Archive for the ‘Malaysia’ Category

How Hong Kong eradicated corruption in the 1977

Wednesday, July 15th, 2009

I copied this from http://malaysiafinance.blogspot.com/2009/07/my-favourite-best-posting-over-last-35.html (hope Mr SD doesn’t mind) as I think it act as a good lesson as to what Malaysia can do eradicate corruption.

Sir Jack Cater’s Legacy

The Missing Legacy was first written in a blog of mine dated 7 February 2006 - it was on the passing of Sir John Cowperthwaite, the person most responsible for HK’s reputation as the freest economy/capitalism in the world. Cowperthwaite’s passing did not get much press coverage at all in HK media, and that kinda pissed me off because a group of people who can forget so easily their “roots” and “how they got here” are doomed to lose the blueprint set by Cowperthwaite.

Now another old gwailo died, and his contribution to HK is no less than Cowperthwaite. Sir Jack Cater died on Guernsey on 14 April 2006 aged 84. He was the founding head of HK’s infamous Independent Commission Against Corruption (ICAC), which took radical steps to combat graft in the police force in the 1970s. Cater went on to become HK’s Chief Secretary, Acting Governor and Commissioner in London. Bribery had long been endemic in Hong Kong’s police and civil service, but was thought of as being confined to the Chinese lower ranks, rather than expatriate officers. Calls to eradicate it were largely ignored by governors before Maclehose, who arrived in 1971. Maclehose lacked the political will to tackle the problem despite strong urgings by Cater .

If you were to do a net search, you will find Jack Cater’s passing only being solemnly mentioned within the HK’s government admin portal at www.news.gov.hk … how soon we forget!

Cater even threatened to resigned in 1973 when trying to bring down Chief Superintendent Peter Godber. Godber fled HK while under investigation for amassing a fortune of several million pounds, much of it banked in Vancouver. Cater needed to strike at the top, even at one of his own, to further reinforce the dire need for eradication of corruption in HK. The developments forced the hand of Maclehose. Jack Cater was asked to form an independent anti-corruption unit with the support of a former Special Branch officer, John Prendergast.

The establishment and independence of ICAC is crucial to HK’s economy. While Cowperthwaite had eradicated bureaucracy, you still needed “pure meritocracy” in the financial economic system to uphold its integrity and transparency. Only with those factors can HK gain an ever growing reputation as a true financial center - attracting professionals and companies to invest.

Cater’s reputation for determined leadership had been established during the period of civil unrest in Hong Kong in 1967. He cared deeply about his work and about those closest to him, and he encouraged the careers of talented young officials - including women, who in earlier days had generally been denied promotion.

In the first year of its operation, 1974, the ICAC handled 1,798 complaints of police involvement in bribery and extortion. It was said that more than a third of all Chinese policemen were members of triad gangs which controlled prostitution, drug-running and gambling across the Territory - rackets which, as Cater pointed out, raked in more than three times the profits of the Hongkong & Shanghai Bank.

By October 1977 the Commission’s uncompromising methods (it acted on anonymous tip-offs, and allowed no presumption of innocence) had caused such anger in the Police Force that 2,000 officers marched through the streets to present a protest petition, and a group of CID men stormed the ICAC’s offices. Fearing a breakdown of order, Maclehose felt forced to declare an amnesty for all but the most heinous offences.

In spite of this setback, the ICAC’s work continued with unflagging determination. Investigations proceeded into other government departments, notably public works, education (parents were often asked for bribes to enrol children in schools of their choice) and health (hospital patients were forced to pay up for bedpans). It was indeed a cradle-to-grave system, with bribes demanded even for burial sites. Among those most grateful for the clean-up were the drivers of Hong Kong’s battered fleet of minibuses, whose fares had for many years been preyed upon by bent policemen.

The ICAC was often accused of heavy-handedness, but its intervention provoked a culture change which still stands Hong Kong in good stead while corruption remains rife in other parts of Asia. Though Cater moved on in 1978 to the top civil service post of Chief Secretary, it was at the ICAC that he made his most significant contribution. Cater was Chief Secretary from 1978 to 1981. With a rapidly growing economy, it was a golden era for HK. Cater was several times Acting Governor, and was in line to succeed Maclehose in 1982; but Margaret Thatcher was persuaded to appoint a senior diplomat, Sir Edward Youde, to commence negotiations for the eventual handover to China.

Instead Cater became HK’s Commissioner in London until 1984. He then returned to Hong Kong to work in the private sector, joining China Light & Power Co - the electricity generator for Kowloon and the New Territories - and becoming head of Hong Kong Nuclear Investment Co, which was China Light’s participation with Beijing in a nuclear power station venture at Daya Bay in Guangdong province. He was president of Hong Kong’s Agency for Voluntary Service, a member of the Court of the University of Hong Kong and an international director of the United World Colleges, participating in the foundation of Hong Kong’s own College at Shatin in the New Territories.

Again, another passing of an important gwailo being largely ignored by HK’s media. Is it a gagging issue; were media companies trying not to agitate China’s political HQ by not bringing up the “glory days” of British colonial influence? How many more “important gwailo septua/octo-generians” must die before HK people recognises its roots, and pay the according tributes and gratitude that are due.

One can just imagine the gulf between HK and Singapore as financial centers if “true meritocracy” did not prevail in HK. Will Cater and Cowperthwaite ever make the books of HK’s recent history. The Chinese have an oft-quoted saying, “when drinking water, one must never forget its source”, how they got here. Just because some of them involved people who are not Chinese does not matter, and should not matter.

Malaysia export to GDP>100%, Eco grow down to 3.5%

Tuesday, November 4th, 2008

Pretty scary stuff with export (gross) > 100% of GDP.  It is so export dependent, and sounds like
Malaysian sole reason of exsitence is to make stuffs for other countries..

