Is social media really that effective for communicating budget policies to citizens? – a case study of the Singapore budget 2018

Although numerous studies have been done regarding the use of social media as a policy communication tool by governments around the world, existing literature focuses on the supply-side by using citizen evaluation to measure the effectiveness of social media engagement. This is to examine how well g...

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Main Author: Chin, Zhao Wei
Other Authors: Wu Wei (SSS)
Format: Final Year Project
Language:English
Published: 2019
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10356/76708
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Institution: Nanyang Technological University
Language: English
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spelling sg-ntu-dr.10356-767082019-12-10T10:59:03Z Is social media really that effective for communicating budget policies to citizens? – a case study of the Singapore budget 2018 Chin, Zhao Wei Wu Wei (SSS) School of Social Sciences DRNTU::Social sciences::Mass media::Media effects DRNTU::Social sciences::Political science::Public administration::Asia::Singapore Although numerous studies have been done regarding the use of social media as a policy communication tool by governments around the world, existing literature focuses on the supply-side by using citizen evaluation to measure the effectiveness of social media engagement. This is to examine how well governments adopt social media to communicate policy. This paper instead seeks to address the demand-side by identifying factors from the citizens themselves that may impact the effectiveness of adopting social media for policy communication. The case study used to examine these factors is the Singapore Budget 2018. Social media effectiveness is measured across two dimensions; (1) the change in level of awareness, as well as the (2) change in attitudes towards Singapore’s budget policy after the Budget 2018 Speech had been released. Citizen feedback is collected using an online public survey, of which demographical factors such as age, educational qualifications and employment status were cross-tabulated and suggest that social media avenues such as Facebook may not be the best way to communicate budget policy to certain segments of the population. Moreover, there is a risk of investing too much focus on social media, such that other segments of the population may be neglected. Policy recommendations are suggested to caution against and suggest ways to address this. Bachelor of Arts in Public Policy and Global Affairs 2019-04-05T03:02:11Z 2019-04-05T03:02:11Z 2019 Final Year Project (FYP) http://hdl.handle.net/10356/76708 en 41 p. application/pdf
institution Nanyang Technological University
building NTU Library
country Singapore
collection DR-NTU
language English
topic DRNTU::Social sciences::Mass media::Media effects
DRNTU::Social sciences::Political science::Public administration::Asia::Singapore
spellingShingle DRNTU::Social sciences::Mass media::Media effects
DRNTU::Social sciences::Political science::Public administration::Asia::Singapore
Chin, Zhao Wei
Is social media really that effective for communicating budget policies to citizens? – a case study of the Singapore budget 2018
description Although numerous studies have been done regarding the use of social media as a policy communication tool by governments around the world, existing literature focuses on the supply-side by using citizen evaluation to measure the effectiveness of social media engagement. This is to examine how well governments adopt social media to communicate policy. This paper instead seeks to address the demand-side by identifying factors from the citizens themselves that may impact the effectiveness of adopting social media for policy communication. The case study used to examine these factors is the Singapore Budget 2018. Social media effectiveness is measured across two dimensions; (1) the change in level of awareness, as well as the (2) change in attitudes towards Singapore’s budget policy after the Budget 2018 Speech had been released. Citizen feedback is collected using an online public survey, of which demographical factors such as age, educational qualifications and employment status were cross-tabulated and suggest that social media avenues such as Facebook may not be the best way to communicate budget policy to certain segments of the population. Moreover, there is a risk of investing too much focus on social media, such that other segments of the population may be neglected. Policy recommendations are suggested to caution against and suggest ways to address this.
author2 Wu Wei (SSS)
author_facet Wu Wei (SSS)
Chin, Zhao Wei
format Final Year Project
author Chin, Zhao Wei
author_sort Chin, Zhao Wei
title Is social media really that effective for communicating budget policies to citizens? – a case study of the Singapore budget 2018
title_short Is social media really that effective for communicating budget policies to citizens? – a case study of the Singapore budget 2018
title_full Is social media really that effective for communicating budget policies to citizens? – a case study of the Singapore budget 2018
title_fullStr Is social media really that effective for communicating budget policies to citizens? – a case study of the Singapore budget 2018
title_full_unstemmed Is social media really that effective for communicating budget policies to citizens? – a case study of the Singapore budget 2018
title_sort is social media really that effective for communicating budget policies to citizens? – a case study of the singapore budget 2018
publishDate 2019
url http://hdl.handle.net/10356/76708
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