June 13, 2009

Coveting Love

I am prompted by Jojo's response that "Beauty lies in the eyes of the beholder" on my blog posting and so I thought it would be opportune to go back to one of my earlier posting in another blog on the subject of "Beauty" and make it current.

Wikipedia defines ‘beauty’ as a quality present in a thing or person that gives intense pleasure or deep satisfaction to the mind, whether arising from sensory manifestations such as shape, color and sound, a meaningful design or pattern, or something else such as personality.

Beauty can also be described as a quality in a person, place or idea that provides the perceptual experience of pleasure to someone.

"Beauty is in the eye of the beholder" is a common phrase attributed to this concept.

Let us apply this concept to a beautiful girl. She attracts us physically by the blinding beauty of her face. We can be delighted by her body shape and her other physical attributes. We can be attracted to her magnetic personality, her motions, emotions and her energy level. We can be in love with her mind. We can fall for her talents in the arts like singing, dancing and in the performing arts.

Does love possess? Most people in love intend to jealously possess. They covet!

Most of all, are lovers, mostly in love with a possession for love, an image or better still, a wild fantasy of one's own cravings?

Singapore's Painless Recovery?

I paraphrased an article printed on-line in the Straits Times on 15th May 2009. I think it is an interesting article.

When the government cried fire, there seems not to be smoke anywhere for its citizens. What gives?

The government's official stand-Singapore is in the midst of a severe recession,the worst ever.

Exports collapsed in the first three months of the year by almost 30 per cent, dragging down first-quarter growth by a record negative 20 per cent over the previous quarter.

The Government then downgraded its full-year growth forecast to negative 6 per cent to negative 9 per cent, while the International Monetary Fund (IMF) forecasted a negative 10 per cent, making Singapore the worst performing country in Asia this year.

But there is another set of facts that presents quite a different picture.

These facts may be less scientific, but they are nevertheless real.

However, on the ground, the picutre do not seems to reflect the so-called economic woes!

Sales of new private homes in Singapore have jumped back to near pre-crisis levels, and there is evidence that property prices are stabilising and even inching up. Car sales dipped for a while, but then found a firmer footing. Crowds have been turning up in record numbers at travel and computer fairs.

Retail sales did drop by 15 per cent in January, but this was still better than the 20 per cent plunge during the 1997-1998 Asian financial crisis. Most restaurants in town remain packed at weekends, while the lines at nightclubs such as Butter Factory and Zouk still stretch round the block.

This disconnect — between what the statistics indicate is a gut-wrenching recession and the actual less-than-disastrous state of the real economy — has got economists debating the true impact of this “worst-ever” recession.

Yes, some businesses have been driven to closure, thousands of people have lost their jobs and almost everyone is feeling some pain. But there is a clear “disjuncture” between “what are truly horrible numbers” for economic growth, exports and industrial production, and the impact this is having on “ordinary folk as they go about their ordinary lives”, Manu Bhaskaran of the Centennial Group observed at an IMF event last week.

So why is the picture on the ground so different from that painted by the statistics? Economists have proffered a number of reasons.

One is that Singapore is entering this unprecedented recession from an equally unprecedented position of strength. “A lot of Singapore’s resilience is due to the seven ‘fat’ years we had from 2001 to 2007, where economic growth averaged 5.5 per cent a year, even with the SARS period in 2003,” said OCBC economist Selena Ling.

In particular, the past two years saw supercharged growth, boosting Singapore workers’ average monthly earnings by 5.8 per cent a year.

This explains why “apart from the relatively small proportion of unemployed, the rest of the Singapore population is still in a position to shop, dine out and bargain hunt for assets”.

During the 1997-1998 crisis, the GDP per capita was S$35,115 (RM84,997). By last year, it had jumped to S$53,192. In 2006 and 2007, Singapore was among the countries with the fastest growing number of millionaires.

Companies also raked in record takings, building a large buffer of savings that muted the blows of the financial crisis, said Citi economist Kit Wei Zheng.

All this means fewer than expected people and firms are actually going broke.

Bankruptcy levels last year were half those in 2003 and 2004, while the number of companies liquidated last year was a third of that in 1999, according to Ling.

Then there is the buffer that foreign workers and expatriates provide.

Their number, by some estimates, has risen by 70 per cent since 2000. Jobs held by foreigners have been cut first in this recession in favour of saving Singaporean ones, especially because programmes such as the Jobs Credit Scheme protect only local workers

Time magazine, which featured Singapore’s surprising resilience in an article on April 28, also gave credit to the Government’s social safety net.

Part of the answer also lies in the “dualist” nature of Singapore’s economy, said Bhaskaran. He estimates that half the economy is foreign in terms of ownership and employment, including manufacturing and finance - the hardest-hit sectors in this recession.

Foreign companies have suffered losses. But while there has been some spillover to local industries, this has been more contained, Bhaskaran said.

