Re: ECB and IMF - so you think they knowingly went with austerity, with full knowledge that their actions would harm society but enrich themselves? Or were they blindly obeying neo-liberal ideology and orthodoxy (like some person on this forum)? In any case - I don't know if the European people themselves were against ECB recommendations (seems like those who would benefit did support ECB right? e.g. Germans, French, etc - it's the victims of austerity who didn't, as we can see from all the public protests in Greece, Spain, etc). In England it seems the press/media is much more willing to criticise banks, and as a result politicians are more able to act against banks.
http://www.nakedcapitalism.com/2012...ssold-swaps-what-excuse-does-the-us-have.html
http://www.nakedcapitalism.com/2012...n-and-northern-ireland-from-mrs-n-turner.html
In other words, the KPIs or metrics of "good performance" ought to be widened. Notwithstanding Khaw Boon Wan's slurs about happiness in Bhutan, I think and hope our government is moving towards such metrics (a little belatedly and behind not just advanced nations like those in Scandinavia, but also Thailand which tries to measure national happiness and well-being levels).
Well, the National Conversation is not over and I hope this gets addressed. But like you I'm not really optimistic that it will. The PAP is good at distracting people, changing the topic of conversation, hearing only the good things, etc. We've given them lots of chances but they seem to be their despicable old selves (when it comes to representing the people who elected them).
And maybe I fear that most Singaporeans' happiness is built on money rather than other things (love, physical and mental peace and security, good social relations, access to nature and space, etc). Maybe I'm just in the wrong country, and should leave Singapore for the "real" Singaporeans.
Yup - so we perceive two different things at work here. Taking away safety nets generates one sort of incentive. Providing safety nets generates another sort. So at least we know safety nets aren't just dis-incentiving.
Well, really about innovation and the US, there're plenty of rebuttals of Acemoglu et al - which I can't really evaluate. But here's one (not too technical, with various metrics of innovation) for sample, so you can judge whether the US is really innovating well compared to other countries.
One thing which is sure is - the US has managed to maintain higher levels of GDP per capita than most other countries (especially if you exclude city-states without rural sectors). If the end-goal really is JUST to make money - probably the US is doing something right. What's not so sure is whether they're doing it through innovation or there're other factors involved (some historians/anthropologists think the US' hegemonic position (not just military-politically but also in finance), tributary/client state relations, etc are important). Not really an easy model to imitate - which is why I distrust Acemoglu et al judging the US to be more innovative just because of GDP.
At least I think one thing we both agree on is - technology (a broad sense of technology to include processes and practices) is good for us. The question we don't have an answer to is - how is innovation/technological progress related to varying degrees of social welfare via redistribution of wealth? (I'm not going to try to say social welfare or redistribution are good - that's for Singaporeans to decide - but Singaporeans need to know how social welfare and wealth redistribution affects other aspects of life and society to decide.)
Re: innovation and creativity
Well, I'm no expert on these. Let's stick to your definitions so we can talk coherently.
I think adult Singaporeans aren't very creative, by and large, although it's changing very quickly (the digital generation seem to be much more creative and unbounded by older ideas of limits). But workplace culture is very much set by un-creative un-open-minded leadership - so like you said - innovation doesn't happen much.
Yes I was referring to Chang Ha-Joon commenting on S. Korea - he gave the example of everyone wanting to be a doctor (leading to a shortage of talent going into "risky" jobs e.g. engineers). Which doesn't seem to have hurt Samsung's ability to make great products - and S. Korea is also leading the way in a few industries (LCD screens, batteries) and competing well in many (cars, heavy industries, etc). ASUS in Taiwan also strikes me as being rather innovative. Japan has long had many innovative industrial giants (but are not competitive in terms of costs now). Singapore and Hong Kong are the only Tigers who don't have manufacturing success (and at least HK exported film and music for a while - Singapore has never exported creativity or innovation). We seem really "Uniquely Singapore". (I suspect a few things - maybe our education system failed to keep pace in the 1970s to 1990s - such that our later workforce was affected - or maybe our GLCs weren't well-managed - a lot of Korea's successful firms were state-backed, as were Japan's (with exceptions like Honda though) - but again - I don't have details - just making wild guesses.)
