Categories
Economics Humor

[758] Of April Fool’s Day

In Malaysia, it’s been roughly 50 minutes into April 1st. So, don’t believe everything that you, especially in the blogosphere. If things appears too good to be true, too surprising, too abrupt, too unbelievable, chances are, they are.

Oh yeah, I’m getting married. Oh, lucky me…

p/s – Lowyat.net officially adopt Flying Spaghetti Monsterism as its official religion. This also renders part of their forum inaccessible, annoyingly.

Wikipedia itself has plans for April Fool’s though it won’t make it to the front page until eastern standard time’s midnight. Don’t forget to check Wikipedia soon.

pp/s – just found out that Dell is acquiring Alienware.

Dell has agreed to purchase gaming PC maker Alienware, in a rare acquisition designed to improve Alienware’s supply chain and boost Dell’s standing among PC enthusiasts.

That sucks. I’ve always hated Dell but admire Alienware.

Categories
Economics

[745] Of Malaysia-US FTA on the move

Latest reports impress that both Malaysia and the United States are eager to seal a free trade agreement as soon as possible. On Tuesday, both parties announced a talk on a possible FTA. On Wednesday after the talk, they announced it will be fast-tracked. While I fear the US might be applying its muscle during negotiation, it appears that Malaysia might have a huge leverage against the US. That leverage is time.

As mentioned in various articles, including Financial Times article, the White House’s expedited power will expires in July 2007:

Trade promotion authority, which allows the administration to submit trade deals to Congress for an up or down vote with no amendments, expires in the middle of next year.

At the same time, the US seems extremely eager to strike a deal with Malaysia. If the deal goes through, Malaysia would be the second country in ASEAN to sign a FTA with the US. The US is in talks with Thailand but that talk doesn’t seem to be moving at the right pace by any respectable standard, especially when Thailand is in a major political crisis. The Philippines, another candidate for a FTA, doesn’t look too well either. So, Malaysian FTA might be the only deal the US could get this year.

Apart from that, some in the US consider a possibility of FTA as a way to counter terrorism. They insist that Malaysia is a moderate and the most progressive Islamic country, blah, blah, blah – you know the drill. I don’t care what they think but all these factors give Malaysia advantages to bring into the negotiating table.

Given the circumstances, Malaysia must utilize these advantages to the fullest extent. If Malaysia doesn’t, the United States will. Already the US ambassador to Malaysia was reported as saying that he expects an easy negotiation. Easy is a loaded word and it scares me to hear that. It is as if US expected Malaysia to acquiescent easily at the table.

Regardless what the general sentiment is in the US, Malaysia must not give too much ground without gaining substantial returns. Above all, Malaysia needs to be mindful of the recent US-Colombia FTA. In that FTA, Colombian tariffs on many US agricultural goods are torn down to zero while US quotas on Colombian export are not eliminated. Instead, it was merely increased. I don’t know how the Colombians feel about it but to me, that’s unfair.

This FTA is important to Malaysia because our country is a small open economy. Trade is our lifeline. However, no trade is better than a lop-sided trade. Bottom line is, I hate to see Malaysia be in the same spot as Colombia. More crudely, I don’t want to see Malaysia gets screwed.

p/s – w00t! The Simpsons is now live!

pp/s – Sirotablog is the first blog standing against Malaysia-US FTA that I know off. The blogger sounds like a protectionist. So, leftist Democrat, I think. A anti-globalization blogger for certain. Anyway, the way he describes Malaysian labor market is outrageous. He says Malaysian labors are oppressed because there is no minimum wage. Funny think is, Malaysians don’t think so. Do they?

Categories
Economics Sports

[744] Of things to watch: US-Malaysia FTA

United States and Malaysia are planning for a free trade deal . According to Reuters:

WASHINGTON (Reuters) – The United States and Malaysia will announce plans on Wednesday to negotiate a free trade agreement, industry and congressional sources familiar with the decision said.

U.S. trade officials have previously said they were very close to launching talks with Malaysia, the United States’ 10th-largest goods trading partner.

U.S. Trade Representative Rob Portman and Malaysian International Trade and Industry Minister Rafidah Aziz are expected to announce plans to begin negotiations at a joint news conference with U.S. lawmakers, one source said.

I wonder how the FTA would affect Malaysian automotive industry. And rivalry between palm and soybean oil industries would probably flare up during negotiation.

It wouldn’t be too far off if I suspect some sort of bullying by the United States’ representatives to occur. From what I read, the US trade representatives are notorious of that. Stiglitz made that even more vivid. Moreover, when US-Singapore FTA was discussed a number of years back, the United States representatives managed to convince the Singaporean government to legalize chewing gum – we all know about how much the Singaporean government hates chewing gum! Well, partly anyway – Singapore dragged its feet.

I support free trade. I even go farther and support free flow of trade and labor. Not in totality of course since sometimes, things need to be done on case by case basis but in general, I’m for free trade. However, most free trade agreements are only free in name and hardly fair at all. For instance, remember India’s offer last year? Thank goodness that has been flatly rejected.

For this very reason, it’s good to know that Rafidah Aziz will lead Malaysian team to the table. She might be unpopular but she has the experience to withstand or even counter United States’ pressure. I’ve problem imagining of whom would be more suitable for the job. Syed Hamid Albar? Maybe but Abdullah Ahmad Bawadi certainly can’t do.

p/s – oh, yea. Ajax 6 – 0 Sparta. PSV is next.

Categories
Economics Photography

[743] Of economics, preference and rationality

I was about to blog something about microeconomics but ended up emailing my undergrad economics professor instead. Meanwhile, I dug up a pile of shit and found this written in one of my economics coursepacks:

Mohd Hafiz Noor Shams. Some rights reserved

It was taken from the coursepack itself. The full version is this – “Remember, economics defines rationality in terms of whether an individual acts sensibly given his or her preferences, not whether the preferences themselves are sensible.

How true. That’s positive economics.

Categories
Earthly Strip Economics

[741] Of Earthly Strip: False Authority

Mohd Hafiz Noor Shams. Some rights reserved

Malaysian blogosphere is refreshing. Despite having little knowledge on a subject, suddenly, everybody’s an expert. When Public Works Department produces flawed bridge, everybody’s an engineer. When there’s inflation, everybody’s an economist. Makes you wonder, doesn’t it?One important thing – opinion is not necessarily based on fact. Especially when it comes from false authorities.

Anyway, I heard there will be a protest over the recent price hike. These protesters must have a short attention span, given their inability to appreciate how prolonged subsidy is bad for Malaysia. Funny actually. People demand efficiency but when efficiency is introduced, some vehemently denounce that efficiency.

One frequent argument against price hike is this: public transportation in Malaysia needs serious upgrading before partial or complete removal of gas subsidy.

Well, question: where do you think the cash gonna come from? Answer: Resources from reduction of subsidy.

What? Surprised? Did you actually think money grow on trees? Do you actually think, we face unlimited resources? Wake up and smell the roses.