Friday, April 3, 2009

G20 ‘trillion’ dollar magic trick Reforms remain house of cards

G20 ‘trillion’ dollar magic trick Reforms remain house of cards

News|Bretton Woods Project|3 April 2009

To great fanfare, the G20 announced a $1.1 trillion global package, which will actually deliver less than half that amount in new or guaranteed resources. Meanwhile issues of fundamental economic reform were left off the agenda.

The G20 meeting on 2 April, billed as the London Summit 2009 because of its inclusion of non-G20 players, captured positive media attention despite failing to set out a vision for transformative economic change, and pumping more money into the IMF and World Bank without a clear plan for reforming them.

Where did the "trillion" go?

The IMF received most of the boost, with a possible $500 billion in new resources and $250 billion in issuances of Special Drawing Rights (SDRs). Of the $500 billion, only half has been signed and sealed, the vast majority of which had been previously announced: $100 billion from Japan in January and the same amount from the EU in March. Most of the new $50bn comes from China – a small drop in its vast ocean of reserves, indicating that it continues to be reluctant to back the IFIs financially without real governance reform. The second tranche of $250 billion only exists as a G20 promise to find the extra cash, and to make “substantial progress” in doing so by April’s spring meetings.

The other massive increase in IMF resources was through an allocation of Special Drawing Rights (SDRs), the IMF’s own internally created reserve asset (See article.) An SDR allocation effectively means printing new money, $100 billion of which will go to “emerging market and developing countries”. Unlike other forms of finance, SDRs come without conditions attached, but a country must still pay interest when it uses them. As SDRs are allocated according to voting shares at the IMF, the majority will go to rich countries.

On new money for the multilateral deveopment banks (MDBs), the language is particularly hazy. The G20 agrees only to “support” additional annual lending by the MDBs of $100 billion per year. Some of this, such as a boost to IFC trade financing, is money already promised. Some is supposed to come from existing MDB resources. Some will come from a 200 per cent boost to the Asian Development Bank’s capital, and consideration of similar moves for the Inter-American Development Bank and the African Development Bank.

World Bank attempts to garner additional contributions for their ‘vulnerability’ funds were snubbed, with the G20 making clear that these would only be delivered bilaterally from willing donors. So far, the UK is the only country to make concrete commitments – diverting £200 million of its existing aid budget for this purpose. The G20 also asked the Bank to increase lending limits for “large countries” and to lend at market rates to low income countries, but only those with “sustainable debt positions and sound policies.”

Money for the poorest?

Of the putative $1.1trillion, $50 billion, or less than 5 percent, is likely to be for the 49 poorest countries in the world. The communiqué does not give clear details of how this figure is arrived at. Brussels based NGO, Eurodad estimates that, in addition to $6 billion (over three years) from IMF gold sales that will be added to the IMF’s concessional lending pot, $19 billion in new money will come from the SDR allocation. The communiqué also calls for a doubling of the IMF’s concessional lending capacity, currently at about $20 billion. That means that most of the total is IMF loans, which are only available if poor countries’ economies go into meltdown.

The detail on the promised “global effort to ensure the availability of at least $250 billion of trade finance over the next two years” is entirely absent from the communiqué. However, the IFC - the private sector lending arm of the World Bank - is already angling for a slice of this cash for its new global trade lliquidity programme. Most of the rest is likely to funds provided by export credit agencies, which have been heavily criticised for a host of issues, including focussing their support on the arms industry. The communiqué’s commitment to meet existing aid pledges obviously meant more to some G20 countries than others. Italy, the current host of the G8, plans to cut its aid by 55 per cent this year.

Elephants in the room: governance and conditionality

The G20 communiqué says nothing new on IFI governance reform, and big increases in IMF resources have not been matched with clear commitments to end the controversial austerity policies that have so far been accompanying IMF bailout packages (see Update 64, 63).

Changes to voting shares to give developing economies “greater voice and representation” are promised in general but the annex appears to backtrack on IMF reform. The existing plan for Bank governance reforms by the 2010 Spring Meetings for the World Bank is reconfirmed, but on the Fund, the annex indicates that the slightly accelerated quota review may not address the democratic deficit or governance imbalance but will be undertaken “to ensure the IMF’s finances are on a sustainable footing”.

Critics remain concerned that lessons from the Asian financial crisis a decade ago have not been learned, where IMF conditions were blamed for worsening recessions. Duncan Green of Oxfam said: “we have deep concerns about how central the IMF has become in this crisis. The fund has been given a blank cheque but its reform remains no more than a promise.”

Financial reform: does it have teeth?

Campaigning NGOs and continental European governments had pushed the issue of tax havens to the fore in the run up to the summit. The UK, itself a sponsor of many of the world’s most famous tax havens including the Cayman Islands and Jersey, had picked up the rhetoric.

The G20 decided to endorse the OECD approach of exchanging information about companies and individuals suspected of evading taxes on request, rather than the more stringent automatic exchange of information called for by the Tax Justice Network and others. There was no mention of measures that could help developing countries crack down on corporate tax abuse: country-by-country financial reporting or requiring transparency of all information on beneficial ownership in all jurisdictions.

The fanfare surrounding a supposed ‘blacklist’ of non-cooperative countries published on the day of the summit by the OECD went silent when it emerged that only four countries were on the list – Uruguay, the Philippines, the Malaysian Federal Territory of Labuan, and Costa Rica - none of them well known tax havens. Further confusion followed when even these four were removed, leaving no countries in the OECD's worst category. The strong rhetoric - declaring that “the era of banking secrecy is over” and promising to “stand ready to deploy sanctions” – has yet to be turned into effective action.

As promised by the G20 finance ministers in March the Financial Stability Forum will be expanded to include all G20 countries, and renamed the Financial Stability Board (FSB). It will continue to have a purely advisory role to; “promote co-ordination”; “assess vulnerabilities affecting the financial system” and “set guidelines”. With no specific powers or sanctions available to it, and a lack of a clear governance structure, it remains to be seen whether the new board will be an improvement on the old forum.

On banking regulation, a topic that has dominated headlines in the run up to the summit, surprisingly little concrete was agreed, though international bodies are tasked with looking further into a host of issues. International minimum capital requirements will remain unchanged “until recovery is assured” and the often criticised Basel II capital framework supported. The existing ‘toxic assets’ in banks remain a huge problem, but one that has been left to national regulators to fix.

In his post-summit press conference, British Prime Minister Gordon Brown repeated his assertion that the ‘shadow banking system’ would be brought into “the global regulatory net”, but the language of the communiqué is far more cautious – “systematically important financial institutions, markets, and instruments” should be subject to an “appropriate degree of regulation and oversight.”

The FSB and IMF are tasked with deciding what “systematically important” means. Many hedge funds and private equity firms may continue to escape the regulatory net, especially those formally headquartered in off-shore financial centres. Hedge fund and credit rating agency “registration” is promised, and credit derivatives markets will be “standardised,” but it is left to the industry itself to decide how to do this.

Missing the green picture

Green groups slammed the G20 for failing to grasp the opportunity to signal a clear commitment to building a low-carbon economy. The communiqué promises to “make best possible use” of stimulus packages “towards the goal of building a resilient, sustainable, and green recovery” and to “identify and work together on further measures to build sustainable economies.” But there were no hard commitments about what portion of stimulus packages would be directed towards green projects, technologies, or jobs.

