
Soon Koh: Infrastructure Development Trust Fund hamstrung by limitations, modern consolidate financing model needed
KUCHING (May 21): The Infrastructure Development Trust Fund (IDTF) was hamstrung by 'structural and operational limitations', said Bawang Assan assemblyman Dato Sri Wong Soon Koh.
While expressing for the Infrastructure Development Trust Fund (Dissolution) Ordinance 2025, he said the IDTF must be replaced with a modern, consolidated financing model.
According to him, the IDTF, established in 1985, lacks transparent governance, accountability mechanisms, and the flexibility to finance technology-driven, high-value projects.
'Without adaptive governance, the IDTF might fail to address emerging needs like rural-urban connectivity or port or airport modernisation,' he said during the debate of the Bill, which was passed by the State Legislative Assembly (DUN) today.
Wong listed four key shortcomings of the old framework: inadequate accountability, limited adaptability to sustainability goals, inflexible funding rules, and exposure to potential mismanagement.
'The dissolution of the IDTF represents a momentous move in our approach to infrastructure financing and management.
'Indeed, this change must be seen as our broader efforts to rationalise our public finance management, which is moving towards unifying financing, and this unified financing can reduce fragmentation of development funding mechanisms, which can bring about strategic overall prioritisation of infrastructure projects,' he said.
He called for a detailed implementation schedule for the dissolution, including timelines, various responsibilities, and audit trails, as well as proposed a dedicated transition task force be set up to oversee the migration of funds and project documentation.
Furthermore, he emphasised that the reform must be seen as part of the state's vision to modernise the infrastructure financing system to ensure that money spent will bring maximum value to the people.
Wong warned that the move's success hinges on stringent oversight and the state's ability to leverage alternative funding models effectively.
'By consolidating funds under this financial model, the state is on its way to accelerate infrastructure development, reduce bureaucratic inefficiencies, and assert more financial independence,' he added. Infrastructure Development Trust Fund lead wong soon koh
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Daily Express
19 hours ago
- Daily Express
Singaporeans told: Unite to face the challenges
Published on: Sunday, August 10, 2025 Published on: Sun, Aug 10, 2025 By: Malay Mail Text Size: Fireworks display during Singapore's 60th National Day, with celebrations returning to the Padang today. SINGAPORE: Singapore Prime Minister Lawrence Wong has urged Singaporeans to hold fast to the spirit of unity that built the nation six decades ago, warning that the years ahead will bring sterner tests amid a more fractured and volatile world. Delivering his National Day message yesterday from the Padang — the historic field where Singapore's first National Day Parade was held in 1966 — Wong said national cohesion, resolve and performance would be crucial to staying ahead in an era of deepening geopolitical tensions and economic uncertainty. Advertisement 'As a small nation, we cannot afford to be divided. Our unity has always been our source of strength. When we stand together, there is nothing we cannot overcome,' he said, recalling how the Republic had prevailed against the odds since gaining independence in 1965. The address came on the eve of Singapore's 60th National Day, with celebrations returning to the Padang today. Before the message, a five-minute clip of founding prime minister Lee Kuan Yew reading the Proclamation of Singapore — the document that marked the country's separation from Malaysia — was screened. Wong, who had spoken during the May general election of a changing and uncertain global landscape, said the situation had since worsened. Advertisement 'New conflicts have broken out. Geopolitical tensions have deepened. Barriers to trade are hardening. And protectionist sentiments are worsening,' he said. 'To put it bluntly: The global order that enabled Singapore to thrive for decades is unravelling before our eyes.' Bigger powers, he noted, are increasingly willing to use economic, technological and geopolitical means to tilt the playing field in their favour — making it harder for small states like Singapore to compete. With the global economy expected to remain sluggish, Wong outlined steps the Singapore government is taking to safeguard livelihoods. The Singapore Economic Resilience Taskforce, he added, is rolling out targeted support for businesses and workers while seeking new growth opportunities. While Singapore's economy remains resilient, he said the outlook is 'highly uncertain'. He also said that the country is therefore refreshing its economic strategy to strengthen competitiveness, deepen capabilities and secure its future. Five committees will study key areas including technology, entrepreneurship and productivity, he added. 'We must move faster, adapt quicker and innovate smarter,' Wong said, adding that technologies such as artificial intelligence and robotics must be applied meaningfully across industries. While such transitions may cause disruption, he also said the Singapore government will expand training opportunities, bolster social safety nets and help those facing setbacks to bounce back. Measures such as the SkillsFuture Jobseeker Support scheme have already been introduced to assist the involuntarily unemployed, he added. Wong said more will be done to uplift lower-income families and widen opportunities for all, regardless of background. But this, he stressed, must be a joint effort. 'The government is partnering community groups, businesses, unions and individuals to shape solutions, put ideas into action, and make a difference,' he said. 'Singapore's future must be built by all of us together — through our actions, our compassion, and our willingness to lift up one another.' He also thanked voters for giving his government the political mandate to act decisively in his first electoral contest as prime minister, in which the People's Action Party won 87 out of 97 seats and 65.6 per cent of the vote. 'Your wisdom and trust give my government the political assurance to act boldly, and the confidence to lead with conviction,' he said. * Follow us on our official WhatsApp channel and Telegram for breaking news alerts and key updates! * Do you have access to the Daily Express e-paper and online exclusive news? Check out subscription plans available. Stay up-to-date by following Daily Express's Telegram channel. Daily Express Malaysia


