Societal Equity, Mobility, Meritocracy and The Population Question: A Singaporean Perspective

I must begin this note with what it means to be a Singaporean. I am born and bred in Singapore but I do get questions about my nationality now and then and I wonder why. Perhaps it is my mannerism, intonation of my speech or some strange gene in me. This has set me thinking about what defines being Singaporean means to me and the populace at large.

I grew up in a Housing and Development Board (HDB) housing for most part of my life like about 80% of the population. HDB is government subsidized housing which is made affordable by the government through a series of selective grants ( based on a range of factors like income, marital status, family size etc and a clever structuring to funnel part of personal retirement fund called Central Provident Fund (CPF) to pay for part of it. Actually, it can be generally safe to say that the 80% that live in HDB in Singapore is mostly in the bottom portion of the 80% of the population. The 20% that does not live in HDB are generally and mostly the richer lot who can afford private housing or the destitute that live everywhere on the other end of the spectrum.

I am also a Chinese race wise but has been labeled openly by my Chinese teacher as a yellow banana that is yellow ( Chinese generally have a yellowish tone to their skin colour) on the outside and white on the inside meaning Anglo Saxon in orientation. I actually do not blame them at all for doing so as I have had occasions during my late teens of not only scoring terribly in my Chinese language tests like in the range of 10 to 20 marks out of a perfect score of 100. To add injury to it, there was once where I scored 11 /100 and wrote my Chinese name wrongly on the test script. When the teacher scolded me in front of the entire class, there wasn't even a shred of remorse in me as the whole class broke out in laughter and I found it hilarious as well. He told me that I ought to be absolutely ashamed of not being able to write my own Chinese name correctly at 15 years old but I could not stop laughing with the rest of the class. I tried to explain to my Chinese teacher that I am far from being a yellow banana but am very Chinese in my outlook and love and appreciate Chinese culture, history and music having acquired these by reading about them from books about Chinese culture written in English. Language of music is very universal anyway. I also challenged him that a good handle or weak handle of the language does not necessarily equal to ignorance or dis-taste of the culture. 

I just have a mental block when it came to working with block wordings of the Chinese language and was more in tune with the Romanic letter of the English language. I am not ignoring the fact that language, culture and politics are deeply inter-twined but the relationship is more complex than a simple contingo parallel. Anyway, I only need to convince myself and did not feel the need to justify to those around me about my orientation or the seeming lack of it where the Chinese language is concerned. 

The deal breaker came when the academic results were out for the year and my Chinese language teacher was my form ( mentor ) teacher. I was fourth in class overall but I scored 35/100 for Chinese. I was accorded the honor of being personally invited to his office for a preview of my results before it was made public to all. He asked me a trying question on how he should fill out the form teacher comments. I told him that I would rather have his opinion of me in the raw be it positive or negative and he thought that was a dis-respectful and cheeky response but I looked him straight in the eyes that I meant it. He asked me if I had purposely failed his subject out of spite as I had shown promising results in almost all other subjects. I told him respectfully and factually that it was an improvement as my earlier score for Chinese language was 11/100 and he did not take that very well. A form teacher comment of something very factual that I have done well generally but have to work harder on my Chinese sounds reasonable. I left his office feeling happy that I have done well as I could not be bothered about my Chinese language performance at all. I have given up long ago and was prepared to face the prospect that a University education in Singapore was near impossible as passing Chinese language or your mother tongue was a pre-requisite for entrance into University then but the ruling has since been changed. I did feel bitter about it initially on a personal front and thought that the government could afford a wider spectrum of measurement on University entrance but was prepared to pay the price since I have made a conscious decision to not to pass the Chinese language and there was enough forewarning on this for me not to feel victimized although such feelings do run through me at times. Anyway, I secured a polytechnic education and thereafter went through some trouble to get to University without any remorse and all smiles.

I think I qualify to brand myself a Singaporean Chinese and proud to be a son of Singapore.

Of late, there has been very livid debate in our otherwise morsel reporting on Singapore matters in our media on the topic of equity, mobility, meritocracy and our population or the forthcoming lack of it in our society. This got me very interested as I was on the verge of ending my subscription to the our english language daily newspaper called the Straits Times as a means of dealing with inflation to fuel my Coke habit. Some say I have a blood type of neither A,B,AB or O but C for Coke.

Firstly on societal equity. Here, I do not think in terms of the simplistic far left communist or the far right capitalist or the undecided socialist. I believe that the concept is far more mutli-dimensional to be measured along a single continuum. 