The aim of the upcoming UN climate talks in Copenhagen is set as reaching agreement, with no reference made to the scale of the changes G20 countries, particularly the richest ones, will have to make to combat climate change. Friends of the Earth said the G20 had “short changed people and the planet”; whilst Greenpeace said climate change had been tagged on to the communiqué as an “afterthought”.

Liberalisation still the norm?

The communiqué is understandably short on the usual congratulatory opening paragraphs, though it reiterates support for “an open world economy based on market principles” but now balanced by “effective regulation, and strong global institutions.”

On trade the expected promise to “not repeat the historic mistakes of protectionism” is made, but the commitment to “reach an ambitious and balanced conclusion to the Doha Development Round” looks suspiciously similar to the commitments made by the G20 in Washington last November, since when little progress has been made. Interestingly the G20 estimate for how much the Doha trade round could boost the global economy stands at a modest $150 billion. Civil society organisations around the globe have questioned whether reviving a trade round that developing countries have rejected many times is a good idea.

Protest grows

Marches and protests took place around the world in the run up to the G20 summit, including in India, Philippines, Indonesia, Spain, Germany, France, Austria and Italy. In London, thousands marched under the banner of ‘Jobs, Justice, Climate,’ as part of the 160-plus Put People First alliance of development, environment, faith groups and trade unions.

In addition to mobilisation of citizens, civil society groups have also put out collective statements which look very different from the limited set of issues in the G20 communiqué. At January’s World Social Forum, civil society and social movements from around the world produced a statement signed up to by more than 600 organisations worldwide, entitled “Let’s put finance in its place!” It includes demands barely considered by the G20, yet at the heart of the debate about how best to control global finance, including controlling capital flows, and calling for “citizen control of banks and financial institutions.” It also issued a challenge to the leaders gathered in London, saying: “the G20 is not the legitimate forum to resolve this systemic crisis.”

On the eve of the G20, at the World in Crisis NGO summit in Prague, a declaration was issued calling for putting economies “…at the service of social, environmental and other vital interests of women, men, girls and boys, in particular to start greening our economies and to increase local economic resilience.” A raft of proposals were included on a host of critical topics including: market regulation; breaking the dominance of finance over the economy; keeping the climate negotiations on track; rethinking development finance; fairly sharing resource consumption across the globe; ensuring tax justice; and making IFIs more transparent, representative and accountable.

Meanwhile, the London Summit was slammed for systematically excluding civil society voices. In contrast to most international gatherings there was no process for civil society organisations to accredit and attend. Of the few who were allowed in as media representatives, some had accreditation withdrawn at the last minute. One of these denied entrance, Benedict Southwark of UK campaigning group the World Development Movement said that this: "starts to reek of the deliberate exclusion of critical voices."

Spotlight turns to UN

A week before the G20 met in London, the UN General Assembly president’s commission on financial reforms (see Update 64, 63) released its draft report. The Joseph Stiglitz-led commission was much stronger in the latest report than in its first set of recommendations, and appears ahead of the G20 curve. The G20 has yet to pay adequate attention to this high powered group of thinkers.

The recommendations said: “short term measures to stabilize the current situation must ensure the protection of the world’s poor, while long term measures to make another recurrence less likely must ensure sustainable financing to strengthen the policy response of developing countries.”

The commission was not unwilling to lay blame: “Loose monetary policy, inadequate regulation and lax supervision interacted to create financial instability,” and there was “inadequate appreciation of the limits of markets.” The report split its recommendations up into things to be done immediately and those that should be on the agenda for systemic reform.

Among immediate goals, it called for global fiscal stimulus, a new credit facility with better governance arrangements than exist at institutions such as the IMF, an end to pro-cyclical conditionality and rolling back the limits on developing country policy space created by trade agreements. For the financial sector the commission noted “While greater transparency is important, much more is needed than improving the clarity of financial instruments,” and recommended the use of rules and incentives to limit excess leverage, prevent tax evasion, and address the regulatory race to the bottom.

While the short-term recommendations were sometimes eye-catching, the systemic demands surprised many observers. The call for “a new global reserve system”, echoed the demand to end the US dollar’s privileged position as international reserve currency made by China’s central bank governor Zhou Xiaochuan. The commission also supported the idea for a UN-based Global Economic Council at the head of state level – essentially bringing a G20 type structure under the auspices of the UN system.

On long-term changes to financial regulation, the commission has seven areas for reform and warned against “merely cosmetic changes”. Notably it said: “The fact that correlated behaviour of a large number of institutions, each of which is not systemically significant, can give rise to systemic vulnerability makes oversight of all institutions necessary.” This throws cold water the G20’s plans for regulating only ‘systemically-important’ financial institutions.

The UN commission, despite being organised more quickly than the G20 meeting, was much more open to civil society input. More than 100 organisations made submissions to the stakeholder consultation procedure, and the final report on civil society opinion was detailed, comprehensive, and well received by the commission. The civil society submissions were all put online, more than can be said of the official G20 working group reports (see Update 64), which are yet to be published. In late March, members of the commission also held interactive dialogues with representatives at the UN General Assembly and civil society organisations.

The global focus will now move to a planned UN conference from 1-3 June in New York, billed as the follow-up to the UN Financing for Development conference in Doha. The conference is being held at the initiative of the General Assembly president, rather than from the UN Secretariat because of opposition from some major countries. It is unclear how much participation there will be by heads of state, especially as the G20 announced that it will hold another leader’s level summit sometime before the end of this year.

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'Million-dollar gun deal claim baseless and a sham'

'Million-dollar gun deal claim baseless and a sham'
Nepali critics slam reason given by former crown prince for massacre of royals by killer prince
By Ng Tze Yong
April 03, 2009 Print Ready Email Article

THE revelations of an ousted Nepal prince based largely in Singapore have stirred up a hornets' nest in his country.

Kathmandu's labyrinthine streets were abuzz with talk after The New Paper's interviews with former crown prince Paras Bikram Shah, 37, were carried by many international media, including the BBC, the Times of India and The Telegraph.

The articles have been translated and reproduced by many Nepali media.

In his interview, published over three days earlier this week, Prince Paras pinned the blame squarely on his cousin, then-crown prince Dipendra, for the 2001 palace massacre, which saw 10 members of the royal family slain.

A former high-ranking palace official, however, has come out to contradict this version of events.

Mr Bibek Shah, the military secretary to King Birendra at the time of the massacre, told the BBC Nepali Service that Prince Paras' allegations are 'baseless and a sham'.

An arms deal was on the table, he said, but 'the way he (Prince Paras) presented it in the interview is not true at all'.

According to Prince Paras, Dipendra was interested in buying the German-made Heckler & Koch G36 rifles for the Nepali army.

But he was deeply upset when his father, King Birendra, opposed the idea.

Mr Shah, however, said the Heckler & Koch G36 was one of five or six types of weapons shortlisted for the army.

'But the number and the price that was quoted (in the interview) are not correct,' he told the BBC.

Deal worth millions

The deal, according to Prince Paras, would have been for about 50,000 rifles which, at US$300 ($450) apiece, would work out to be worth US$15 million.

Mr Shah said: 'The agreement that time was to buy 5,000 pieces (of Heckler & Koch G36) and assemble it in Nepal.'

The deal fell through, but not because of a disagreement between father and son, he said.

The reason was that the potential German supplier failed to get a licence from its government for the sale due to a then-embargo on weapon sales to Nepal.

Nepal was in the midst of a Maoist insurgency, and the international community feared that arms sold to the Nepali army would fall into the hands of insurgents.

'I don't know how that matter came to his (Prince Paras') head,' said Mr Shah. 'But it was not a matter of disagreement between the father and son.'

