TJS: Welfare states and economic growth – PM Lee is wrong again

makapaaa

Alfrescian (Inf)
Asset
Joined
Jul 24, 2008
Messages
33,627
Points
0
[h=2]Welfare states and economic growth – PM Lee is wrong again[/h]
PostDateIcon.png
June 23rd, 2012 |
PostAuthorIcon.png
Author: Contributions

tjsa-225x300.jpg
Prof Ian Gough and Tan Jee Say outside the LSE Library on 20 June 2012


“Contrary to naïve interpretations of globalization, the world’s most generous welfare states have developed in societies wide open to and heavily dependent on the world market, such as Belgium, the Netherlands and Scandinavia. These welfare states, in particular the Scandinavian ones, always come at the top in managerial rankings of ‘world competitiveness’.” So wrote Professor Ian Gough and Goran Therborn in their joint paper “The Global Future of Welfare States”.

I had the privilege of meeting LSE Prof Gough at his office in the London School of Economics on my current visit to the UK. He was amused that Singapore continues to be stuck in its outmoded view of the welfare state adversely affecting its economic competitiveness. In his recent speech to the Economic Society of Singapore, PM Lee Hsien Loong poured cold water over the Nordic model. Yet their extensive social safety net has not prevented them from achieving robust economic growth. Nor has it de-motivated people from striving to give of their best despite high taxes. Just look at the many world class companies and innovative thinkers they have produced.
tjsb-195x300.jpg
Lord Butler and Tan Jee Say in the House of Lords in London on 20 June 2012


Denmark alone has at least 13 Nobel prize winners. And it is the happiest country in the world, followed by Finland, Norway and the Netherlands (according to a Gallup survey published in the World Happiness Report released in April 2012). And these are countries with extensive welfare states and high taxes! There is a lot we can learn from these countries. I hope to continue my discussions with Prof Gough in the months ahead.

I also called on Lord Butler at the House of Lords. Some of you will recall that Lord Butler commended my 45-page essay “Creating Jobs and Enterprise in a new Singapore economy – Ideas for Change”. A summary of the essay appeared in my book “A Nation Awakes”. I presented a copy of the book to his Lordship. I told Lord Butler that the essay was the subject of intense debate in Singapore’s 2011 General Election. It even elicited a spirited response from then Minister Mentor Lee Kuan Yew who commented that I had ‘no qualification’ to say what I wrote in the essay. I had replied that I studied economics at Oxford and later headed economic planning at Singapore’s Ministry of Trade and Industry, and I added that my essay was endorsed by Lord Butler who had served under 3 British Prime Ministers. My reply to the Minister Mentor was voted by Yahoo as the best rebuttal of the whole GE campaign. I referred Lord Butler to the relevant passage in the book that described this episode; Lord Butler browsed through it and smiled with great amusement.
.
Tan Jee Say

* Jee Say was a Presidential candidate in the 2011 Presidential Election. The article first appeared on his facebook: http://www.facebook.com/TanJeeSay.
 
The problem with Old Goat is that he was trained as a lawyer. I am not sure how good a lawyer he would have made, but he should have stuck to that. Instead, in his ego and pride, he fancied himself to be smarter than everyone, and hence implemented all sorts of policies because he did not think that people trained in those fields were better than him. Hence, you have the no welfare state policy (economics), stop at 2 policy (eugenics), etc. In the end, everyone can see that he is just a big fraud. His intellect after all is not better than others. If his intellect and his policies were so superior, he would not need the ISD and the ISA to force people to follow him. He could have been a well loved father figure of the country, now, he is a detested, feared, old man who is making the ordinary singaporean's lot worse and worse.
 
Back
Top