Although my fellow bloggers would stone me for saying it,
there are journalist from the main stream media who have been writing some
pretty good stuff. One of those journalist who has been writing “explosive”
commentaries is Han Fook Kwang, the current managing editor of the Straits
Times. Mr Han has developed a habit of spelling out home truths. Despite his
senior position in the Straits Times, Mr Han has gone as far to describe the
relationship between transport regulators and operators as being “cozy” and
suggested that Singapore’s public transport system needed a good dose of
competition. By the more cautious standards of Singapore journalism – this is
explosive stuff.
Mr Han’s latest article that has caused a bit of a stir was
published on July 1, 2013. The article had a simple headline – “Do S'porean
workers deserve their wages?” The answer to this headline was a tragic no. His argument
was simple – Singaporean workers are not as analytical, articulate, creative, innovative
and productive as their Asian counterparts, let alone the workers from
Switzerland or Germany.
Unfortunately, during the last decade, I’ve seen plenty
examples that prove Mr Han to be correct. Just look at Singapore’s economic
landscape. The top jobs are more often than not filled by someone from
elsewhere. In the old days it meant Caucasian expatriates from the West. People
accepted this as part of the natural order of things. After all, the multinationals
were inevitably based out of places like New York or London.
However, the top jobs are also going to people from India
and other parts of the world. Not only do you have Indian expatriates running Indian
companies but they are playing senior roles in Western ones and even in
Singapore government owned companies.
Unfortunately, the Indians are not hired because they are
significantly cheaper than the local Singaporeans. Piyush Gupta, the CEO of DBS
made a good nine million dollars last year. While not every Indian expatriate makes
what Mr Gupta makes, a good portion of them make enough to live quite
comfortably.
It’s quite hard for your average Singaporean to get his head
and heart around the situation. It was one thing when the boss was a white man.
It’s quite different when the bosses come from the parts of Asia that we were
conditioned to think of as third-world backwaters that our ancestors were
fortunate to run away from.
So what’s going on? How is that Singapore, for all its
advances in education and development, been so bad at producing the people that
we need to run today’s companies? Think about it, not only are the guys running
are economy from elsewhere, the guys running the government are trained
elsewhere?
The question has to be asked – can we produce a “home grown”
leader? The answer to this question is going to be increasingly important in
that Singapore needs leaders who understand local situations and are able to
develop solutions rather than those import someone else’s model.
Singapore’s education system usually comes under attack
whenever this question is debated. The most prominent point here is that while
the system produces people who can read and write, it’s failed to produce
people who can think. Despite out small population, we have an increasing
number of universities. Yet despite the high ratio of universities per person,
we have produced no Nobel Prize contenders let alone Nobel Prize winners and I
can’t think of a local business school graduate who has gone onto run a Western
Multinational. By contrast, India has very few institutions per person and yet
we have Indra Nooyi running Pepsico and Ajay Banga running Master Card.
To be fair to the Singapore’s authorities, they seem to recognize
that there is an issue here. Moves are being made to make the education system
less “exam” focused. The world knows that we “kick Arse” when it comes to
taking exams but beyond that we don’t seem able to do much. In his article, Mr
Han gave examples of graduates who couldn’t string a sentence together and yet
expected to become marketing managers in multinationals. In any other country,
people would question how an articulate chap could become a graduate. In Singapore
we know – the guy couldn’t speak but he was an ace at exams. This has got to
change and thankfully there’s some recognition of the issue from the
powers-that-be.
While I applaud the education authorities for recognizing that
something needs to be done, I think the main issue facing Singapore is deeper.
The system has become such that the best and the brightest do not face competition.
Let’s face it, leaders and leadership material is developed
when it is placed under challenging situations. For example, military
commanders develop their skills from combat experience and leading men under
combat situations. Military academies like West Point or Sandhurst can only
teach one so much. The real learning is out in the field. The American and
British armies are highly regarded because their senior leaders have seen some
form of action sometime during their careers.
By contrast, the Singapore military favours book learning
over actual combat experience. Yes, unlike the American and British armies we
don’t go to war but we are also a nation that is obsessed with defense. We
spend the largest percentage of our GDP in this region on defense. We do send
people to UN Peace Keeping missions to give them a bit of exposure (technically
peace keeping and war are two different things). You would imagine that we’d
want our Generals to be a bit more seasoned rather than text-book soldiers. Unfortunately
we don’t. When we had a general who acquired the closest thing to combat
experience and was praised by the international community for his leadership,
we demoted him and pushed him into retirement as fast we could. We promoted
younger, less experienced but more book smart people over him.
There seems to be a cultural aversion to exposing bright
people to challenges. Instead of testing out people under stress, the system
seems to allow the chosen to avoid it and it gives them power over those who
don’t have the luxury of avoiding hardship. Should it surprise anyone that
Singapore fails to produce people with leadership qualities?
Just American soldiers are expected to face war before
reaching the general ranks, American workers are judged on their current
performance rather than on what their careers are meant to be as decided by
some bureaucrat. The former CEO of General Electric, Jack Welsh had a policy of
firing the bottom ten percent of performers – regardless of their
qualifications. What mattered is the here and now rather than the glorious past
of the university fields. GE has remained one of the biggest companies in the
world for over a century.
Something needs to be done.
Singapore should probably start
by removing government support from businesses and deregulate more aggressively.
Our workers will develop the necessary skills more quickly if they face greater
competition.
3 comments
/// Unfortunately, the Indians are not hired because they are significantly cheaper than the local Singaporeans. ///
Only the real top guns are hired because of their merit. However, once hire, they hire their own kind. And it becomes worse if the HR manager or director is Indian - you can be sure that a whole trainload will follow. You can see that happening in Citi Singapore.
"The world knows that we “kick Arse” when it comes to taking exams but beyond that we don’t seem able to do much."
There are a lot of things you can't openly talk in Sg without some authorities or folks frowning down on you. Basically, it makes an uptight and timid society. Though there are exceptions, the norm is just too prevalent. The result is an inarticulate and weak(spineless) society.
Such people are good/excel in exams(you need positive stupidity for that), at work(taking orders) and in the army( boss around by the government).
"The most prominent point here is that while the system produces people who can read and write, it’s failed to produce people who can think. "
How to think in a textbook society? Even social programs are all top down led or to be more exact.. approved.
The people mimic after their leaders...a block of wood. No personality, no originality and very...textbook(religious manual)
If you want Singaporean military leaders to experience defence, yes they have--East Timor, Afghanistan, UN Peacekeeping. But these are not given to the scholar generals. These are given to non-scholars promoted to general rank and then demoted when they return to Singapore and enever get the chance of being CDF, or army,navy or air force chief.
East Timor: Tan Huck Gim. Was made Major General. Returned to Singapore and reduced to BG. Never got the chance to be COA or CDF.
Gulf of Aden/Arabian Sea: Bernard Miranda. "Promoted" to Rear Admiral (1 star). Come back to Singapore, demoted to Colonel. Instead of being CNV, that when to the Ng Brothers. He was "forced" to retire.
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