In an article in The Himalayan Times, a retired lieutenant-general separately confirmed there was an arms deal on the table.

'The Nepali Army was running short of weapons as it had increased the number of army personnel,' he said. 'We wanted personal arms to be given to each soldier.'

But he also said the deal fell through because of the embargo.

'So how the prince would have received commission for weapons that could not be bought... only God knows,' said the retired general.

Later, the weapons did somehow make their way into Nepal, according to Jane's Infantry Weapons 2003-4 report, despite the German government's denial of any transaction taking place.

Were royals corrupt?

The BBC's correspondent in Kathmandu, Mr Charles Haviland, said that if Prince Paras' allegations of the father-son dispute over the arms deal were true, it would confirm previously heard accounts of the royals' corruption.

Prof S D Muni, a visiting senior research fellow at the Institute of South Asian Studies at the National University of Singapore, said that mentioning the arms deal may be a way for Prince Paras to prove his innocence.

The first inquiry, conducted immediately after the massacre, was carried out by a two-man committee and completed in just one week. It pinned the blame on Prince Dipendra.

Some disputed the findings and remain convinced that Prince Paras and his father, the former King Gyanendra, were behind the killings.

In February, Nepal's new Maoist-led government announced it would form a commission to re-investigate the massacre, almost eight years after it happened.

'With his revelation, Mr Paras has succeeded in confusing people. But the question is whether he will succeed in influencing the new inquiry,' said Prof Muni.

If true, Prince Paras' version of events might end up working against him.

Nepal's Maoist leader Barsha Man Pun told The Himalayan Times that there was 'something sinister' about his allegations, and called for an international investigation into the massacre, in addition to Nepal's own inquiry.

In Singapore, a Nepali professional has characterised Prince Paras' allegations as a publicity stunt.

'He just wants to create a buzz before he goes back to contest in future elections,' said Mr Shah, a professional in his30s.

He declined to give his full name as he fears for the safety of his relatives, who he alleged were jailed in the 1980s for pro-democracy protests.

As to Prince Paras' declaration that he intends to return to Nepal one day to contest the elections, Mr Shah is neither impressed nor indignant, just ambivalent.

'He is no longer a prince, just an ordinary citizen, and he has the right to do whatever he wants, like any of us,' he said.

'But whether people will vote for him is a different matter altogether.'

The New Paper ran a series of interviews with Prince Paras last week.

The former crown prince had then given three main reasons for the massacre: The royal family's disapproval of Prince Dipendra's choice of bride, his dissatisfaction with his father's decision to relinquish the absolute monarchy, and - most intriguing of all - a botched multi-million dollar arms purchase that opened a rift between father and son.

The interviews were conducted by Associate Editor S Murali and veteran journalist Clement Mesenas, who has worked for newspapers around the world for more than 40 years.

Mr Mesenas, who is currently consulting at a Singapore public relations firm, co-wrote the articles in a private capacity. The interviews were not connected to his PR work.

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The TOP 30 highest paid politicians in the world

The TOP 30 highest paid politicians in the world

The TOP 30 highest paid politicians in the world are all from Singapore:
1. Elected President SR Nathan - S$3.9 million.
2. Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong - S$3.8 million.
3. Minister Mentor Lee Kuan Yew - S$3.5 million.
4. Senior Minister Goh Chok Thong - S$3.5 million.
5. Senior Minister Prof Jayakumar - S$3.2 million.
6. DPM & Home Affairs Minister Wong Kan Seng - S$2.9 million.
7. DPM & Defence Minister Teo Chee Hean - $2.9 million
8. Foreign Affairs Minister George Yeo - S$2.8 million.
9. National Development Minister Mah Bow Tan - S$2.7 million.
10. PMO Miniser Lim Boon Heng - S$2.7 million.
11. Trade and Industry Minister Lim Hng Kiang - S$2.7 million.
12. PMO Minister Lim Swee Say - S$2.6 million.
13. Environment Minister & Muslim Affairs Minister Dr Yaccob Ibrahim - S$2.6 million.
14. Health Minister Khaw Boon Wan - S$2.6 million.
15. Finance Minister S Tharman - S$2.6 million.
16. Education Minister & 2nd Minister for Defence Dr Ng Eng Hen - S$2.6 million.
17. Community Development Youth and Sports Minister - Dr Vivian Balakrishnan - S$2.5 million.
18. Transport Minister & 2nd Minister for Foreign Affairs Raymond Lim Siang Kiat - S$2.5 million.
19. Law Minister & 2nd Minister for Home Affairs K Shanmugam - S$2.4 million.
20. Manpower Minister Gan Kim Yong - S$2.2 million.
21. PMO Minister Lim Hwee Hwa - S$2.2 million
22. Acting ICA Minister - Lui Tuck Yew - S$2.0 million.
23 to 30 = Senior Ministers of State and Ministers of State - each getting between S$1.8 million to S$1.5 million.

Note: 1. The above pay does not include MP allowances, pensions and other sources of income such as Directorship, Chairmnship, Advisory, Consultancy, etc to Gov-linked and gov-related organisations or foreign MNCs such as Citigroup, etc.
2. Though it is based on an estimate, the data cannot be far off the official salary scales.

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Government’s continued silence on CDC bonuses is fasting eroding public trust and confidence in its governance

Government’s continued silence on CDC bonuses is fasting eroding public trust and confidence in its governance

Following relevations that some local council bosses were being awarded salaries higher than the British Prime Minister Gordon Brown, the British government will pass new laws to force council executives to reveal their salaries, bonuses and pension agreements to the public. (read article here)

John Healey, the Local Government minister, said: “We’ve seen top council salaries spiralling recently. We’ve seen some councils change top managers like premiership football clubs, sometimes with big pay-offs for failure. The level of disclosure we require for councils is well short of that which we require for top civil servants and I think the public need to know the full picture.”

There was a similar outcry in Singapore recently over the eight month bonuses allegedly received by two staff of the Northwest Community Development Council (CDC).

A CDC is responsible for initiating, planning and managing community programmes to promote community bonding and social cohesion. There are 5 CDCs in Singapore whose mayors are usually PAP MPs appointed to the post. The mayor of Northwest CDC is Dr Teo Ho Pin.

Dr Teo claimed he was not aware of the bonus of his staff as they were seconded to him by the People’s Association which did not confirm or refute the bonus allegations when quizzed by the media.

One of our readers, Paul wrote an email to Dr Teo Ho Pin to ask him for clarifications on the rumors circulating in the internet chatrooms. He was told that the salaries and bonuses of CDC staff are “confidential”. (read article here)

Had Dr Teo muttered that in England, he would probably be cruxified by the media and forced to apologize. Fortunately for him, he is a politician in Singapore where he can get away with even an open admission of ignorance to the public.

Are Singaporeans unhappy about the bonuses received by the CDC staff? Of course some are. In a recent interview conducted by The Singapore Enquirer, 21 residents from a HDB estate felt the CDC should disclose the salaries and bonuses of all its staff (watch video here)

The question popped up again during a dialogue session with Health Minister Khaw Boon Wan at the Paya Lebar Community Club. He was asked point-blank by an irate resident to verify the rumors and again he pleaded ignorance on the pretext that he had never managed a CDC before (watch video here)

“I don’t know” is not an acceptable answer to expect from a highly paid minister or MP. Surely they can write in to the People’s Association or the Minister in charge to ask for answers on our behalfs?