KUALA LUMPUR, Nov 4 (Reuters) - The downward revision of Malaysia’s 2009 economic growth forecast is not a surprise given the country’s heavy dependence on exports, ratings agency Moody’s said on Tuesday.

Malaysia’s government dramatically increased its budget deficit forecast for 2009 due to slowing revenues and said that economic growth would come in at just 3.5 percent, its slowest pace since 2001.

‘The growth forecast has not come as a surprise, obviously Malaysia is quite heavily exposed to the global economy with an exports-to-GDP ratio in excess of 100 percent,’ said Aninda Mitra, Sovereign Analyst at Moody’s (nyse: MCO - news - people ) Investors Service.

The country’s direct export exposure to the U.S., the European Union and Japan is also very high at almost one-third of the total exports, he said.

‘So in that context the export slowdown is under way. Not only that, but also commodity prices have dropped a lot, palm oil and crude oil prices have come down quite a bit, so the growth revision does not come as a surprise.’

He did not comment on the revised budget deficit, saying he needed to see the details.

Liberty and Justice, is Malaysia in the dark age?

Saturday, July 19th, 2008

Let me begin this with the respond - not really.   Often, fellow country man like to quote how free it is in the western states and how opressive Malaysian government is.  Let’s put this in a side by side table and see how bad Malaysia actually is, or how advance western democractes are in ensuring liberty and justice to its subjects.  While  I completely agree that Malaysia still has much room for improvements, I think - (i) the West are not that far ahead and (ii) The west has plenty of room of improvements as well.

West Malaysia
Limitation on free speech Anything involving race and colour In Germany/Austria, denying the “H” word Anything involving races and Bumi privileges
Respond to breach (in UK at least), police at your door faster than police would appear if your house is broken into Police at your door as well
Judiciary and Justice Guantanamo Bay, UK 42 days detention without trial, Council use phone taps powers on minor tipping offences etc ISA



How the Law Is Lost


about how prosecutor abuse the law to achieve convictions, despite the injustice. In 1934 Supreme Court Justice George Sutherland summarized the dual role of prosecutors: The United States Attorney is the representative not of an ordinary party to a controversy, but of a sovereignty whose obligation to govern impartially is as compelling as its obligation to govern at all; and whose interest, therefore, in a criminal prosecution is not that it shall win a case, but that justice shall be done. As such, he is in a peculiar and very definite sense the servant of the law, the twofold aim of which is that guilt shall not escape or innocence suffer. He may prosecute with earnestness and vigor — indeed, he should do so. But, while he may strike hard blows, he is not at liberty to strike foul ones. It is as much his duty to refrain from improper methods calculated to produce a wrongful conviction as it is to use every legitimate means to bring about a just one.[24] Justice Jackson saw it the same way: [Prosecutors who focus on building] up statistics of success ha[ve] a perverted sense of practical values, as well as defects of character. . . . [T]he citizen’s safety lies in the prosecutor who tempers zeal with human kindness, who seeks truth and not victims, who serves the law and not factional purposes, and who approaches his task with humility.[
Similar things happen, including the use of these are political tool
Corruption Cash for honours (UK), MP expenses, BAE-Saudi case close down, Tax Heaven London, Washington Lobbying Plenty
Liberty Confiscation of income through high taxation Not as greedy
Faces more checks and fingerprinting at US/UK airport Easier to get through Malaysian airport, often swipe and go
Terrorised by yobs where the state turns a blind eyes and if a resident do something to them, the resident is charged with criminal offence. The right to defend one’s property is lost At least either the police do something or the residents can form a group and take the appropriate action without fear of THEM becoming the criminal instead
Thief/Intruders who becomes injured can sue for compensation No such non sense

So…no Utopia I am afraid but we can strive to make things a little bit better at a time.

Immigrant labour in Malaysia and UK

Thursday, April 17th, 2008

Recently, immigrants changing the fabric of the society in the UK is a hot topic.

I am surprised to read from HERE that there are 2 million foreign work permit holders and 1million
of illegal immigrants in Malaysia.  The 3 million total represent 13% of the local population and 20%
of the working population.

It is an natural human behaviour - continue to seek for better life. Malaysian goes to UK, Australia etc.
The Eastern European moves to UK etc and then Indonesia, Nepalese, Burmese coming to Malaysia etc.

Equality of races in Malaysia

Wednesday, April 16th, 2008

From time to time, we heard about ‘ketuananan Melayu’ has to be preserved forever as the Malays have granted other races citizenship.

Considered what happend in the US, UK etc. Citizenship were granted to slaves and decendent of slaves now enjoy equaly (and ironicially, sometimes more) rights than the so-called indigenous population (which are not really indigenous anyway as Americans are really Irish, Spanish, Engish, Scotish, French etc) and many British are of Viking roots etc.

With a population (that is those who really add value to the soceity) that is increasingly mobile, such discrmination will have no good to anyone. The result, I suppose, would be that those who can and capable of leaving will leave and creates value elsewhere.

And also, no longer we have a close economy, and even close economy can longer escape the reaility where nations competes for commodities and resources worldwide (oil, rice, copper etc). So, if Euthopiana (I made this up) decided that it wants to pursue non meritocracy policies, over the long term it will suffer from much slower economic growth than other competitors. In a self sufficient world, this is fine as even if it grows slower, the standard of livings will still improve slowly. In this new supercharged globalised era, if it grows too slow, it will actually see its standard of living falls are demands for common resources (oil etc), hollywoord films (!) will see its population able to afford less. Things will have to changed.

So..global commodities inflation can be a good thing - it forces political changes, and hopefully for a better, and more efficient world (and I am terribly sorry for the many that will suffer in this process)