Economic resilience aside, the dismal statistics themselves could have been exaggerated. Companies pre-emptively slashed production to preserve their balance sheets and conserve cash. This implied a vanishing of demand that did not quite materialise.

In all, there are “certainly more shock absorbers” now compared with the “shock amplifiers” in the last recession, when companies’ balance sheets were weaker and policy regimes were more “inflexible”, Bhaskaran said.

Whatever is the explanation, markets might do well not to overreact to the apparent contradiction between statistics and experience. Already, talk of “green shoots” has boosted sentiment so much that Citi’s Kit upgraded his growth forecast for Singapore this week.

If it is true that the recovery is on the way, Singapore’s worst-ever recession could turn out to be among its most painless.

But there is another, more worrying possibility: That the real economy could be just lagging behind the numbers, said CIMB-GK’s Song Seng Wun.

“Green shoots” may be emerging statistically, but the pain implied by the earlier figures may not have fully hit yet, thanks in part to the Government’s cushions. If external demand fails to pick up, for instance, further agony could be around the corner as the job market traditionally lags the economic numbers by a few quarters.

In other words, it may not feel like negative 10 per cent now, but it will soon.

Anyone betting on this?

Cost of Living- Dr.Zain Azrai's Views


Cost of living and runaway inflation has affected the pensioners and the lower salaried class.

The failure of Bank Negara (BNM) for failing to up the interest rate to cut off the ugly head of inflation has been blamed squarely on the top politicians and Zeti. Then when sub-prime hits home, Zeti lost no time in screwing up the interest rate regime at the behest of the poor savers. Do these people ever learn economics or were their hands tied? Whatever, it was folly at its worst!

Someone from China sent this fantastic article written by a doctor,Zain Azrai. I believe he is not the same guy from Wisma Putra.

The thread of Zain's article is the argument that the cost of living in each country is based on what you earn in the respective country and whether the standards are higher than in Malaysia. In his own words:

" I tried to point out that many Malaysians always convert and that is why they say the UK is expensive. In fact, the cost of living is much cheaper than in Malaysia .

In actual fact, Malaysians are being conned because for such a rich and resource rich country, the pay in Malaysia is way too low compared to the cost of living and inflation.

One good example is Singapore.

Singaporeans, on the average, earns around S$3000 to S$4000 and nearly everything is half the price of Malaysia. E.g. clothes, computer parts, electronics etc. But the average Malaysian still earns M$2000 plus and goods are double the price of Singapore.

This is the same as the UK. If you earn around 2000 pounds, you can liken this to the person earning RM$2000 in Malaysia. I give you some examples below.Maybe you can understand.

1) Good terrace house

It is more or less the same. If you want a house in KL, it would most probably be in Puchong and not Damansara Heights. So your house would be RM$200,000. In UK , you can get a decent new house in Zone 6 (still within the tube) for 200,000 pounds.

If non-London, you can get a nice house also for less than 200,000 pounds outside London. The same also applies to buying a house in Seremban, Kajang etc. You can buy a nice house for RM200,000 below. So buying a house is the same for the local and the Malaysian.

Renting a place is the same too or maybe cheaper than in Malaysia (I am not sure of this). A 2-bedroom flat in London is about 750 pounds (Zone 2). 500 pounds outside Zone 6 but still able to commute to London. A 2-bedroom house in Nottingham is 450 to 500 pounds. A 3-bedroom house in Belfast is about 300 pounds.

2) A car

A good Wira is RM$55,000. Most Malaysians have to take 7-year loans and be in debt all the time. If you are earning RM$2000 a month, you take nearly 3 years saving the RM$2000 with not eating at all just to buy a Wira.

In UK, the average local earns about 2000 pounds. He saves 3 months, he can buy outright a good Ford Fiesta or a Vauxhall Corsa without being in debt.

If buying a second hand car, even better. A 1990 Mercedes 190E cost 500 pounds. My 1996 Mercedes E220 cost 2000 pounds. My friend just gave me his 1989 Honda Accord (Auto) for free because he said he could only get 30 pounds for it.I used it for a few months and decided to give it of for free too. That alone speaks for itself.

Even if you are a coolie or an office boy, you still can drive a Mercedes or a BMW. Yes, coolies and office boys get paid quite well.

Average temporary staff/office boy in London can earn about 7 to 10 pounds and
hour. Overtime is 1.5 times or double. A brick-layer can earn 20 pounds an hour.

The same Indonesian who lays bricks in Malaysia earns RM$50 for the whole day.

Before I became a doctor, I used to be an office boy and I earned near 300 pounds a week working about 70 hours a week. My makan was 30 pounds a week. My rent was 70 pounds a week for a room but I still drove a BMW back then. I bought the 10-year old BMW 3 Series car for 200 pounds.

Amazing how an office boy can drive a safe and luxurious car.

