One of the most prominent quotes about one of the ladies in my life came from Singapore’s dumpiest hooker, who described my ex-girlfriend, who was had been to Raffles Girls School (RGS) as having “Studied so much that she had become stupid.”
I think of this
line because in a way, this sums up the biggest problem in Singapore these
days. We have top heavy management filled with people who have studied so much
that they have become stupid. If one were to look at the performance of the big
firms run by born and bred CEOs, as was done in “BE LIKE A PARALYMIAN AND DON’TBUBBLE WRAP YOURSELF” (26 August 2021), you will notice an uncomfortable trend.
Our big local firms, run by born and bred Singaporeans have been underperforming
in just about every measure of the word and that is despite the fact that they’ve
got near monopoly power in their domestic market on essential services.
The internet is
a buzz with lots of noise about how the influx of dark-skinned Asians has ruined
the lot of our local born Singaporeans. The common complaint is this – how can
someone from the University of Rubber Pundek Prata on the tip of Tamil Nadu get
a position superior to the graduate from the National University of Singapore
(NUS), which we are told is a world-class university? As much as the government
decries the people complaining about graduates from the University of Rubber Pundek
Prata, the government is actually grateful that the complainers are focused on
the University of Rubber Pundek Prata because it districts the population from
the awful truth that the real problem with Singapore is the fact that the
government has stuffed the top positions on every organisation with power over
the lives of ordinary citizens with people who have studied so much that they’ve
become dumb to the reality of what’s happening on the ground.
Our guys have
great degrees and the top ones don’t even come from NUS. They come from places
like Harvard and Cambridge. If you looked at their qualifications, you’d say
that these people are exceedingly smart. You would be right to assume that they’re
smart – they’re so smart that they realised that all they had to do in life was
to ignore all the basic laws of economics and collect money. The key to success
once you’re in a lucrative position is to stay there and avoid getting into
trouble – which means not doing anything. Your screw ups will be miraculously
turned into a success narrative.
Just look at the
SMRT Corporation and how it’s CEO, Mr. Desmond Kuek became a hero for creating
value for his shareholders by selling the company to his largest shareholder,
Temasek Holdings. Or look at another former General, Ng Yat Chung, who ran Singapore
Press Holdings in such a manner that he became a hero by hiving off the media
part of the company that needs government support and the property part was sold
at a few times less than its peak to another property company.
Our “local”
genius seems to come from creating stories about how fine everything is without
checking on the ground. Today (25 January 2022) had one of its best.
Apparently, an academic in our world class national university has worked out
that the people on the lowest rung of the ladder were in fact the least
affected by price increases. The story can be found at:
It’s quite clear
that the good professor is rather sheltered. Sure, the price of certain items
that the middle and higher classes buy might have risen a bit more than the
prices of the things the poor focus on. However, it doesn’t take a genius to understand
that someone earning S$5,000 a month is going to feel the pinch significantly
less than someone earning S1,400 (the amount that is considered a minimal wage
of sorts in Singapore).
What exactly are we trying to prove here? We have
a world class university because it can come with statistics that magic away
the reality that people face on the ground?
There’s no way
of saying it other than to say that we are wasting brains and talent of our local
achievers on creating a fantasy world. There are plenty of issues faced by
normal people, who are paying Rolls Royce prices for a “top-notch” government
to solve. The government and our local elites need to spend a bit less time
creating stories that have no relation to the reality that the rest of us face
and start having an honest dialogue with the people.
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