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ASIA HAND - Cracks appear in Lee's mantle

ashjaw

Alfrescian
Loyal
Southeast Asia
Mar 20, 2009


ASIA HAND
Cracks appear in Lee's mantle
By Shawn W Crispin

While a populist backlash against perceived corrupt bankers and financiers mounts in the United States, all is comparatively calm in financial hub Singapore, where the state and finance sector are virtually one and the same.

Yet some analysts wonder whether the deepening downturn could eventually spark popular calls for political change to the People's Action Party (PAP)-led government, similar to the mass mobilizations that ousted Indonesia's and nearly toppled Malaysia's entrenched authoritarian regimes amid the 1997-98 Asian financial crisis.

Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong faces Singapore's worst economic crisis since it achieved independence in 1965 and



some analysts believe his handling of the downturn will determine largely his future staying power as premier once his influential 85-year-old father, Minister Mentor and national founder Lee Kuan Yew, eventually passes from the scene.

The senior Lee warned earlier this month that gross domestic product (GDP) growth could contract by as much as 8% this year. As one of Asia's most open economies, where exports of goods and services last year accounted for around 145% of GDP, Singapore has been especially hard hit by the collapse in global trade. Investment bank Credit Suisse estimates every 10% lost in goods and services exports will through first round effects shave 7.2% off Singapore's GDP.

But it's Lee's government's financial management, particularly its role in running the Government of Singapore Investment Corp (GIC), Temasek Holdings PTE, and, perhaps most crucially, the Central Provident Fund, which is drawing more critical attention. Earlier this month the Straits Times reported that GIC's assets, often roughly estimated at US$300 billion, had fallen by around 25% off their peak of last year.

The state-controlled newspaper quoted the senior Lee saying that GIC had invested "too early" when it took stakes in early 2008 in Swiss investment bank UBS and now diminished US banking giant Citibank. Until a recent preferred to common stock swap, GIC had lost 80% on its Citibank gambit.

Singaporean eyebrows also rose earlier this year when Temasek chief executive officer Ho Ching, the wife of Prime Minister Lee, announced she would step down from her post in October and be replaced with an Australian national. Temasek executives have said that her resignation is not related to the investment company's recent financial performance, which in historical terms has tanked.

The sovereign fund shed 31% of assets' value between April and November 2008, driving its portfolio down to US$127 billion, according to a Ministry of Finance report made to parliament. Some analysts expect even worse when the sovereign fund announces its total annual results, expected in the weeks ahead. The senior Lee was quoted saying in the local press that there was "no equal" inside Temasek to the outside Australian national candidate appointed to the post, but later backtracked on the comment.

The mentor minister's flip-flop about Temasek's top management capabilities struck some as odd, considering the sovereign fund had until recently claimed to have earned an average 18% in total annual shareholder returns. It's notable in retrospect that the International Monetary Fund (IMF), in a 2006 report, inquired Temasek managers whether they "took into account the impact of its investment on the overall economy's exposure to sectors and countries".

Temasek officials responded that the outward expansion was done "cautiously and selectively, overseen by an independent board". Authorities also told the IMF then that "disclosing further information on GIC's operations and financial position was difficult because of strategic reasons, but underscored that such investments were largely in liquid assets and undertaken with sufficient internal oversight".

The IMF said in an August 2008 report that GIC's and Temasek's operations "do not appear to undercut the formulation or conduct of domestic policies", though this assessment was made before government officials revealed the extent of their recent losses.

Pension questions
Opposition politician and political scientist James Gomez, for one, believes that the mounting crisis has exposed flaws in the government's economic management. He says that while Temasek's and GIC's losses have not overtly affected the day-to-day lives of most Singaporeans, they could eventually impact on the Central Provident Fund (CPF), a state-run compulsory social security program.

The CPF board has consistently said it only invests funds in "risk-free" government bonds and bank deposits, but both opposition and PAP politicians have contradicted those claims. Opposition politicians, including Low Thia Khiang, have questioned whether the funds paid into the CPF actually provide a de facto cheap source of finance for GIC in particular to invest abroad.

GIC officially acknowledges that it invests overseas some of the proceeds raised from government bonds. However, the government does not publicly release information on assets held abroad or data on the position of the consolidated public sector, according to the IMF. That's historically raised criticisms that could intensify in the months ahead as the economy weakens. Opposition MP Low was quoted in the Straits Times in September 2007 asking in parliament whether the "government short-changes Singaporeans by giving CPF members 3.5% of the interest rate while the GIC makes 9% and pockets the balance of 5.5%".

Gomez says that because there is no clear evidence to show that CPF funds have disappeared with GIC's and Temasek's recent losses, there has not yet been a public reaction against the two investment funds' management. However, he contends there is a growing "disquiet" about the various mechanisms the government has since 2007 put in place to delay CPF disbursements to the population, including a rise in the minimum retirement age.