It is my belief that first of all, it is both a macro viewpoint and collectively measures effort/reward outcomes. On a personal level, it is the level of justice, compassion and humanity that exists in the deep recesses of our being that propels us to equalize it. So what does all these means? 

Chief amongst them are justice, compassion and firm belief that all men should be born equal although experientially, it seems otherwise. The key operative is should and therefore a need for going beyond birth rights to have in place mechanisms to make the playing field more just and level for all. The less endowed generally have a stronger motivation to overcome their inherited disadvantages. The privileged might in some instance have an equally strong motivation to maintain their lead save for the altruistic ones who would lobby for better societal justice or equity mostly out of their generosity and philanthropic bias. 

Last but not least, the politicians are also very mindful that one level of wealth for all as in the communist system nor the large rich/poor gap that the capitalistic system tend to produce will do. There has to be  some equalization that has to be done to narrow the rich/poor gap as it tend to create cracks in the society that could make way for widespread revolutions that could cripple a society. This is my starting point for societal equity in my limited intellectual brilliance. It is not meant to be comprehensive but serve as a macro shot into important and defining parts of the picture.

Social mobility is a great dream maker for the under dog in a society to propel forward and can be a nightmare for the elite not to regress from their high point. I have learnt very early that the concept of wealth and poverty are at times a relative concept rather than a absolute one. For example, a person that has started the race with little living in a poor neighborhood would start to feel very elated as his material dimension improves while still staying in the poor neighborhood but with relatively better house fittings, clothes, food compared to his neighbors. However, should he elect to move to a richer neighborhood for which he has marginally afforded to purchase with a slew of loan instruments that could leave him cash strapped, the feeling could be different. In this new surrounding, he is not likely to ace the neighborhood in terms of material well being as he is now a new entrant to this class and most probably at the bottom of the pecking order of this neighborhood. There could be a sense of regressive feeling wealth/poverty wise which is largely relative rather than absolute in nature.

Meritocracy is a very noble and just concept in that it pre-supposes no bias whatsoever but pure and blind pursuit of it could result in the opposite. Entrance census of students in ivy league schools that largely operate on a meritocratic basis have proven that a disproportionally large part of the students are from family with better background as indicated by things like income, housing district, paternal/maternal education level etc compared to the general mix of such factors in the general population. Why is this so? Some frame the debate along the lines or nature ( meaning better genes ) or nurture ( better upbringing ). No matter what the reason be it nature or nurture, a dichotomy has happen in terms of ill matching profile. Some recommend affirmative action to keep things in check. I have no easy answers and give it some thought and you be your own judge.

The last topic pertains to breeding or population or the the lack of it as our birth rate goes into deep dive from a population replacement ratio of 2.1. A whole slew of economic incentives have been dished out by the government to encourage pro-creation. However, if we examine the package as a whole, there seems to be some form of selective breeding in terms of better incentives directed at certain quarters of society. In the name of equity and diversity, I feel strongly that we should remove all such bias for possible selective breeding. The magic of human kind lies partially in its diversity and this could be why incest is an almost universally pungent and criminal act.

Peter Lye aka lkypeter

Safe Harbor. Please note that information contained in these pages are of a personal nature and does not necessarily reflect that of any companies, organizations or individuals. In addition, some of these opinions are of a forward looking nature. Lastly the facts and opinions contained in these pages might not have been verified for correctness, so please use with caution. Happy Reading. Peter Lye




Technology Stuff and Technology Staff

As technology becomes more pervasive in our daily living, it is not uncommon for technology stuff to fail, technology staff supporting the technology stuff takes a beating.

Technology Stuff created by Technology Staff who are not perfect will not be perfect either. We seems to rest upon the false belief that Technology Stuff is perfect when in truth, it is as good as their maker save for their consistency which means it can be consistently right or consistently wrong.

Peter Lye

JS Bach Air on G String BWV 1068

This is a classic example how the son became more famous than the father. You see, JS Bach did not compose Air on G String. The piece was taken out of the second movement of his third orchestra suite which was keyed in D major.

Somewhere along the line, someone discovered that if the this second movement were to be transposed from D major to G major, the entire piece could be played on a single G string on the violin and there comes the name Air on G String.

To bring further insult to JS Bach, Air on G String is normally played without any reference to its original composer nor his original intent.

Air on G String is an absolute lyrical piece and I would urge those that enjoy explore further by listening to the entire third orchestra suites in its original key in D major. There are only a total of 5 movements and it will be worth it.

