Lion
city
Move in Adam Smith
Let private sector work those national assets and free the
animal spirits. By Alan Oxley, Tech Central Station.
Sep 14, 2004
Asians
evidently like political dynasties. India, the Philippines,
Indonesia and North Korea have had Leaders who were children
of Leaders. Singapore has anointed a new Leader and joined
the club.
The
line from the Lion City, Singapore's self-adopted tag, is
that this is a signal that stability will continue and there
will be no dramatic shift in policies.
But
for Singapore's own good, and for the rest of Asia, it is
time there was a dramatic change. It is time Singapore released
Adam Smith's animal spirits.
On 12
August, Lee Hsien Loong, Singapore's Deputy Prime Minister
replaced Goh Chok Tong who lead Singapore for 12 years.
He in
turn replaced Lee Kwan Yew who ruled Singapore since independence
from Britain in 1963. Lee Hsien Loong is Lee Kwan Yew's
son.
Singapore
has been an unabashed economic success story. Britain gave
the city state of 3 million independence in 1963 and, thereafter,
it traded on its natural place as a commercial hub in one
of the fastest growing regions of the world, and prospered
mightily.
For
several years, its per capita GDP has ranked with OECD economies.
It is also economically and politically closer to the US
than any other country in Southeast Asia.
Lee
Kwan Yew built modern Singapore with an interesting blend
of Western economic models and Asian political absolutism.
He set Singapore determinedly on a capitalist path, but
under firm government direction.
He created
a "nanny state" European socialists could only
dream of. But he based it on a very Chinese value (most
people in Singapore are émigrés from China)
- savings.
In Singapore's
development strategy, savings came first. A compulsory national
savings scheme was introduced. Employers and workers paid
for national welfare.
Profit
was second, but was important. Unprofitable state-owned
businesses were shut down. The national union movement was
integrated into the State system and given monopolies to
run, such as supermarket chains and taxi companies, but
only if they were profitable.
Singapore's
annual economic growth has consistently averaged seven percent
over the last thirty years, one of the highest in the world.
When it falls to five percent or below, the Government goes
into panic mode.
Singapore
has been a leader in the "flying geese" economic
formation which Japan so proudly touted as the Asian development
model until it went into it its own prolonged economic slump
in 1990.
(In
this formation, Japan's booming economy leads the wing and
Asia's tiger economies follow, emulating Japan's growth
strategy.)
When
the Asian currency crisis unveiled fundamental weaknesses
in economic governance in Asia in 1997, it was Singapore,
which implored analysts not "to throw the baby out
with the bath water". The message was that Singapore
had got the Asian economic model right.
But
there are worrying features about Singapore's economy.
Sixty
percent of productive activity is accounted for by businesses
owned by the State and the public sector. Singapore Airlines,
Chartered Semiconductor, SingTel, PSA Corp, Singapore Technologies,
Changi Airport, DBS Bank, Keppel Corporation, Singapore
Press Holdings, and Raffles Corporation, for example, are
all state-owned and owned by either Temasek Holdings (owned
by the Singapore Government) or by the Government of Singapore
Investment Corporation (GIC).
These
businesses displace private business. In Singapore, private
and small and medium sized enterprises generate 20 percent
of economic activity. In Taiwan and Hong Kong they generate
75 percent.
Nevertheless,
private business would claim to do well in Singapore. In
times of recession, the Government invariably acts to reduce
costs controlled by government to ensure profits remain
buoyant.
The
state-owned businesses in Singapore, while profitable, are
generally not producing returns comparable to privately-owned
businesses in other markets.
And
the value of their publicly-traded shares is marked down
by the inevitable weighting markets attach for the risk
inherent in government control of a company.
Singapore
has problems. Unemployment is now around 5 percent. The
"nanny state" is under challenge. People have
been told the State will not now provide for them "from
cradle to grave". The change is on.
The
Singapore Government has begun a steady process of selling
shares in its companies on the open market and exposing
these companies, like SingTel, the national telecommunications
provider, to competition.
In its
recent Free Trade Agreement with the US, Singapore committed
to create competition policy law, which guaranteed state-owned
companies could not secure privileged positions in the Singapore
economy.
But
the approach to change is oxymoronic. The Singapore government
wants to control the rate at which Adam Smith's animal spirits
are released.
Its
leaders know that growth and enterprise in free market economies
comes from entrepreneurship. But they seem not to understand
that animal spirits generate that, not special business
schools or courses on how to be an entrepreneur which it
has fruitlessly fostered over the years.
Singapore
has a fabulously wealthy base, but too much of it is in
the wrong hands - the Government.
It is
in danger of going the way of the leader of the flying geese
unless it transfers a large slab of that wealth quickly
to the private sector and sets the animal spirits to work.
Until
Singapore takes that step, its prosperity today might be
a plateau rather than a base from which to move to the higher
level of quality necessary to prosper in the world economy.
When Singapore takes that step, the economic model that
emerges may well make it the leader of the flying geese.
(Alan
Oxley is host of the Asia Pacific page and Chairman of the
Australian APEC Study Centre and former Australian Ambassador,
GATT. This was posted on Tech Central Station on Aug 16,
2004)