Those measures are a reflection, some believe, of the CPF's weak financial position, which analysts say has been hampered by a pro-business government policy in recent years to substantially reduce employers' payments into the scheme. The IMF said in 2006 that "steps are needed to increase income replacement rates for retirees relying on their [CPF] savings". It's not apparent - three years later and amid the country's worst ever economic crisis - that those recommended steps have been taken.

There are other areas of potential popular agitation, including a nagging perception, expressed on blogs and among the political opposition, that top government officials are grossly overpaid. In April 2007, ministers received a 60% pay hike, bumping their pay to an average of US$1.2 million per year. Prime Minister Lee's salary jumped at the time to the Singapore dollar equivalent of US$2 million. The official pay hikes were justified by a compensation system created in 1994 by the senior Lee, then premier, that pegged top officials' salaries to what they might earn at the same level in the private sector.

Then, the senior Lee strongly defended the hefty pay hikes, warning the previous month that without them "your jobs will be in peril, your security at risk and our women will become maids in other people's countries". With the global downturn, at least the first of those dire warnings has come a cropper for many Singaporeans, though there are no indications yet government ministers' salaries will be cut back in line with rising global discontent over perceived corruption in top level corporate compensation packages.

Prime Minister Lee has responded to the mounting economic crisis through vigorous fiscal pump priming. The government's 2009 budget entails fiscal measures, including a heavy dose of off-budget loan guarantees, which amount to 8% of GDP, the largest such percentage in Asia. Underscoring the potential depth of Singapore's crisis, the fiscal package is nearly twice the amount as a percentage of GDP the government mobilized in the wake of the 1997-98 Asian financial crisis. Half of the fiscal cash is expected to be injected into the economy this year, according to Credit Suisse.

Whether this will be enough to keep rising social discontent from morphing into calls for political change and greater government transparency is still unclear. Opposition politician Gomez contends that most Singaporeans are "too fearful too express their desire for political change" in light of the government's notoriously harsh handling of its critics, including the use of crippling defamation suits to bankrupt opposition politicians.

He believes that the government's fiscal strategy amounts to "cash handouts to mitigate criticism", which, he concedes could still work in Singapore's materialistic society. But Singapore's wealth has recently greatly diminished, perhaps more than many realize, and as the global economic crisis bites deeper at home, it's possible that desperate Singaporeans look to pin the blame on Lee's government.

Shawn W Crispin is Asia Times Online's Southeast Asia Editor. He may be reached at [email protected].

(Copyright 2009 Asia Times Online (Holdings) Ltd. All rights reserved. Please contact us about sales, syndication and republishing.)
 

tonychat

Alfrescian (InfP)
Generous Asset
how can a country go through well the crisis, when the country's sinkies only knows how to follow rules and not creative enough to create something out.

How can a country go through well the crisis when the country leaders only way to get money is to tax the pple and bend down to ask foreigners to invest, instead of admitting that it is their incompetence in running the country.
 

jimmyfallon

Alfrescian
Loyal
Sg got no balls need Foreigners to stand up for us. I hope more publications write stories about this and start the revolution.
 

tonychat

Alfrescian (InfP)
Generous Asset
Sg got no balls need Foreigners to stand up for us. I hope more publications write stories about this and start the revolution.

sinkies feels no shame that the govt uses their tax $ to sue foreigners so as to protect their own power.

The $ should be spend on improving the country and if a person does no wrong why afraid of others talking about the Lee Family and its dirty ways of holding on to power and money.
 

yellow_people

Alfrescian
Loyal
sinkies feels no shame that the govt uses their tax $ to sue foreigners so as to protect their own power.

The $ should be spend on improving the country and if a person does no wrong why afraid of others talking about the Lee Family and its dirty ways of holding on to power and money.

"We have a practical people whose culture tells them that contention for the sake of contention leads to disaster. I have said this on many a previous occasion; that had the mix in Singapore been different, had it been 75% Indians, 15% Malays and the rest Chinese, it would not have worked. Because they believe in the politics of contention, of opposition. But because the culture was such that the populace sought a practical way out of their difficulties, therefore it has worked." Lee Kuan Yew in Parliament, 1985.
 

halsey02

Alfrescian (Inf)
Asset
"We have a practical people whose culture tells them that contention for the sake of contention leads to disaster. I have said this on many a previous occasion; that had the mix in Singapore been different, had it been 75% Indians, 15% Malays and the rest Chinese, it would not have worked. Because they believe in the politics of contention, of opposition. But because the culture was such that the populace sought a practical way out of their difficulties, therefore it has worked." Lee Kuan Yew in Parliament, 1985.

In short? they are SCREWED!:biggrin:
 

takcheksian

Alfrescian
Loyal
"We have a practical people whose culture tells them that contention for the sake of contention leads to disaster. I have said this on many a previous occasion; that had the mix in Singapore been different, had it been 75% Indians, 15% Malays and the rest Chinese, it would not have worked. Because they believe in the politics of contention, of opposition. But because the culture was such that the populace sought a practical way out of their difficulties, therefore it has worked." Lee Kuan Yew in Parliament, 1985.

Quite true. They all took the easy way out. They chose the right pill, and went back into the matrix.
 
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