Last but not least, I believe that G String panties which some would like to associate the piece Air on G String was furthest from JS BACH thought when he first composed it in D major. :)


Sibelius Violin Concerto Op. 47

Was listening to Sibelius Violin Concerto and really am surprised that the concerto conveyed so much emotional warmth for someone that lives in the Nordic countries where the weather is mostly cold. The versions that I have are as follows. All versions are of the final 1905 versions except the one Leonidas Kavakos for which I have both the original 1903/04 versions and the 1905 versions.

1.Hilary Hahn with Esa-Pekka Salonen conducting Swedish Radio Symphony Orchestra(DG)
2.Kwung Wha Chung with Andre Previn conducting London Symphony Orchestra(DECCA)
3.Itzhak Perlman with Erich Leinsdorf conducting Boston Symphony Orchestra(RCA)
4.Leonidas Kavakos with Osmo Vanska conducting Lahti Symphony Orchestra(BIS)-Both the 1903/04 original version and the 1905 final version
5.Jascha Heifetz- with Walter Hendl conducting Chicago Symphony Orchestra(RCA)-Old recording that is almost technically faultless and some say lacking in depth.

Of which only the Kavakos is of Nordic stock. If you get to compare the various interpretation, let me know your preference. I like the version by Perlman which was recorded when he was younger as a child prodigy for its technical interpretation. Perhaps his later recording might encompass more emotional maturity having walked more of life experiences. This is my normal findings when comparing earlier and later recordings by child prodigy that like wine, their later recordings are better. My next review would likely be about Bach Violin Concertos.

Cheers,,, Pete

British Conversations

The brits are generally more gentry in their ways as well as speech. Sometimes, it gets so diplomatic that both the speaker and the audience end up confused especially if both sides are brits. I really meant both. The speaker in his quest for form over matter has forgotten about the matter altogether. The poor audience is of course left to distill the facts out of the speech. And of course also to preserve a sense of self-respect, the audience, if they are brits as well, would be too proud to clarify as always.

©An original joke by Peter Lye

Mstislav Rostropovich

He is not only a great cello master but also very passionate about his beliefs. He lost his Soviet citizenship for his actions but was re-instated later. He died peacefully in his homeland which shows he has a great love for it. He was there playing his cello by the Berlin Wall when it came down to show his political affinity in-spite of the risks. A great man.

My NOL Story

I bought some NOL share last week and sold out today. Following is an edited excerpt of my emails with my friend in Jakarta. No conflict of interest as I do not hold any position in NOL now. I am not always that accurate...Cheers,, Pete

7 August 2008 12:38am
I did sometime in LCL shipping at Votainer which was one of the largest LCL carrier worldwide but was acquired Air Express and now is part of DHL. My dissertation was about LCL business.

I was tempted to think that the market has priced in the share dilution with the forthcoming hapag lloyd acquisition if NOL is successful.

With world trade possibly thinning out and a directionless oil price situation and a possible over capacity on the carrier market, NOL does have an uncertain future. It was partially brought down by the bad showing of its competitor OOCL.

Actually, what I am looking for is a formidable management team to steer clear this cycle and it would be ready to ride the next. One of my bets is that most yards have converted to oil based vessels and with a limited built out of container carriers, the over capacity is likely to be shorter term. If an up turn in trade happens within next 18 months, the capacity over hang could turn into a shortage giving the carriers better pricing power.

APL's largely trans pacific and trans atlantic routes which are highly regulated by tariff filing by FTC in US could make the price adjustment slower than on un-regulated routes. The OOCL bad showing does worry me a bit as it is largely intra asia with good chinese political support and tung chee wah behind it did not help much. Hmmm.....

Actually, I am tired of trading in and out of market and looking for medium term place to park funds.....

My last caveat is that nol is largely a temasek cornered play and market price transparency is more opaque. 

7 August 2008 7:50pm
After writing such a long story on NOL to you. I decided to buy NOL today when it broke record low of 2.51 but I landed most lots at 2.52 which is OK. There is a .04 dividend payment soon so not so bad.

11 August 2008 12:42pm
My trading instincts have the better of me and I sold my NOL shares at 2.68 this morning which I bought at 2.52 last week for a good profit. I am back to looking for investment opportunities again. My sell rationale is AXA which is one of the funds that has majority stake has started accumulating from about 5% to 7% and I think the buying pressure will ease once they have gotten what they wanted. Secondly, the war in Georgia could cause an increase in oil prices which will affect NOL.


Tchaikovsky Violin Concerto in D Major Opus 35

This is the only known violin concerto written by Tchaikovsky. It is also one of my favourites that comes in three movements. I have heard the following versions and my vote goes to the version by Julia Fischer with Russian National Orchestra conducted by Yakov Kreizberg. I felt that this recording tug at my heart strings the most. This is a very personal opinion as the various artist plays at various speeds.

