Ministry of Information, Communications and the Arts

Ministry of Information, Communications and the Arts
Logo of MICA
Agency overview
Formed November 28, 1990 (1990-11-28)
Preceding agency Ministry of Culture, Ministry of Communication and Information
Jurisdiction Government of Singapore
Headquarters 140 Hill Street, MICA Building, Singapore 179369
Employees 364 [1]
Annual budget $1.006 billion SGD (2010)[1]
Ministers responsible Yaacob Ibrahim, Minister
Grace Fu, Senior Minister of State
Chan Chun Sing, Minister of State
Agency executives Chan Yeng Kit, Permanent Secretary
Sim Gim Guan, Deputy Secretary
Child agencies Infocomm Development Authority of Singapore
Media Development Authority
National Arts Council
National Heritage Board
National Library Board
Website
www.mica.gov.sg

The Ministry of Information, Communications and the Arts (Abbreviation: MICA; Chinese: 新加坡新闻通讯及艺术部; Malay: Kementerian Penerangan, Komunikasi dan Kesenian) is a ministry of the Government of Singapore. It is in charge of the creative industries, arts, heritage, library, media, infocommunications and government public relations.

Contents

History

On 5 June 1959, the Ministry of Culture came to being with the swearing-in and appointments of Ministers for the new Singapore Government. In 1 February 1980, the Broadcasting Division of the Ministry of Culture became a statutory board, the Singapore Broadcasting Corporation.

1985 saw the dissolution of the Ministry of Culture. Its Information Division came under the new Ministry of Communications and Information (MCI). Its arts promotion component was assimilated into the Ministry of Community Development (MCD) as the Cultural Affairs Division.

Five years later, on the 28 November 1990, the Information Division of the MCI and the Cultural Affairs Division of MCD, together with other associated departments and statutory boards, reunited to form the Ministry of Information and the Arts (MITA).

On 1 September 1991, the Festival of Arts Secretariat, Singapore Cultural Foundation, Arts Division of MITA, and the National Theatre Trust merged to form the National Arts Council (NAC).

On 1 October 1994, the Singapore Broadcasting Authority (SBA) was formed as a statutory under MITA to oversee and promote the broadcasting industry in Singapore.

On 23 November 2001, the Infocomm technology (ICT) function (under then-Ministry of Communications and Information Technology) came under MITA. The expanded Ministry was renamed the Ministry of Information, Communications and the Arts, but retained the acronym MITA. In that year, Infocomm Development Authority (IDA) became one of MITA's statutory boards.

On January 1, 2003, Singapore Broadcasting Authority, Singapore Films Commission and Films and Publications Department (previously under MITA HQ) merged to form Media Development Authority (MDA).

On August 13, 2004, the Ministry's acronym is changed from "MITA" to "MICA".

Vision and Mission

Vision

Creative People, Gracious Community, Connected Singapore

Mission

To Develop Singapore as a Global City for Information, Communications and the Arts, so as to Build a Creative Economy, Gracious Community and Connected Society with a Singaporean Identity rooted in our Multicultural Heritage.

Statutory Boards

MICA has five Statutory Boards.

  1. Infocomm Development Authority of Singapore (IDA)
  2. Media Development Authority (MDA)
  3. National Arts Council (NAC)
  4. National Heritage Board (NHB)
  5. National Library Board (NLB)

See also

References

  1. ^ a b "Head Q: Ministry of Information, Communications and the Arts" (PDF). Budget 2010: Revenue and Expenditure Estimates. Ministry of Finance. 2010-02. http://www.mof.gov.sg/budget_2010/revenue_expenditure/attachment/23%20MICA%20EE2010.pdf. Retrieved 2010-09-14. 

External links