Singapore to workers: Lean out

Sheryl Sandberg has become the toast of the publishing world and the envy of all authors everywhere with her runaway bestseller Lean In that tells women they can, indeed, have it all if they will just, well, lean in by being more aggressive and putting in more effort. However, here in Singapore where I’ve been ...

ROSLAN RAHMAN/AFP/Getty Images
ROSLAN RAHMAN/AFP/Getty Images
ROSLAN RAHMAN/AFP/Getty Images

Sheryl Sandberg has become the toast of the publishing world and the envy of all authors everywhere with her runaway bestseller Lean In that tells women they can, indeed, have it all if they will just, well, lean in by being more aggressive and putting in more effort.

Sheryl Sandberg has become the toast of the publishing world and the envy of all authors everywhere with her runaway bestseller Lean In that tells women they can, indeed, have it all if they will just, well, lean in by being more aggressive and putting in more effort.

However, here in Singapore where I’ve been visiting for the past few days, the government of this uber competitive city state is telling its top executives to let up a bit and lean out.

A recent survey here has shown that one in three people are getting so little sleep that it is affecting their health. Worse, a Straits Times poll of 140 people shows that most of them didn’t know that lack of sleep can cause obesity, diabetes, and heart disease not to mention that it can also result in loss of memory and cognitive functions. Further, a study by the Singapore Academy of Medicine has shown that lack of sleep causes lack of concentration that in turn nearly doubles the risk of transport and industrial accidents.

Indeed, the lead story in the Straits Times this past weekend warned that road rage is becoming an epidemic with one rage attack about every four days.

To solve this problem, a Straits Times editorial says, corporate managers should set an example by not staying late in the office when there is no pressing need to do so. The commentary goes on to say that executives should impress on their staff that working long hours in the office does not make them better workers. Rather, it indicates that they may not be as organized in their work as they should be.

So take that Sheryl Sandberg. Maybe women who want to leave the office early and spend more time at home are on the right track and should be hailed as the real pace setters instead of being urged to spend more time with the boys in the office.

By way of setting an example, the Singapore Ministry of Education has given schools the authority to start morning classes at 8 a.m. instead of 7:30 a.m.  I really wish I could do my schooling all over again in Singapore. I always felt that the ministry’s present conclusion is correct. Getting kids up at or before dawn in order to start school as early as possible in the day is not only unpleasant, it’s downright unhealthy.

It also helps establish at an early age bad sleeping habits that will lead to the loss of a country’s competitiveness in the long run.

Of course, Singapore’s trade surplus is always around 20 percent of GDP. Imagine what it will be when Singaporeans start actually getting enough sleep.

Clyde Prestowitz is the founder and president of the Economic Strategy Institute, a former counselor to the secretary of commerce in the Reagan administration, and the author of The World Turned Upside Down: America, China, and the Struggle for Global Leadership. Twitter: @clydeprestowitz

More from Foreign Policy

Residents evacuated from Shebekino and other Russian towns near the border with Ukraine are seen in a temporary shelter in Belgorod, Russia, on June 2.
Residents evacuated from Shebekino and other Russian towns near the border with Ukraine are seen in a temporary shelter in Belgorod, Russia, on June 2.

Russians Are Unraveling Before Our Eyes

A wave of fresh humiliations has the Kremlin struggling to control the narrative.

Chinese President Xi Jinping (R) and Brazilian President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva shake hands in Beijing.
Chinese President Xi Jinping (R) and Brazilian President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva shake hands in Beijing.

A BRICS Currency Could Shake the Dollar’s Dominance

De-dollarization’s moment might finally be here.

Keri Russell as Kate Wyler in an episode of The Diplomat
Keri Russell as Kate Wyler in an episode of The Diplomat

Is Netflix’s ‘The Diplomat’ Factual or Farcical?

A former U.S. ambassador, an Iran expert, a Libya expert, and a former U.K. Conservative Party advisor weigh in.

An illustration shows the faces of Chinese President Xi Jinping and Russian President Vladimir Putin interrupted by wavy lines of a fragmented map of Europe and Asia.
An illustration shows the faces of Chinese President Xi Jinping and Russian President Vladimir Putin interrupted by wavy lines of a fragmented map of Europe and Asia.

The Battle for Eurasia

China, Russia, and their autocratic friends are leading another epic clash over the world’s largest landmass.