1. Julia Fischer with Yakov Kreizberg conducting Russian National Orchestra(PentaTone)
2.Kwung-Wha Chung with LSO conducted by Andre Pervin(DECCA)
3.Sarah Chang with LSO conducted by Sir Colin Davis (EMI)
4.Gil Shaham with SSO conducted by Lan Shui-(CanaryClassics)
5.Akiko Suwani with Czech Philharmonic Orchestra conducted by Vladimir Ashkenazy(DECCA)
6.Zino Vinnikov with The Royal Philharmonic Orchestra conducted Yeudhi Menuhin(MEMBRAN)
7.Vadim Gluzman with Bergen Philharmonic Orchestra conducted by Andrew Litton(BIS)

One of the unique thing about this violin concerto is that it is self introducing. The quite normal concerto form would have the orchestra followed by the solo by this one starts off with the soloist.

Incidentally, Tchaikovsky had a very unusual ending in that he took his own life.

Peter Lye aka lkypeter
lkypeter@gmail.com Safe Harbor. Please note that information contained in these pages are of a personal nature and does not necessarily reflect that of any companies, organizations or individuals. In addition, some of these opinions are of a forward looking nature. Lastly the facts and opinions contained in these pages might not have been verified for correctness, so please use with caution. Happy Reading. Peter Lye (c) Peter Lye 2014

The Final Departure

I received an interesting book one Christmas from a friend entitled Tuesdays with Morley. She told me that she hope that I do not mind it as the book details the final journey of a man from the time he was pronounced with a terminal illness till he breathe his last. I did not mind it as I believe that the surest thing after our birth is our departure from this earth. This statement only reflects my mental comprehension and by no means tells of my readiness to deal with my end life situation.

Star Wars/SUN & IBM

Episode 1 The Phantom Menance The SUN Menance
Episode 2 Attack of the Clones Attack of the BIG BLUE
Episode 3 Revenge of the Sith Revenge of the SUN
Episode 4 A New Hope A New Hope
Episode 5 The Empire Strikes Back The SUN Strikes Back
Episode 6 Return of the Jedi Return of the P Series

Email, PushMail, BushMail and BUll SHit Mail

In the office, we get E mails.
Outside the office, we get PUSH mail.
At the White House, they get the BUSH mail.
This might be the reason for the spate of resignations last of which was Treasury Secretary Snow which cannot stand the BUll SHit (BUSH) mails anymore

The Singapore Election Diaspora by Peter Lye (lkypeter@gmail.com)

The Singapore leadership is grappling with the twin issue of a falling birthrate that has gone way below the universal population replacement ratio of 2.1 and the increasing number of Singaporean that have decided to leave Singapore and start life anew in greener pastures elsewhere. A thunder bolt of idea flash by me that sets me thinking about how the electoral process is inter connected with this twin issue. It is too simplistic to use the electoral process as the only microscope to examine these two issues but lets do this so that we can give the perspective a more focused look.

The incumbent ruling party; Peoples Action Party (PAP), has been ruling this nation state for more than 30 years. For a large part of this period, the PAP has managed to set an unprecedented electoral miracle. In a few general elections, the victory is complete in that they have managed to win every single electoral seat. Of late, this record has been broken by scarce victories by the opposition in 1 to 2 seats out of a total of over 70 seats. Under this backdrop, a few notable developments have also happened which might or might not be related to the electoral process. You be the judge.

Firstly, the electoral process underwent a fundamental change with the introduction of the Group Representation Constituency (GRC). Most Singaporeans would know the basic framework of GPC but I would describe it briefly for those who might not. Essentially, the GRC would group a portion of the electoral seats into a GRC which would consists of between 4 to 6 individual seats. With this change, political parties would have to field that number of candidates to contest in a GRC electoral boundary instead of individually. While there are many merits for introducing GRC like enabling better servitude of the constituency as there are a few representatives instead of a single one to turn to, some of the unintended or intended effect of this new ruling are as follows. Firstly, independent candidates are also not allowed to contest in a GRC by virtue of the fact that they are a one man band. Secondly, this is likely to make it more difficult for the opposition to contest effectively because they now need to field a team instead. Let the results speaks for itself. No opposition party has won any GRC since its introduction. If this is the case, why has the GRC bill pass into law?