Well, I wouldn't trust Paul Krugman to be entirely free of political agendas (he's Democrat biased), but if you read Conscience of a Liberal (the book, not his blog), he claims that America's growth today was founded on the huge middle-class among post-war baby boomers, created by the redistributive policies from FDR's New Deal and war-time policies. Something might be lost in translation - but I think his point was - you get good growth after periods of equality - because equality creates certain good conditions - a big middle-class equals a big consumer market, and people growing up in middle-class backgrounds grow up to be more productive adults than people from impoverished backgrounds. And he thinks America is hurting itself with all the tax-cuts since Reagan up to today, destroying the middle-class, under-investing in education, health, infrastructure, and paving the way to an unproductive era. (And he's not alone right - other people like Stiglitz say somewhat similar things.)
The interesting thing about such things as education, infrastructure, and healthcare are the very long lag times between investment and results. These are the kinds of things that multi-party democracies aren't very good at doing because they're always attending to voters' current desires. Which an authoritarian PAP didn't have to deal with. But they didn't do the job very well anyway, did they?
I really don't know. Can you provide some figures or examples? (But do try not to get sued!)
I do know that our GLCs always get a good deal on previously public assets - e.g. POSB, Changi Airport, transport companies, etc were always let go very cheaply to GLCs (but I think the same things happen in Korea and Taiwan and probably Japan - maybe they did the right thing by leaving out the GLC bit - and just directly giving good deals to "favoured industries" - it certainly is more privatised?). But anyway in Singapore it's not politicians serving the moneyed class - it's politicians enriching themselves (because who works in GLCs? all ex-civil servants, people with political links, etc).
I'm not sure too. Re: casinos, and firms which can threaten to pull out - I have no information. I remember after SMRT strikes some angmor from Singapore International Chamber of Commerce made some statement about being very concerned. Kindof similar to Chavez and Venezuela's oil right? Before nationalisation - they had higher profit margins, more production, but less money went to the country. Now it's nationalized, less efficient, but at least the profits stay in Venezuela. Same thing with giving corporations tax holidays in Singapore (I mean - let the MNCs leave and replace them with local firms - they might be less efficient in the short-run, but more of their profits will stay in the Singapore economy - and in the long run - that's the only way to get home-grown firms, right?). I remember the old argument was technology transfer. Are Singaporeans solid enough in technology and management to run our own businesses today? Or are we still at the mercy of footloose trans-national corps?
Re: running a tax haven - well that's good and bad. It's good money, but it's frowned on and borderline legal, and it's just finance. (And re: being so finance focused,) Somehow I have this weird idea that finance isn't real industry. It produces no real goods, and it is prone to swelling up and collapsing (bit like a casino). And in disastrous times, it's really worth nothing, unlike factories. But I don't think Singapore banks are likely to need a bail-out? So long as they don't need bail-outs and don't need public subsidies - we don't need to be too concerned?
So - the first way to get around this problem is to have a free and independent press (like mentioned earlier - look at how UK's freer press environment leads to more political will for legal action against banks - while in the US, with their co-opted media, banks are forgiven for all sorts of shit, and mind you both countries' banks have gotten taxpayer funded bail-outs), and a free and independent academy. I agree with you it's probably better to have Yale-NUS here than not to (just thinking about the freedom and independence of the academic situation) - but I think it's good to kick up a fuss to rattle some sabres to get more awareness out, to bargain for more rights, more academic and civic freedoms.
http://www.nakedcapitalism.com/2012...ssold-swaps-what-excuse-does-the-us-have.html
http://www.nakedcapitalism.com/2012...n-and-northern-ireland-from-mrs-n-turner.html
There are two things. To keep up our level of prosperity at the level of the individual is important. Too often, we are given the GDP for the entire nation, and that fudges a lot of things: population growth, the distribution of wealth. It is not that wealth is bad, but they are pretending the question of who has the money is not important. The solution is extremely simple: we should report GINI figures and GDP. Not only must the economy expand, but also the distribution of wealth must improve. Failure to achieve either one would mean it's a bad year. But do you think they will ever do anything like that?
