"It is an issue where honestly speaking, there are no easy choices. There are trade-offs," said Lee in a television interview with Ambassador-at-Large Chan Heng Chee, chairman of the Lee Kuan Yew Centre for Innovative Cities.
The interview "A Conversation with the PM: Our Future, Our People" was telecast last night.
Lee said "I would like to keep this a Singapore-Singapore ... It has to maintain that Singapore character," addressing the concerns about the economy, anxiety over job competition with foreigners and a possible identity crisis in the future."
"First, we do have to watch to see how the foreign workers and immigrants are fitting in with our community, and you have to watch them mix so that you don't overbalance the numbers or the tone of our society. So it is not populist to take cognisance of these real problems and to deal with them and to calibrate the inflow (of foreigners)", he added.
"And so I think what we have tried to do over in the last 10 years when in the earlier phase, when the opportunities were there, we needed the growth, we were more generous in bringing in foreign workers and the immigrants," he added.
He further said during the interview that, "If we have no foreign workers, our economy suffers, our own lives suffer. (If) we have a lot of foreign workers, the economy will do well, (but) we have other social pressures, other problems with our society which are going to be very real and which we have to take very seriously and which we cannot accept".