Secondly, PAP not only have the simple majority needed to pass most bills but also a two third majority to pass bills that could change the basic fundamental rule in our nation state. Being a parliamentary system, there is a further advantage to the ruling party in terms of the party whip that will force PAP representatives that have views contrary to their party from voting according to their conscience. This has the effect of appropriating additional authority to the ruling party. The party whip can be lifted if the party so chooses to do so but the question is whether it is in interest of the ruling party to do something to reduce their authority? An additional last safe guard which was introduced lately to accord the elected president with veto power to block the passage of bills that the elected president deems as being against the interest of our society at large. However, this power of the elected presidency is being curtailed by the presidential council of 3. My question is why have an elected presidency with electoral mandate and subject him to a presidential council without any electoral mandate?

Thirdly, the issue of political apathy of our society has been so bad that it has become a national concern. It is difficult to understand the psyche of the ruling party on this issue. Are they playing masquerade? It is not uncommon to see a marked increase in court room drama casting the incumbent politicians and political wannabes. The right to legal redress should be available to all including people in high office. However, one should also consider the micro issues with the larger macro issue at hand. Because of the high profile of the caste involved in the court room battle, some coloration by the populace will be the order of the day. What is legal might not be right. The ruling party might have won the court room battle but with regards to winning the war for the hearts and soul of the populace, you decide.

With these behind us, we shall examine the likely behavior of the populace. To be more adventurous, we shall stretched our imagination further a field and come down to earth thereafter for a more balanced view.

Firstly, the basic premise of a democratic system is to have the will of the populace represented by the majority in regular election whereby potential candidates offer themselves for election. The essential ingredient is entrance of potential candidates. While there is a need to exercise a certain level of safeguards to prevent real rouge from offering themselves, such safe guards should be the based on the bare minimum as they would have to pass through the rigid electoral process of the populace and therefore there is sufficient check and balance in place already. In Singapore, some additional requirements like not having a conviction that attracts a certain level of sentence might be too rigid. Like what stock analyst like to say that past performance is no insurance of future performance, it cuts both ways in that a clean record does not guarantee crime free future and a stained record that now necessarily equal to a repeat offender. On this note, as our society matures, we ought to have the concept that there is a differential between the effectiveness of the office bearer and his moral high ground. I am not suggesting that we should have a crook for a leader but some level of tolerance ought to be in place as nobody is perfect and everyone has some skeleton in one’s closet. Although I do not condone what Bill Clinton has done in the private life but it is a fact that the then leader of the Democrat did a fantastic job on the US economy.

Secondly, on the need to impose OB markers on freedom of press, we have grown up as a nation and the racial and religious flashpoint of yesteryears no longer applies. If it does, why is the ruling party concerned with the level of political apathy? The populace is also no so gullible and is able to give the proper gravity to the issues at hand than just take it at face value. The wisdom of yesterday being that the press can incite social unrest but I in today’s society, I believe that suppression is more likely to result in sudden outburst of societal unrest as the suppressed pressure would ultimately need release. It would be better for issues to have an outlet and discussed openly so that misnomers can be addressed.

Lastly, I would like to introduce the concept of Fight, Flight and Silent Anarchy. The first two is common to us in that placed in an uncomfortable or unlikable situation, we would either fight it off or flight away. What one chooses is a complex of many factors including the power differential, perceived chances of winning, perceived level of damage and tolerance for damage, perceived level of losing, possibility of flight etc. As we can see that the option of flight is not open to all but to the select for which there is demand for their wealth or talent. The majority would have to contend with staying put. For those that do stay put, if they do not see the possibility of winning a fight, they are likely to follow the path of evolution and take on the veil of what I call silent anarchy. On the outside, it looks good but on the inside , values that national pride, patriotism and societal altruism ranks way down. Economic success is important but it is not the only measure of success.

With a heritage of a largely immigrant society, we ought to value building of national pride, patriotism and a strong value ( not economic ones ) that galvanized the society together. For the Americans, it is freedom, respect and the pursuit of happiness. For us, we need to and must first create a more inclusive society first that shares a certain strong value system ( not promoted by campaign as campaign fatigue is the order of the day here ) that would galvanized us or we would polarize as a society. If even Hong Kong that had the highest rating for political apathy can slowly but surely achieve that, so can we and so must we.

Peter Lye aka lkypeter
lkypeter@gmail.com Safe Harbor. Please note that information contained in these pages are of a personal nature and does not necessarily reflect that of any companies, organizations or individuals. In addition, some of these opinions are of a forward looking nature. Lastly the facts and opinions contained in these pages might not have been verified for correctness, so please use with caution. Happy Reading. Peter Lye (c) Peter Lye 2014
September 2006