// Global Analysis Archive
Singapore’s 2026 budget continues a surplus-driven fiscal model backed by strong 2025 revenues and sizable investment returns, with major allocations to Changi expansion and productivity technology. The source cautions that energy-market disruption could raise inflation and weaken growth, potentially requiring larger cost-of-living support and revised fiscal assumptions.
The source argues that China’s BRI is shifting from a model dominated by large sovereign infrastructure loans toward more selective exposure as conflict-driven physical risks rise, particularly in the Middle East. It highlights growing emphasis on transport and digital infrastructure and expanding two-way capital flows with Gulf sovereign investors as mechanisms to distribute risk.
Singapore’s 2026 budget continues a surplus-driven fiscal model backed by strong 2025 revenues and sizable investment returns, with major allocations to Changi expansion and productivity technology. The source cautions that energy-market disruption could raise inflation and weaken growth, potentially requiring larger cost-of-living support and revised fiscal assumptions.
The source argues that China’s BRI is shifting from a model dominated by large sovereign infrastructure loans toward more selective exposure as conflict-driven physical risks rise, particularly in the Middle East. It highlights growing emphasis on transport and digital infrastructure and expanding two-way capital flows with Gulf sovereign investors as mechanisms to distribute risk.
| ID | Title | Category | Date | Views | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| RPT-2979 | Singapore’s 2026 Budget: Surplus Strategy Tested by Energy Shock Risks | Singapore | 2026-03-22 | 0 | ACCESS » |
| RPT-4970 | From Debt to Disruption: Security Shocks Push Beijing to Recast the Belt and Road | Belt and Road Initiative | 2024-10-04 | 0 | ACCESS » |