Singapore
Pushed back by 10 years
And it’s only the beginning with the government losing
more than just money. Comment. By Seah Chiang Nee.
Nov 22, 2008
It never
rains, but pours; it wouldn’t have been too bad if
I were just talking about the weather.
I’m
referring to the growing pain that the global financial
meltdown is wreaking on this small affluent state.
It has
made us – the government and the people – a
lot less rich, and pushed the poorer class into deeper dire
straits. It has eroded national cohesiveness and widened
the economic gap.
The
country has been pushed back by at least a decade, possibly
more. Leaders have warned that the pre-crisis living may
not come back for some years.
The
government, which had been sweeping general elections, is
evidently worried about an upsurge in discontent that could
erode its power base.
“The
crisis has dealt a blow to public trust in the younger leaders’
ability to help people manage the crisis,” said an
activist.
Take
weekends at the Speakers Corner.
Hundreds
of victims of the US financial woes have been gathering
almost every Saturday to vent their anger at what they see
as government failure to protect their interests.
This
by itself is a national phenomenon, considering that public
protests had been forbidden until a few months ago.
The
protesters are among 10,000 Singaporeans who have lost S$500mil
(RM1.2bil) of their life savings on “toxic”
Lehman Brothers products sold here by DBS, a government-controlled
bank.
When
Lehman went bankrupt, these structured notes, which were
extremely complicated products offering a high 5% interest,
became worthless.
Many
claim the local banks had portrayed them as a safe product,
instead of telling them that if one of the six underwriting
banks goes bust, the principal amount would be loss.
DBS
has denied this, and the Monetary Authority of Singapore
(MAS) is investigating specific charges. Meanwhile, a small
number of old and ill-educated investors have been refunded.
The
irate protesters are not your usual breed of street protesters,
but hail from Singapore’s most conservative, pro-government
citizenry.
Some
are retirees and housewives, careful investors, who speak
no English. Women have openly wept while the men, with controlled
anger, lashed out at what they consider the government’s
unsympathetic response.
Before
tempers cool, another public outcry has erupted with serious
repercussions for the government, and undermined its standing
in Singapore’s heartland.
Eight
of the 14 PAP-managed town councils, which altogether have
S$2bil in “sinking funds” reserves, have invested
and lost S$16mil in the failed structured products.
The
money was collected from every household and meant for use
in the estate’s upkeep.
They
refer only to the toxic products and do not include investments
in other markets, which have declined significantly in value.
There has been no town council disclosure of total losses.
Questions
about the town councils’ total investments –
let alone losses – are unknown. So really, how much
money has been lost?
Residents
are worried that the market decline will mean higher conservancy
charges.
“My
questions are: Why were these estate funds – with
PAP members of Parliament in charge – allowed to be
used to buy risky papers?” asked a web writer.
In the
first place, why were they collecting so much excess funds
instead of using it to develop the estates?
Criticism
has been widespread because it affects more than a million
people – although very marginally.
Some
Singaporeans fear that more skeletons will emerge within
the government machinery as the crisis deepens.
Many
statutory boards, educational institutions, trade unions
and armed forces may have saved up and invested billions.
Those
who did are continuing to see the flow of red ink.
The
conventional wisdom is that the current storm will blow
over and the lost value will be restored – but that
is many years away.
Amidst
the “sinking funds” losses, it was announced
that four Statutory Boards had incurred 14% market losses
this year, none of which were Lehman’s toxic products.
They
were the Civil Service College, Singapore Land Authority,
Infocomm Development Authority and the Professional Engineers’
Board.
However,
the losses represented only 0.05% of their total investment
portfolios.
The
market rewards were rich during the good times, but the
punishment is just as hefty when times are bad. So why does
Singapore invest so mightily?
The
reason lies in its small size and lack of natural resources,
which has forced it to rely on two things – human
skill and capital.
During
the past 20 years, its investments overseas have been leaping.
Individually
they’re getting bigger. Previous totals of tens –
or at most a few hundred – millions of dollars, have
been eclipsed by new shareholdings today which are often
measured in the billions.
It is
not known whether – or to what extent – the
post-crisis government will review its investment policies.
At the moment, Temasek and GIC appear to be adopting a more
cautious approach.
Some
10 years ago – even before the current big investment
push, Singapore was seen as a prime global candidate for
excess saving and investment.
The
Federal Reserve Bank of San Francisco wrote in 1997: “Singapore’s
saving and investment rates are the highest in the world,
and much of this saving and investment is mandated by the
government.
“This
is in sharp contrast to Western industrialised countries
... we cannot rule out the possibility that Singapore invests
too much.”
As industries
worldwide reduce their operations, Singapore, too, is cutting
back on its ambition.
But
it will likely continue to develop its external wings –
by significantly investing abroad – perhaps on a much
more cautious mode.
(This
was first published in The Star, on Nov 22, 2008)
Comment
Dear Mr Seah,
I don’t know if you write for any of the papers in
Singapore. If you do, you should ask Singaporean,why should
they be angry? They elected their government and they put
their trust in them. In year 2000, after working many years
in Singapore, I was advised to put my hard earned CPF money
in Unit Trust High Tech Fund approved by CPF Board as the
“blue chips fund” to be invested so that our
retired saving fund can grow as we grow older. The so called
approved CPF “blue chips fund” is now 20% of
the value of its original amount! Whom am I to blame? Am
I any different than retirees or housewives? I was investing
my hard earned money based on CPF advise and approved blue
chip funds! What is a blue chip stock? Your knowledge is
as good as mine. And you know as well I am not alone in
this. The government, the CPF Board, the so called Investment
Fund Company THINK they know what they are doing but they
don’t! After almost 8 years, the unit trust fund bought
by my hard earned dollars are still looming at 20% of the
total investment. Why haven’t our fund been refunded?
Why must those fund/product by Lehman be refunded? What
is the logic? If you invest, there’s risk! If you
don’t want risk, then put it in a saving account!
Tell Singaporean they are too pampered! If you lose something,
you lose something. Don’t expect the government to
help you regain what you lost! Then everyone wants to regain
what they lost! What about my investment then? I am no different
from those housewives and retirees who don’t speak
English!
Till now, I have been holding on to my anger but I think
I have learned my lesson. To those who tell you or advise
you on everything…even the Singapore government, don’t
listen to them. At least if I make my own judgement and
If I’m wrong, I’m satisfied that I am to be
blame and no on else!
Jerry