The Star
2 days ago
- The Star
PM Wong calls on Singaporeans to band together for nation to remain exceptional in National Day message
SINGAPORE (The Straits Times/ANN): Faith in the promise of Singapore gave its people the strength to build a nation from scratch 60 years ago, and this shared purpose will be even more vital in the years ahead, said Prime Minister Lawrence Wong. In his National Day message on Aug 8, he called on Singaporeans to band together to overcome new challenges in a rapidly changing and more uncertain world. Singapore must remain exceptional in its cohesion, resolve and performance to stay ahead, PM Wong said. 'As a small nation, we cannot afford to be divided. Our unity has always been our source of strength. When we stand together, there is nothing we cannot overcome,' he said as he briefly recounted how the Republic has prevailed against the odds since its independence. He was speaking at the Padang, where Singapore's first local head of state Yusof Ishak was inaugurated when it became a self-governing state in 1959, and the venue of the inaugural National Day Parade in 1966. The 2025 parade celebrating SG60 will take place at the Padang on Aug 9. A five-minute video of founding prime minister Lee Kuan Yew reading out the Proclamation of Singapore – the official document that marked Singapore's separation from Malaysia – was broadcast before the National Day message. PM Wong, who had spoken of a changed world ahead of and throughout the hustings before the May general election, said in his message that the situation has since grown graver. 'New conflicts have broken out. Geopolitical tensions have deepened. Barriers to trade are hardening. And protectionist sentiments are worsening,' he said. 'To put it bluntly: The global order that enabled Singapore to thrive for decades is unravelling before our eyes.' Singapore must now navigate this more contested and volatile world in its own way, said PM Wong. In the general election, Singaporeans 'chose the team you believe can best steer Singapore through this turbulence', he said. 'Your wisdom and trust give my government the political assurance to act boldly, and the confidence to lead with conviction.' The PAP won 87 out of 97 seats, along with 65.6 per cent of the vote, in PM Wong's first electoral outing as party secretary-general. With the global economy expected to remain troubled for some time, the Prime Minister set out how the Government is responding – the Singapore Economic Resilience Taskforce is rolling out targeted measures to support businesses and workers, and identifying new opportunities. While Singapore's economy has been resilient so far, the outlook remains highly uncertain, he noted. Beyond responding to immediate headwinds, Singapore has to anticipate what is on the horizon as other countries are not standing still, said PM Wong. Bigger powers, with more resources and larger populations, are now more willing to use every tool at their disposal – economic, technological and geopolitical – to tilt the playing field in their favour, he said. 'That will make it harder for small states like Singapore to hold our own,' he added. Singapore is thus refreshing its economic strategy, PM Wong said, to strengthen its competitiveness, deepen its capabilities and secure its future in a very different world. The review was announced earlier in the week, with five committees formed to look at different aspects of the economy including competitiveness, technology and entrepreneurship. 'We must move faster, adapt quicker and innovate smarter,' he said. This means applying new technologies such as artificial intelligence and robotics meaningfully across the economy. While this transition may cause some disruption, the Government will expand opportunities for learning and skills upgrading, strengthen social safety nets and help every Singaporean facing setbacks to bounce back, said PM Wong. Some new policies like the SkillsFuture Jobseeker Support scheme – which provides temporary financial support to people who are involuntarily unemployed – have already been introduced to help those individuals get back on their feet, he noted. The Government will do more to uplift lower-income workers and families, and create more pathways for every Singaporean to succeed, regardless of their starting point in life, he added. This has to be a shared effort, he said. The Government is partnering with community groups, businesses, unions and individuals to shape solutions, put ideas into action, and make a difference. 'Singapore's future must be built by all of us together – through our actions, our compassion, and our willingness to lift up one another.' - The Straits Times/ANN

Barnama
2 days ago
- Barnama
Singapore Must Remain Exceptional To Stay Ahead, Says PM Wong
By Nur Ashikin Abdul Aziz SINGAPORE, Aug 8 (Bernama) -- Singapore must remain exceptional to stay ahead, as the world becomes increasingly uncertain amid deepening geopolitical tensions and rising protectionist sentiments, Prime Minister Lawrence Wong said. Speaking on the eve of the country's 60th National Day celebration, Wong, who is also Finance Minister, emphasised that the need for Singapore to move faster, adapt quicker, and innovate smarter by embracing new technologies such as Artificial Intelligence and robotics, and applying them meaningfully across the economy. bootstrap slideshow 'We must enable our people, workers and businesses to make full use of these tools, and sharpen our competitive edge. 'The pace of change will be rapid and not always comfortable. There will be disruption. Not everyone will find the transition easy,' he said in a pre-recorded televised National Day Message from the Padang. Wong said the government would continue to walk this journey with the people, including by expanding opportunities for learning and skills upgrading, strengthening social safety nets, and helping every Singaporean who faces setbacks to bounce back. He noted that Singapore is refreshing its economic strategy to strengthen competitiveness, deepen capabilities, and secure its future. On Aug 4, Deputy Prime Minister Gan Kim Yong announced that the government has formed five commitiees as it would undertake an Economic Strategy Review to consider new ideas and approaches aimed at strengthening the nation's global competitiveness and economic relevance. Meanwhile, Wong also called on Singaporeans to remain united, stating that as a small nation, it cannot afford to be divided.