The government’s displayed uneasiness and reluctance to come clean with the public is fasting eroding public trust and confidence in its governance and damaging its credibility as a self-proclaimed honest, accountable and transparent government.

The mainstream media has moved in quickly to salvage the situation by removing two online articles and avoiding any mention of the fiasco in subsequent days. However, there is nothing they can do to stop the ongoing gossips in cyberspace.

Singaporeans, especially the young, spent at much as 8 hours a day on the internet according to a recent survey. They do not have to depend on the media for their daily staple of news and when there is a void of information, the alternative media will move in quickly to fill it.

The ensuing PR disaster shows how inept the Singapore government is at handling the new media. The People’s Association should just reveal the salaries and bonuses of all its staff to put a stop to the endless speculations and flaming.

Let the public decide if the financial renumerations are justified and the matter can be brought to a proper closure. Instead, they tried to sweep the issue under the carpet which led to the impression that they have something to hide, thereby giving free ammunitions to their critics to shoot at its standards of governance.

On the whole, the Singapore government is a fairly clean, honest and responsible government, but it needs to do more to dispel the perception or misperception that it is not doing enough to show its accountability and transparency to the people.

Unlike twenty years ago, Singaporeans can easily access public records of other countries and compare their styles of governance with Singapore’s.

When Singaporeans read about the Hong Kong’s civil service publishing the salaries of all its staff online, they will wonder why the Singapore civil service does not do so.

They get incensed when they read about the British government’s move to force Council executives to reveal their salaries and bonuses while there was not even a debate in Parliament on the issue.

Both the Hong Kong and British governments are paid much less than Singapore. We have been told time and again that high ministerial salaries is a price to pay for a good government. Yet when we demand basic accountability and transparency, we are denied the right to access to information which should be in the public domain in the first place.

It doesn’t matter if the CDCs do not come under the Civil Service or the Public Service Division. Where do they get their operating funds from? As long a single cent of their salaries is derived from taxpayers’ monies, then they have the obligation to disclose them to the public.

It is good standard practice for the government to publish the salary scales for the staff under the payroll of the civil service and various statutory boards online.

Besides assauging public concerns about the spiralling salaries of civil servants, it will also serve to attract talents from the private sector to join government service if the renumeration is indeed attractive.

On the whole, Singaporeans do not begrudge civil servants receiving a pay and bonus which is commensurate with their peformance. What we ask for is simply for the respective organizations to keep us informed on how they utilize public funds. Is this too much to ask for?

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Young PAP v2.009

Young PAP v2.009

Friday • April 3, 2009

Loh Chee Kong

cheekong@mediacorp.com.sg

HAVING made forays into Facebook and online multimedia, the ruling party is now taking the cyber-battle for hearts and minds up another notch. Its youth wing is set to launch an offensive in the weeks ahead, with a revamped website that could feature a more prominent no-holds-barred forum, lively rebuttals by party activists to online chatter, and provocative essays by external writers.

Today understands that the broad strokes of the changes have been communicated to Young People’s Action Party (YP) cadres down to the branch level; and several internal discussions have been conducted since November to solicit views on how to more effectively engage Netizens.

When contacted, YP chief Teo Ser Luck confirmed initiatives would be rolled out “soon”. Tight-lipped on the specifics, he would only say: “When I took over YP, I wanted to make sure there’s an embrace of diversity of views. So, you will see more diversity and more participation.”

The proposed changes come five months after the PAP website underwent a makeover to include podcasts and videos, and 17 months after the party’s newsletter Petir was revamped to include articles from former civil servants and analysts.

Currently, the YP — whose membership is below age 40 — publishes most of the articles penned by members on its blog and the website, while leveraging on Facebook to draw eyeballs. Some have sparked sharp exchanges with non-partisan Netizens and opposition members. For instance, one article headlined “The Ever-Redundant Opposition” written last August by YP member Nicholas Lazarus, drew a slew ofpositive and negative comments on the ruling party’s political dominance. It spun off into a discussion, which still sees activity, on YP’s Facebook account.

Interestingly, a few who identified themselves as YP or PAP members disagreed with Mr Lazarus’ assertions. And Nanyang Technological University political scientist Ho Khai Leong believes, it is such diversity of views that the YP would try to showcase.

The youth wing is more likely to succeed, he thinks, if it comes across to Netizens as acknowledging the “need for pluralistic views on public affairs and policies”, rather than simply out to counter perceived “irrational, destructive criticism”.

“It is the realisation that you can’t expect young people to accept everything you say,” said Associate Professor Ho.

Still, Dr Terence Chong wonders if the YP’s online revamp would succeed in drawing eyeballs from other socio-political websites, which are often critical of the Government and the ruling party. How candid or radical can YP members afford to be in their views?

Pointing to the few websites currently pushing the envelope, Dr Chong, a research fellow at the Institute of Southeast Asian Studies, said: “At the end of the day, the party activists have to toe the party line. We’ll have to wait and see how the dynamics play out.”

Also being overhauled is the joint “P65” blog set up two years ago by the 12 post-1965 Members of Parliament. The blog will take a backseat to the revamped website and Facebook as YP’s platforms of choice.

Mr Teo said: “Definitely we are making some changes. Not just the P65 blog, we are looking through the different sites and seeing what we can do better, after two years.”

Meanwhile, other changes are coming on the PAP’s own website.

For one, the party’s Public Policy Forum, which holds regular policy dialogues between party members and senior PAP cadres including Ministers, will post online “short synopsis of what transpired” at these sessions — sans sensitive party information, forum chairman Satwant Singh told Today.

Besides updating the website to “stay relevant”, the new initiative will give the public a better sense of what goes on behind the closed doors of such sessions, saidMr Singh. More changes could be on the way as discussions are ongoing, he added.

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PAP lays red carpet for Australian opposition MP, but treat Singapore’s opposition like dirt

PAP lays red carpet for Australian opposition MP, but treat Singapore’s opposition like dirt

What’s wrong with this CNA headline - “Australian MP Gregory Hunt to visit Singapore on high-level exchange” ? (read article here)

At first glance, readers may get the impression that Gregory Hunt is some big shot in the Australian government who is on a “high level” diplomatic mission to Singapore. That’s why we are laying the red carpet to welcome him:

According to a statement from the Singapore Foreign Affairs Ministry, Mr Hunt will call on Foreign Affairs Minister George Yeo and Senior Parliamentary Secretary for the Environment and Water Resources Amy Khor during his stay.

Senior Minister of State for National Development Grace Fu will also host him to an official meal.

Mr Hunt will participate in a roundtable discussion at the S Rajaratnam School of International Studies. He is also scheduled to attend a People’s Action Party (PAP) meet-the-people session.

With no offence to Mr Hunt, he actually belongs to the same “species” of people whom our Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong had expressed his desire to “fix” if more of them were to get elected into Parliament.

And this is the type of people described by MM Lee Kuan Yew as person non grata in Singapore.

Mr Hunt is not a cabinet minister. He is not even a MP of the ruling Labor Party. In short, he is an opposition MP. His official title is Australia’s Shadow Minister for Climate Change, Environment and Urban Water.

I certainly hope that MFA did not mistaken a “shadow” minister as the real minister. Australia has a shadow cabinet comprising of opposition MPs who form an alternative cabinet to the government’s and whose members shadow or mark each individual member of the government.

Why is the Singapore government treating an opposition MP from Australia like some esteemed guest while it treats local opposition politicians like dirt and as some would say - “SH*T”.