In other words, the KPIs or metrics of "good performance" ought to be widened. Notwithstanding Khaw Boon Wan's slurs about happiness in Bhutan, I think and hope our government is moving towards such metrics (a little belatedly and behind not just advanced nations like those in Scandinavia, but also Thailand which tries to measure national happiness and well-being levels).
Well, the National Conversation is not over and I hope this gets addressed. But like you I'm not really optimistic that it will. The PAP is good at distracting people, changing the topic of conversation, hearing only the good things, etc. We've given them lots of chances but they seem to be their despicable old selves (when it comes to representing the people who elected them).
And maybe I fear that most Singaporeans' happiness is built on money rather than other things (love, physical and mental peace and security, good social relations, access to nature and space, etc). Maybe I'm just in the wrong country, and should leave Singapore for the "real" Singaporeans.
It is hard to tell. There are 2 arguments. First, if you take away safety nets, then people will all be forced to work harder. The opposite argument is that you need to provide people with all the basic neccesities, and after that they feel free to take whatever risks they want to take. Since there are merits to both, it's hard to tell either way. But the facts on the ground is that the US is ahead when it comes to innovation. Not only now, but for the last 100+ years. Nobody has ever managed to catch up with them in this respect, except for Japan during a short period of 20-30 years. And today, nobody will ever say that Japan is more innovative than the US.
Yup - so we perceive two different things at work here. Taking away safety nets generates one sort of incentive. Providing safety nets generates another sort. So at least we know safety nets aren't just dis-incentiving.
Well, really about innovation and the US, there're plenty of rebuttals of Acemoglu et al - which I can't really evaluate. But here's one (not too technical, with various metrics of innovation) for sample, so you can judge whether the US is really innovating well compared to other countries.
One thing which is sure is - the US has managed to maintain higher levels of GDP per capita than most other countries (especially if you exclude city-states without rural sectors). If the end-goal really is JUST to make money - probably the US is doing something right. What's not so sure is whether they're doing it through innovation or there're other factors involved (some historians/anthropologists think the US' hegemonic position (not just military-politically but also in finance), tributary/client state relations, etc are important). Not really an easy model to imitate - which is why I distrust Acemoglu et al judging the US to be more innovative just because of GDP.
At least I think one thing we both agree on is - technology (a broad sense of technology to include processes and practices) is good for us. The question we don't have an answer to is - how is innovation/technological progress related to varying degrees of social welfare via redistribution of wealth? (I'm not going to try to say social welfare or redistribution are good - that's for Singaporeans to decide - but Singaporeans need to know how social welfare and wealth redistribution affects other aspects of life and society to decide.)
Re: innovation and creativity
Well, I'm no expert on these. Let's stick to your definitions so we can talk coherently.
I think adult Singaporeans aren't very creative, by and large, although it's changing very quickly (the digital generation seem to be much more creative and unbounded by older ideas of limits). But workplace culture is very much set by un-creative un-open-minded leadership - so like you said - innovation doesn't happen much.
Yes I was referring to Chang Ha-Joon commenting on S. Korea - he gave the example of everyone wanting to be a doctor (leading to a shortage of talent going into "risky" jobs e.g. engineers). Which doesn't seem to have hurt Samsung's ability to make great products - and S. Korea is also leading the way in a few industries (LCD screens, batteries) and competing well in many (cars, heavy industries, etc). ASUS in Taiwan also strikes me as being rather innovative. Japan has long had many innovative industrial giants (but are not competitive in terms of costs now). Singapore and Hong Kong are the only Tigers who don't have manufacturing success (and at least HK exported film and music for a while - Singapore has never exported creativity or innovation). We seem really "Uniquely Singapore". (I suspect a few things - maybe our education system failed to keep pace in the 1970s to 1990s - such that our later workforce was affected - or maybe our GLCs weren't well-managed - a lot of Korea's successful firms were state-backed, as were Japan's (with exceptions like Honda though) - but again - I don't have details - just making wild guesses.)
In particular, American style materialism is something interesting. Everybody is already wealthy to some degree, but they want to be even richer. And their wealth was a little more spread out - not in the GINI sense, but in the sense that even the lower middle class were doing pretty OK. Until a few years ago, of course.