3) Petrol

For a UK person earning 2000 pounds, 80 pence a litre/gallon is cheaper than RM$1.52 paid in Malaysia. If you don't convert, it is like paying 80 sen a litre in Malaysia

4) Shopping

20 pounds (which is 1% of 2000 pounds) can buy you 1 week's worth of groceries in Tesco. RM$100 (which is 10% of RM$2000) can also buy you 1 week's worth of groceries in Giant or Carrefour.

5)Utility Bills (This is what I pay in UK )

1. Virtually non-stop heating the whole day only 20 pounds a month. (Only 1% of the 2000 pounds earned)

2. Electricity, I use my electricity maximum only 20 pounds a month (Only 1% of the 2000 pounds earned)

3. My water bill also comes to about 20 pounds a month (Only 1% of the 2000 pounds earned)

4. My internet - I get 2Mbps for about 25 pounds (Bulldog DSL) (Also slightly above 1% of the 2000 pounds earned)

5. Astro Equivalent (NTL cable or Sky) - 30 pounds per month (Also slightly above 1% of the 2000 pounds earned)

In Malaysia , this is what I used to pay

1. Tenaga Bill comes to RM$200 to RM300 a month with 3 air-cons. This is more than 10% of the RM$2000 earned)

2. Water (Puas) comes to RM$40 (This is about 2% of the RM$2000 earned)

3. Astro RM$100 (if you take Chinese package) (This is about 5% of the RM$2000 you earn)

4. Internet Streamyx 512K RM 88 per month (This is about 5% of RM2000 you earn)

5) Books

A good book is about 10 to 15 pounds in the UK . This is less than 1% of the 2000 pounds you earn. In Malaysia , you have to spend RM$75 to RM$100 for a decent book in MPH or Kinokuniya in KLCC. This is about 5% of the RM$2000 ringgit you earn.

6) Education

I think it is about RM$20,000 per year to do a degree in Sunway Monash and about RM$12,000 per year to send your kid to UM, UKM, USM etc. I am not sure about this.
But in UK , it is only 3000 pounds a year to send your kid to a great university. That also, the white man still makes a lot of noise because the grants were taken away. Previously, it was virtually free for the English man to send his kid to university but now, since the grant was taken away, he has to spend 3000 pounds per year to send his kid to university and less money to get drunk in the pub.

Well, if you are earning RM$2000 ringgit, sending your kid to UM to study is quite difficult. If you are earning 2000 pounds per month, you can easily send you kid to university in the UK .

8) Assessments to local councils

I may pay high council tax but at least my council assures my streets are clean and safe, got no holes (pot holes) on my roads, and they jump and attend to me whenever I call them.

When I stayed in Malaysia, I paid my assessment and quit rent but MPSJ (I lived in Subang) told me to "podah" whenever I asked them to come and fill up the pot holes, cut the long lalang, put street lighting etc.

The councils, especially MPPJ and MPSJ, were more interested in eating nasi lemak and going for 10 teh tariks in a day during office hours and hardly did anything for their residents.

9) Income Tax

My national insurance and income tax also is not wasted. When I was unemployed in 1997, the government via social security paid for my 2-bedroom flat for one whole year and I was given about 100 pounds per week for me and my wife to live on. I am happy to know that one day if I lose my job, I can still claim social security and get my apartment paid and food to eat again for free. It is a good security to know.

The list goes on. Here alone you can see, the sterling you earn goes a long way in the UK. So your quality of life is far better in the UK than a Malaysian in Malaysia. It is just that Malaysians are just too content with what they have. But you compare apple for apple.

The British just love to complain. They have it made but still they love to complain. Nothing is good enough for the British. The government gives the citizens so much but they still seem to want more and more.

Regards

Dr Zain Azrai
London

Tortoise Speed Stimulus Effects

Yes, it is confirmed. The stimulus packages totalling RM67 billion are not exactly biting!

Today(13 June)Second Finance Minister, Datuk Seri Ahmad Husni Mohamad Hanadzlah announced that the packages will only be felt in the third and fourth quarters of 2009.

He said the ministries involved in the implementation have offered 43,681 contracts for RM6.95 billion in the first stimulus package and 708,011 contracts worth RM10 billion for the second.

“A total of RM15 billion is fiscal expenditure in the second stimulus package. But only RM10 billion is being utilised for this year with the remainder to be spent in 2010.

“Apart from that, to enhance the development of the country’s economy, the government has switched from the dependence on the manufacturing sector to the services sector as the basis for economic growth,” he said.

Ahmad Husni, said the liberalisation of 27 services sub-sectors as well as the issuance of seven new licences — five for commercial banks and two Islamic banks — is expected to attract even more local and foreign investment.

On the 2010 budget, he said it would focus fully on strengthening national resilience and the development of the economy. He said that the government has formed 21 groups involving 400 representatives from industries, non-governmental organisations and artistes’ who will discuss the above initiative as the involvement of all parties is needed to spur the growth of the country’s economy.

My take is that the positive effects of these stimulus packages may just be felt by the wrong people without any meaningful trickling effect to the poor and the people who will likely spend to improve the economy.