Opposition MPs are hounded by PAP MPs like a pack of wolves the moment they open their mouths as Low Thia Kiang found out in a recent Parliamentary sitting when he voiced out his doubts about the Job Credit Scheme.

Opposition politicians are treated like pariahs and criminals, their actions and words closely monitored and followed by the security apparatus.

Of course it is basic courtesy for our nation to extend a welcome to our foreign guest, but I still feel it is most hypocritical for the PAP to boast about its hospitality in the media when it has been dishing out the most unkind, inhumane and cruel treatment to our opposition.

The opposition play a crucial role in checking on the government to ensure it is held accountable to the people. As the Australian example has shown, it is important to have a shadow minister to scrutinize the work of their counterparts in the cabinet.

As Singapore do not have such a system, the ministers are allowed to screw up big time with impunity without ever having to pay a political price for their mistakes which brings to mind Wong Kan Seng, Khaw Boon Wan and Raymond Lim.

A shadow cabinet will also guarantee the availability of a ready alternative to replace the ruling party should it lose a future election thereby facilitating political succession and handover of power.

Currently, the opposition has too few MPs in Parliament to form a shadow cabinet but that does not prevent them from not doing so in their own personal capacities.

I would suggest the opposition set their petty differences aside to band together and form a bigger coalition like the Pakatan Rakyat in Malaysia which is composed of three political parties with different ideologies.

Besides the three opposition MPs in Parliament, well respected and regarded politicians from the coalition can be appointed to shadow every ministries to hold their respective ministers accountable.

It will bode well for the future of Singapore to have a ready alternative which can take over the reins of the government with ease should the incumbent gets booted out via a “freak” election.

http://forums.delphiforums.com/sunkopitiam/messages?msg=25845.1

CORRECTION: The 10 highest paid politicians in the world are…

CORRECTION: The 10 highest paid politicians in the world are…

The British Daily Times Online published a list of the 10 highest paid politicians in the world on 1 April 2009 in the aftermath of the blue movie scandal involving the Home Secretary Jacqui Smith to focus attention on the pay and perks received by British politicians (read article here)

The list compiled is wrong unless the title is changed to “The 10 highest paid leaders in the world”.

Here’s our corrected version of “The 10 highest paid politicians in the world“:

(note: salaries quoted are an estimate only)

1. S R Nathan- Singapore

Salary - S$3.1 million

2. Lee Hsien Loong - Singapore

Salary - S$3.00 million

3. Lee Kuan Yew - Singapore

Salary - S$3.00 million

4. Goh Chok Tong - Singapore

Salary - S$3.00 million

5. S Jayakumar - Singapore

Salary - S$3.00 million

6. Wong Kan Seng - Singapore

Salary - S$2.5 million

7. Teo Chee Hean - Singapore

Salary - S$2.50 million

8. Tharman Shanmugartan - Singapore

Salary - S$1.50 million

9. K Shanmugan - Singapore

Salary - S$1.50 million

10. Khaw Boon Wan - Singapore

Salary - S$1.50 million

Other interesting facts:

PM Lee’s salary is more than the combined salary of:

1. Obama (USA)

2. Brown (UK)

3. Harper (Canada)

4. Merkel (Germany)

5. Sarkozy (France)

6. Rudd (Australia)

And if you divide the salary by head of population, PM Lee gets 540 times that of Obama based on per capital:

1. Lee Hsien Loong - Singapore
Salary: $US2.47 million
Per head of population: 54c

10. Barack Obama - United States
Salary: $US400,000
Per head of population: 0.1c

Well, actually that costs less than one plate of Char Kway Tiao, so stop complaining, fellow Singaporeans for our leaders are worth every single cent they get. They help to shield the harsh realities of life from us which might otherwise break our hearts. That’s why they have so kindly refrained from telling us the following:

1. Losses incurred by GIC and Temasek.

2. Amount of reserves left.

3. Bonuses of CDC staff.

4. Cost price of one new HDB flat.

5. Salaries and bonuses received by Ho Ching and MM Lee (if any).

The list goes on, please feel free to add any more which we have missed out.

http://forums.delphiforums.com/sunkopitiam/messages?msg=25844.1

Capitalism with Chinese Characteristics: Entrepreneurship and the State

Capitalism with Chinese Characteristics: Entrepreneurship and the State
Reviewed by Hugo Restall

Posted April 3, 2009

Beijing has responded to the global financial crisis with a $586 billion stimulus package skewed toward large-scale infrastructure projects, while also directing state-owned banks to extend credit to state-owned enterprises. The net effect will be to double down on an already investment-dependent, state-directed economy; some analysts predict fixed-capital investment will soon pass 50% of GDP.

CapitalismIf Yasheng Huang, a professor at MIT’s Sloan School of Management, is right, this will hurt China in the long run. He argues that by encouraging a high savings rate and channeling this capital to urban enterprises, the government has destroyed the rural entrepreneurship that initially lifted hundreds of millions out of poverty. Financial liberalization, deregulation and political reform are the keys to rebalancing the Chinese economy toward greater domestic consumption.

Some history is necessary to understand where Mr. Huang is coming from. After Deng Xiaoping rolled back Maoism, which diverted resources from the countryside in order promote heavy industry in the cities, rural residents were the first to benefit. Deng broke up the collective farms and allowed farmers to manage their own plots, leading to a surge in agricultural productivity. But the story doesn’t end there. In the 1980s, farmers also started small-scale manufacturing and service businesses, supplementing their incomes. Banks provided financing for these township and village enterprises, which were officially collectively owned but in fact were owned and run by entrepreneurs.

Around 1990, however, a new generation of technocratic leaders came to power and China changed its growth model. The central government embarked on industrial policy on a grand scale, again emphasizing urban industrialization. Shanghai, which was relatively neglected in the 1980s, came to the fore, along with other coastal cities. Rural access to credit dried up, and the TVEs faded away. Farmers migrated to the coast to find factory jobs.

The results were deceptive. Growth in GDP continued to be strong, so observers both within China and around the world hailed an economic “miracle.” Meanwhile growth in household income was slowing. This gap between GDP and income growth reflects the increasing share of wealth controlled by the government and the politically well-connected corporate elite, rather than workers and entrepreneurs.

Over the course of the 1990s, income inequality soared, social mobility slowed, and the health and education systems deteriorated. Property rights never enjoyed legal protection, but at least during the 1980s there was confidence that the reform trend was moving in favor of greater protection; over the last two decades, however, this reversed and corrupt local officials began to expropriate land and otherwise engage in rent-seeking activity.

Mr. Huang’s forte is explaining why China’s apparent strengths are actually symptoms of weakness. His last book, Selling China: Foreign Direct Investment in the Reform Era (Cambridge, 2003) showed that the 1990s explosion in foreign direct investment reflected the difficulty businesses have in working around the impediments government places in their way. The private sector may be the most efficient and fastest growing sector of the economy, but it is hampered by regulations and lack of access to lending from the state-owned banks. So entrepreneurs turn to foreign partners—whether real or created out of Chinese capital that is moved abroad and then brought back.

Likewise, China’s incredibly high savings rate is frequently attributed to the frugality of the Chinese people. Sometimes it is lamented that the rate is too high, which is supposedly due to the lack of a social safety net causing households to hold onto their income. In fact, Mr. Huang notes that Chinese households save less than their Indian counterparts; it is government and the corporate sector savings that turns China into a savings superpower. This suggests that consumption would increase if household income were to rise in line with GDP.