Well, I wouldn't trust Paul Krugman to be entirely free of political agendas (he's Democrat biased), but if you read Conscience of a Liberal (the book, not his blog), he claims that America's growth today was founded on the huge middle-class among post-war baby boomers, created by the redistributive policies from FDR's New Deal and war-time policies. Something might be lost in translation - but I think his point was - you get good growth after periods of equality - because equality creates certain good conditions - a big middle-class equals a big consumer market, and people growing up in middle-class backgrounds grow up to be more productive adults than people from impoverished backgrounds. And he thinks America is hurting itself with all the tax-cuts since Reagan up to today, destroying the middle-class, under-investing in education, health, infrastructure, and paving the way to an unproductive era. (And he's not alone right - other people like Stiglitz say somewhat similar things.)
The interesting thing about such things as education, infrastructure, and healthcare are the very long lag times between investment and results. These are the kinds of things that multi-party democracies aren't very good at doing because they're always attending to voters' current desires. Which an authoritarian PAP didn't have to deal with. But they didn't do the job very well anyway, did they?
The connections between the rich in Singapore and the elites? Ever noticed that the beneficiaries of asset enhancement are all the property magnates? How many of them are in the list of richest Singaporeans?
I really don't know. Can you provide some figures or examples? (But do try not to get sued!)
I do know that our GLCs always get a good deal on previously public assets - e.g. POSB, Changi Airport, transport companies, etc were always let go very cheaply to GLCs (but I think the same things happen in Korea and Taiwan and probably Japan - maybe they did the right thing by leaving out the GLC bit - and just directly giving good deals to "favoured industries" - it certainly is more privatised?). But anyway in Singapore it's not politicians serving the moneyed class - it's politicians enriching themselves (because who works in GLCs? all ex-civil servants, people with political links, etc).
How about the casinos? How about the fact that Singapore is posturing itself as a great global financial centre? Who's going to come if you don't start sucking on their dicks? How about all the offshore financing that Singapore is getting from the rich elites of our corrupt neighbours Malaysia and Indonesia? (well maybe that one can close one eye because it does benefit citizens by giving them nice cushy jobs in the financial sector, yah?) How about the multinationals who can squeeze the PAP's balls by saying, "you cut my taxes or I lay off 1000 workers"?
I'm not sure too. Re: casinos, and firms which can threaten to pull out - I have no information. I remember after SMRT strikes some angmor from Singapore International Chamber of Commerce made some statement about being very concerned. Kindof similar to Chavez and Venezuela's oil right? Before nationalisation - they had higher profit margins, more production, but less money went to the country. Now it's nationalized, less efficient, but at least the profits stay in Venezuela. Same thing with giving corporations tax holidays in Singapore (I mean - let the MNCs leave and replace them with local firms - they might be less efficient in the short-run, but more of their profits will stay in the Singapore economy - and in the long run - that's the only way to get home-grown firms, right?). I remember the old argument was technology transfer. Are Singaporeans solid enough in technology and management to run our own businesses today? Or are we still at the mercy of footloose trans-national corps?
Re: running a tax haven - well that's good and bad. It's good money, but it's frowned on and borderline legal, and it's just finance. (And re: being so finance focused,) Somehow I have this weird idea that finance isn't real industry. It produces no real goods, and it is prone to swelling up and collapsing (bit like a casino). And in disastrous times, it's really worth nothing, unlike factories. But I don't think Singapore banks are likely to need a bail-out? So long as they don't need bail-outs and don't need public subsidies - we don't need to be too concerned?
So - the first way to get around this problem is to have a free and independent press (like mentioned earlier - look at how UK's freer press environment leads to more political will for legal action against banks - while in the US, with their co-opted media, banks are forgiven for all sorts of shit, and mind you both countries' banks have gotten taxpayer funded bail-outs), and a free and independent academy. I agree with you it's probably better to have Yale-NUS here than not to (just thinking about the freedom and independence of the academic situation) - but I think it's good to kick up a fuss to rattle some sabres to get more awareness out, to bargain for more rights, more academic and civic freedoms.