliberate devaluation is effectively tantamount to taking part of our savings which further reduces confidence in Singapore.
Singapore's premier reputation has been hard won over many years and can so easily be lost and is far more difficult to recover if indeed it can be fully recovered, I suspect not. But I have confidence in Singapore and SGD long term.
Today there is no value in savings deposited for interest alone. Cash can appreciate if invested in a strong currency and Singapore can attract savings from around the globe, much the same way as Switzerland has done for decades. Today investors do not want 0.1% interest or even 2.5% interest on savings when, if SGD holds its value, there has already been a 33% gain against GBP this last year alone and this gain may double very quickly since UK is in big trouble and GBP has fallen over the last 24 hrs.
I agree about USD but continue to hold savings in USD for the short term. Obama's inauguration may add value. The SGD devaluatio this month, if it happens, will also creat immediate value.

I have always believed USD would be the last currency standing but the Americans are squandering other people's money (creating debt for their children) at a great rate of knots in what appears one final spending orgy. Banks have their vaults open busily soliciting taxpayers money to cover their trading losses when governments only need to underwrite approved credit to businesses to facilitate trade. They can effectively ignore banks, or should be able to do, if the banking sector is indeed part of the free market and not one huge oligopoly.
I would also consider the AUD but for me it is a volatile currency as indicated by the high interest rates. For many, the interest earned may not compensate for the loss of value if it should fall in value and 2009 will be hard for all. Foreigners can not buy landed property Down Under so there is no incentive for me as there is for residents who will be relatively unaffected by devaluations of AUD. That is not a criticism, perhaps it is prudent to restrict property to residents, it certainly avoids the kind of speculation and inflation we have experienced in Singapore and also UK from oversea cash.
We have seen how overseas investment in property can indeed destabilise a country by creating inflationary pressures.