Could China go back to the 1980s model? In fact, one part of China never abandoned it. Zhejiang province, with its famously hard-driving business cities of Ningbo and Wenzhou, continued to encourage the development of private business through the 1990s. That makes it the perfect case study to juxtapose against neighboring Jiangsu province, which started out at the same level of development in 1990 but then followed the state-led, FDI-dependent approach. Zhejiang has pulled ahead not only in per capita income, but in a host of other social welfare measures.

More efficient allocation of capital is the key. During the 1980s, the Agricultural Bank of China and rural credit cooperatives villages lent freely to rural nonagricultural businesses, but in the 1990s state-directed credit went to agriculture in the countryside and industry in the cities. Another hallmark of the 1980s was the creation of “rural cooperative foundations,” essentially village banks that sold ownership shares and used the share capital to make loans. These and other informal banking institutions were stamped out in the 1990s, except in Zhejiang.

Comparisons like that between Zhejiang and Jiangsu are crucial because Chinese statistics are notoriously unreliable. Even tracking the relative performance of government-owned and private companies is impossible; plenty of companies that are nominally private are actually public, and vice versa. Mr. Huang uses more reliable data series like household surveys to tease out the truth. But in many cases he simply has to present a hypothesis and admit that the evidence to prove it does not exist.

This problem means that trying to characterize the post-1990 Chinese development strategy is a bit of a Rorschach Test. Conventional wisdom classifies it as a variant of the East Asian model pioneered by Japan. Other economists have hailed it as a new model that shows neoliberal prescriptions are misguided. After all, China seems to have succeeded without building a rule of law, property rights, democracy, the free flow of information and capital, etc. Economists have constructed elaborate models to show how this is possible.

Mr. Huang disagrees with both these views, essentially saying that to the extent reform succeeded in China it was due to an early “big bang” of laissez faire liberalization in the countryside, followed by a descent into Latin America-style crony capitalism. The good news is that over the last five years, under Communist Party General Secretary Hu Jintao and Premier Wen Jiabao, Beijing has focused on raising rural incomes. The bad news is that the policies designed to achieve this goal are still top-down administrative measures.

That isn’t surprising, since the Hu-Wen generation still comes from the same Soviet-style technocratic background as their predecessors. The financial crisis only makes it more difficult for them to trust that a liberalized banking sector can deliver growth. Perhaps China will have to wait for new leaders to come forward with the same breadth of vision and confidence in the Chinese people as Deng Xiaoping, Hu Yaobang and Zhao Ziyang, the progenitors of the 1980s renaissance. One can only hope that those future leaders are reading Mr. Huang’s work.

http://forums.delphiforums.com/sunkopitiam/messages?msg=26728.1

Shadow Cabinet, When?

Shadow Cabinet, When?

Gerald Giam brought this up about Gregory Hunt, a Shadow Minister for Climate Change, Environment and Urban Water from Australia who is visiting Singapore. Unfortunately for Singapore, there is not enough opposition in parliament to create a real shadow cabinet to rightly or wrongly challenge the existing policies of the various ministries. There are only 2 opposition MPs and one opposition NCMP, the consolation parliamentary prize given to the opposition. Why is this so? Simply because citizens did not vote in enough opposition.

Something else about our Westminster parliamentary roots that did not take root in Singapore. The quaint gracious official title of the opposition in the UK i.e. the losers of the last election, is “Her Majesty’s Loyal Opposition”. The word “Loyal” is to remind parliament and the people that the opposition’s cabinet is a shadow one, not a shadowy one. This is also something that the PAP should drum into their heads.

http://forums.delphiforums.com/sunkopitiam/messages?msg=26061.1

How will they respond?

How will they respond?

Although there was mounting concern that banking secrecy in tax havens has helped to worsen the economic crisis by disguising the true value of some global assets, plans to name and shame international tax havens ended in a diplomatic fudge. Group of 20 countries leaders agreed to publish a blacklist of countries refusing to sign up to financial anti-secrecy rules but after frantic negotiations only four were included – none of them regarded as major tax shelters. The rest of the 'tax havens' came under another list - The Grey List.

Singapore is included in this 'grey list' countries which includes traditional tax havens – such as Monaco and Gibraltar – which have signed up to, but not implemented, key standards of tax and banking openness. World Leaders agreed that even those on the 'grey list' would face ‘sanctions’ if they refused to comply with regulations being drawn up. The punishments would include cutting aid and increasing costs for those who bank in them.

The international standard for information exchange and reflected in the UN Model Tax Convention was endorsed by the Group of 20 countries in 2004. But some countries fearing a crackdown on tax evaders stashing their money abroad, only committed to the internationally agreed tax standards weeks before the Group of 20 summit. Matti Kohonen of the London-based Tax Justice Network, which campaigns against tax loopholes for rich individuals and corporations, noted that in the two weeks leading up to the G-20 meeting in London a number of tax havens signed up to new banking agreements in hopes of avoiding being listed as uncooperative.

Singapore only committed to the internationally agreed tax standard in 2009, probably just weeks before the Group of 20 summit; and unlike countries like Brunei which also committed to the internationally agreed tax standard in 2009 but has since than have made 5 agreements towards implementing the internationally agreed tax standards, Singapore has not made any such agreements.

What would be even more interesting to note would be how the government of Singapore responds to being placed in the 'grey list'? Is it going to criticise the way the lists were drawn up, sulking perhaps that several US states with tax-friendly laws, like Delaware, Nevada and Wyoming, were not put on either list while Singapore was. Or is it going to respond like Monaco, whose Minister of State (equivalent of Prime Minister of the principality) Jean-Paul Proust said, "We are on the right track. We hope to be able to definitively leave the grey list towards the end of the year"?

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Unemployed PMETs Situation : Bad to worse

Unemployed PMETs Situation : Bad to worse......

PMET is an abbreviation for professionals, managers, executives and technicians. The employment prospects for a PMET above 40 is poor during the good times....and worse than poor during the bad times. During the good times, the govt coined this euphemistic term "structural unemployment" to describe the problem. The proposed govt solution has been the same in good times and bad- retraining, retraining, retraining. When retraining does not work, what does the govt propose? More retraining. Right now the govt is proposing to have more 40 conversion schemes for PMETs [Link]. Do you think they will solve the problem if they have 100 conversion schemes?...make that 200. The problem is not the skills but the age of these people and the ability of employers to practice age discrimination a.k.a ageism.

Why did employers take in those over-40s in the past...say 15 years ago? The reason is very simple. Singapore had a rather tight labor market so when the economy boomed employers couldn't find workers ddn't have much of a choice except to give those who were older a chance. The booming economy created opportunities for these people. When the recession came, they had as good a chance as anyone else of getting retrenched. If they became jobless, they had to struggle until the economy recovered before they got another shot at decent employment.....but that was the situation 15 years ago. What has changed?

When the PAP govt opened the floodgates for foreign workers, they also changed the demographics of our workforce. The supply of workers below the age of 30 became almost unlimited, given you can always find workers from India and China willing to come here. When the economy boomed in 2007/2008 the employers could employ hundreds of thousands of foreign workers. Instead of the labor market becoming tight creating opportunities for those over-40s, the influx of workers caused this group of Singaporeans to remained unemployed or underemployed during the boom.

% increase in employment (residents vs foreigners)

Chart taken from Online Citizen.[Link]

If the goal of the PAP govt simply wanted grow the GDP as fast as possible, it is easy to understand what they were trying to do. The huge influx of foreign workers caused the cost of living (e.g. rentals) to rise and the rapid growth of the economy caused it to overheat[Link : Singapore economy shows sign of overheating as companies hire workers at an unprecedented pace] .

The PAP continues to insist that its economic model is the best for ordinary Singaporeans but ordinary Singaporeans are beginning to ask : What's in it for us? Being forced to work until our old age burdened by the highest household debt in Asia while becoming increasing unemployable after the age of 40...is that something that we want for ourselves and our children? The wealth from this GDP growth distributed inequitably as the system results in an income gap comparable only to 3rd world nations.

http://forums.delphiforums.com/sunkopitiam/messages?msg=25886.1

PAP politicians say the darndest things

Here is a list of quotations by local politicians. There may exist misquotations, after all the source is an email.

“Right now we have Low Thia Khiang, Chiam See Tong, Steve Chia. We can deal with them. Suppose you had 10, 15, 20 opposition members in Parliament. Instead of spending my time thinking what is the right policy for Singapore, I’m going to spend all my time thinking what’s the right way to fix them, to buy my supporters votes, how can I solve this week’s problem and forget about next year’s challenges?”
Lee Hsien Loong, 3 May 2006.

“…you have to pay the market rate or the man will up stakes and join Morgan Stanley, Lehman Brothers or Goldman Sachs and you would have an incompetent man and you would lose money by the billions!”
Lee Kuan Yew said on April 2007

“For a person who runs a million-dollar charitable organisation, $600,000 is peanuts as it has a few hundred millions in reserves.”
Mrs Goh Chok Tong

“If you don’t include your women graduates in your breeding pool and leave them on the shelf, you would end up a more stupid society… So what happens? There will be less bright people to support dumb people in the next generation. That’s a problem.”
Lee Kuan Yew in 1983

“Only 5% are unemployed. We still have 95% who are employed.”
Yeo Cheow Tong

“Retrenchment is good for Singapore. If there is no retrenchments, then I worry.”
Goh Chok Tong

“We must encourage those who earn less than $200 per month and cannot afford to nurture and educate many children never to have more than two… We will regret the time lost if we do not now take the first tentative steps towards correcting a trend which can leave our society with a large number of the physically, intellecually and culturally anaemic.”
Lee Kuan Yew in 1967

“Contrary to public perception, the White Horse classification is not to ensure that sons of influential men gets preferential treatment. Instead it is to ensure that they do not get preferential treatment.”
Cedric Foo

“No, it was not a U-turn, and neither was it a reversal of government policy. But you can call it a rethink.”
Yeo Cheow Tong

“I give you an example: you put out a fun podcast, you talk about”bak chor mee’; I will say “mee siam mai hum”, then we compete.”
Lee Hsien Loong

“I don’t think that there should be a cap on the number of directorship that a person can hold.”
PAP MP John Chen who holds 8 directorships

“It’s not for the money because some of the companies pay me as little as $10,000 a year.”
PAP MP Wang Kai Yuen who holds 11 directorships.

“We started off with (the name) and after looking at everything, the name that really tugged at the heartstrings was in front of us. The name itself is not new, but what has been used informally so far has endeared itself to all parties.”
Mah Bow Tan on the $400,000 exercise to rename Marina Bay as Marina Bay.

“Having enjoyed football as a national sport for decades, we in Singapore have set ourselves the target of reaching the final rounds of World Cup in 2010.”
Ho Peng Kee

“I would want to form an alternative policies group in Parliament, comprising 20 PAP MPs. These 20 PAP MPs will be free to vote in accordance with what they think of a particular policy. In other words, the whip for them will be lifted. This is not playing politics, this is something which I think is worthwhile doing.”
Goh Chok Tong

“If you want to dance on a bar top, some of us will fall off the bar top. Some people will die as a result of liberalising bar top dancing - a young girl with a short skirt dancing on it may attract some insults from some other men, the boyfriend will start fighting and some people will die.”
Vivian Balakrishnan, Minister for Community Development, Youth and Sports

“People support CPF cuts because there are no protest outside Parliament.”
Lee Hsien Loong

“Save on one hairdo and use the money for breast screening.”
Lim Hng Kiang

“Singaporean workers have become more expensive than those in the USA and Australia.”
Tony Tan

“I regret making the decision because, in the end, the baby continued to be in intensive care, and KKH now runs up a total bill of more than $300,000″
Lim Hng Kiang, regretting the decision to save a baby’s life because KKH ran up a $300,000 bill

“Without the elected president and if there is a freak result, within two or three years, the army would have to come in and stop it.”
Lee Kuan Yew

“Please do not assume that you can change governments. Young people don’t understand this”
Minister Mentor Lee Kuan Yew, post-2006 General Elections

“How much do you want? Do you want three meals in a hawker centre, food court or restaurant?”
Dr Vivian Balakrishnan

“People could buy frozen food instead of more expensive fresh food… They could opt for house brand goods, which cost less than others..”
Lee Hsien Loong

“Based on figures provided by ComfortDelGro, Singapore’s biggest taxi operator, cabbies are pocketing about $11 more a day, earning about $318.”
Mr. Raymond Lim

“GST hike is to help the poor.”
Lee Hsien Loong

“I mean, we are different. This was a lapse, what to do, it’s happened.”
Lee Hsien Loong

“You know, the cure for all this talk is really a good dose of incompetent government. You get that alternative and you’ll never put Singapore together again: Humpty Dumpty cannot be put together again…and your asset values will be in peril, your security will be at risk and our women will become maids in other people’s countries, foreign workers.”http://www.blogger.com/post-create.g?blogID=1472917456130506076
Lee Kuan Yew - Justifying pay hikes for Singapore ministers, The Straits Times, 5 April 2007

“This should never have happened. I am sorry that it has.”
Wong Kan Seng

“Every month, when I receive my CPF statement, I feel so rich and the best part is, I know the CPF money won’t run away. CPF will still be around for a long, long time to come. Not only is it earning good interest, my capital is protected.”
Lim Swee Say

http://forums.delphiforums.com/sunkopitiam/messages?msg=25928.1

4 tax havens blacklisted

April 3, 2009
4 tax havens blacklisted

Singapore is placed on the 'grey list', along with Switzerland

'We have agreed that there will be an end to tax havens that do not transfer information upon request,' said British Prime Minister Gordon Brown at the end of the G20 summit. -- PHOTO: AGENCE FRANCE-PRESSE
LONDON - FOUR nations were blacklisted as uncooperative tax havens on Thursday after G-20 leaders declared the age of banking secrecy was over and said they would no longer tolerate shady havens draining away badly needed tax revenue.

At the request of the Group of 20 summit of rich and developing nations, the Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development named the Philippines, Uruguay, Costa Rica and the Malaysian territory of Labuan as the worst offenders, saying they had refused to adopt new rules on financial openness.

Leaders also said nations that refuse to exchange tax information could in the future face tough sanctions - including the withdrawal of financing by the World Bank or International Monetary Fund. 'The time of banking secrecy has passed,' French President Nicholas Sarkozy said following the summit. 'Everyone around the table wants an end to tax havens. Everyone knows we need sanctions.'

The announcement reflects mounting concern that banking secrecy in tax havens has helped to worsen the economic crisis by disguising the true value of some global assets. Anti-poverty activists say such places provide corrupt officials places to stash illicit funds, often depriving poor nations of needed resources.

The OECD has divided countries into three categories: those who comply with rules on sharing tax information, those who say they will but have yet to act and nations which have not yet agreed to change banking secrecy practices.

Switzerland and Liechtenstein, which both have strong banking secrecy traditions, said last month they would adopt international rules on tax cooperation and were ready to comply with G-20 demands. Liechtenstein, Switzerland's tiny Alpine neighbour, said it has already met with British officials to prepare for the new standards. Monaco said earlier that it would be more transparent with foreign tax authorities.

In return they were spared the fate of being blacklisted but were left in a gray area of countries that still have to implement their commitment to accept new information-exchange standards.

The other on the grey list include Belgium, Brunei, Chile, the Dutch Antilles, Gibraltar, Liechtenstein, Luxembourg, Monaco, Singapore and Carribean island nations including the Bahamas, Bermuda and the Cayman Islands.

A third list of the countries named those that had substantially implemented the internationally agreed tax standard. It included Britain, China (with the exception of special administrative regions), France, Germany, Russia and the United States. -- AP, AFP

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Email to Philip Jeyaretnam

Dear Philip

I have just finished reading from cover to cover the book, Make It Right for Singapore, written by your father.

I now feel as if he had risen from the grave and gave me a couple of good slaps on my face. I thought you should know this.

Mr J B Jeyaretnam is not someone that I do not recognise. I saw him a couple of times outside MRT stations, waving perhaps the book that I have just finished reading, and screaming at the top of his voice things that I could not remember.

Naturally, I scurried hastily away from him. Having fed all these years with stuff from The Straits Times, I thought it was smart of me not to go near this man or risk being associated with the guy who was trying to hold on to his dear pant as he contested one defamation suit after another (I am writing this as a figure of speech, and I do not mean Mr Jeyaretnam was not properly attired. I am being extra careful here since I am dealing with a Senior Counsel).

I have now read his book of speeches. I thought it would have been better that he pulled me aside then and told me, “Look punk, read my damn book.” I could have then read the book and perhaps found a way to offer him some kind of help. On the other hand, I could have been a coward and just scoot off faster. But Mr Jeyaretnam might not have cornered me in the first place, because perhaps he belonged to a certain breed of gentlemen who would never want to stuff things down others’ throats, unlike the way things are done by some others that we know. Anyway, there is no merit for speculation. It is all water under the bridge now.

Back to you dad’s book. As I said, I finally have the chance to read it, thanks to a friend who gave the book to me. And this is what is going on in my mind right now.

Mr Jeyaretnam must have felt terribly lonely all those times, as he spoke one man against the rest in Singapore Parliament, to advocate for more transparency and accountability on the part of the government, and justice and fairness for the people. He argued for the dismantling of structures, institutions and electoral rules and systems which appeared, in his view, to serve the interest of the dominant political party PAP rather than the interest of Singapore and its people. He asked our government to remove obsolete laws such as the ISA to free people from their fear, so that people are able to participate in discussions, debates and constructive criticism, for the sake of the progress of Singapore.

Whether Mr Jeyaretnam was doing this because he loved the country or because he was getting back at a somebody, I would not know and I do not care. All I can see is that, as he raged and ranted about issues (and some of them made a heck lot of sense to me), some of the other guys in Parliament either ignored him, looked the other way, jeered at him, or held back their opinion because maybe they cared more about their personal vested interest (read: multi-million dollar salary) than what is good for Singapore.

That is why, as I read his lonesome speeches through the pages of his book, I felt that I was repeatedly slapped by this remarkable man, who persisted in fighting for his cause, something that he thought was the right thing for him to do, even though he was financially destroyed during the process.

I felt ashamed. If only I had just stopped to at least listen to what he had to say as he yelled at us outside the MRT. Why did I not give him my ear for 10 precious minute of my life, when the man gave almost his entire life for the cause that he believed in? The fact is, I have seen him several times and I did not bother to stop once to listen. I am feeling ****ing remorseful now.

I learned many other things from the book. Mr Jeyaretnam cited many quotes from all over the world on democracy, freedom and the rule of the law. One of the most instructive segment of the book was on page 142:

And so the Barons gathered to put an end to this rule by the Monarch without any law and they passed a number of declarations. These declarations were later accepted by the Monarch, Henry III, I think and came to be known as the Magna Carta, the great Charter.

Wikipedia has this to say about Magna Carta:

Magna Carta required King John of England to proclaim certain rights (pertaining to nobles and barons), respect certain legal procedures, and accept that his will could be bound by the law. It explicitly protected certain rights of the King’s subjects, whether free or fettered—most notably the writ of habeas corpus, allowing appeal against unlawful imprisonment.

Philip, I am a practical guy. I am not good at banter or inspirational speeches. I just try to get things done. I notice that Henry III (if your Dad was correct) stopped his nonsense after a group of Barons stood up and effectively asked the King to back off. See? The King listened only after the Barons, the rich and powerful guys spoke, not the small potatoes. Therefore, to me, to stop some of the nonsense that I am seeing in Singapore, one hope for the rest of us is when some of the rich guys in town decide that they are done with just making money for now, and they want to focus on doing something to stop some of the nonsense in Singapore.

Philip, you are a big lawyer working in a big law firm. I am sure you come across some high net worth individuals. I am sure they know who you are. Maybe some of these guys want to do the right thing, but they need just a little nudge from you? Perhaps you could start by giving them a present, a copy of your father’s book, and hopefully some of them will eventually read the book, like how I eventually did? If you are already doing that, I say, “continue the good work.”. If not, then I say “if you never try, you will never know. Don’t be shy.” Unless, of course, you are actually in the process of working out a migration plan. Then there is really nothing else that I want to say.

Mr Jeyaretnam’s book also contains good legal advice for a layman like me. Chapter 19, titled “Presumption of innocence - The right of accused persons” supplies many useful tips on what to do when the police pays people a visit. At least I now know that the first thing I need to do is to ask “Friend, what are the charges against me?” followed by “Wait, I need my lawyer, and you better don’t ask me to blindly follow you back to police station, or else my lawyer can tell you and your boss a lot of things later.” I have also learnt that if I ever land myself in court (heaven forbids that, of course), I’d be better off engaging a lawyer to tell the Judge as many stories as possible, and not to assume that if I keep silent, I am presumed innocent. It is particularly scary to read the part on the possibility of how, in Singapore, other people who are being charged can save their own skin by implicating me and getting me in trouble before the law, even when there is no direct proof that I have done anything wrong. Solution: I better make friends with more lawyers in times of peace.

I believe that you father’s book deserved to be read by Singaporeans. I’d like to tell you that there is Internet which can make it very easy for people to get your dad’s book. Just a couple of mouse click and the entire book goes to your PC in the form of a PDF file. I hope someone could approach the publisher of your dad’s book, to check if such an electronic version of the book could be made available, for people to download it from websites such as Civic Advocator. Of course, if people wish to donate money during the process, I am sure arrangement could be made to share the proceeds with the publisher. The copyright mumbo jumbo relating to internet distribution of books could get quite messy. But I believe you could help, if you want to.

Philip, I also want you to know that I am glad your dad slapped me. In fact, the slapping has just sharpened my vision and I can see things much clearer now. For that, I wish to thank your dad, albeit belatedly, for all the speeches that he made in Parliament for the people of Singapore.

Finally, I wish you and your family the best of spirits and health. Like how your brother Kenneth described in his eulogy for Mr JBJ, I am sure that you feel lucky and proud to carry the name of a man like JBJ.

I write you this email to let you know that there are people like us around. I hope you could choose to help people like us, because, in your own words, no matter who we are, we can do something, we must do something, to make the world a better place. Please consider my ebook idea.

http://forums.delphiforums.com/sunkopitiam/messages?msg=25878.1