Categories
Politics & government

[2299] Of a cab driver’s opinion of communism

On my way to Sydney Airport, I found myself sitting right beside a cab driver — who was probably close to 50 years of age — eager to convince me that he was an honest driver. “Pick any way you want, I go”, he said in outrageously fast but broken English. “I have map. You check. I go.” I almost smiled as he seemed to fit the old Western stereotype of Chinese people.

And as with most Cantonese speakers whom I have met, he seemed to shout when he spoke. I told him that I did not mind any route as long as I would get to the airport on time. Regardless of my indifference, he continued to convince me of his honesty up to the point that I wished I had taken the train instead.

It was unnecessary for him to convince me of his honesty. I know my way around enough and that makes his assertion irrelevant. I depended on his action, not his words.

I typically have a short fuse when it comes to loud and insistence individuals. I find them obnoxious and I will try to get away from them as soon as I can. But I was about to get late and I did not want to pay extra for another cab to the airport.

So, I remained polite to the obnoxious driver throughout the journey.

I am glad that I was polite because the second half of the ride was interesting.

I asked him where he was originally from, hoping that he would stop trying to convince me of his honesty. Given his mangled English, I hazarded ”Mainland China?”

He blew his top off. He insisted that he was from Hong Kong.

He has been in Sydney for 23 years. I asked why he migrated. He said he did not want to live under communism. Ah, at least he was redeeming himself; he appeared less obnoxious to me now. Just as I hid my initial discomfort of him from him, I hid my approval of him from him. I did not offer my view regarding communism and capitalism.

Hong Kong of course was a British colony before it was handed to the People’s Republic of China in 1997. More than that, it was a symbol of free market capitalism under liberal environment. Many were apprehensive of the future of Hong Kong beyond 1997. While the apprehension was justified, Hong Kong today continues to be the beckon of free market capitalism in the world.

He did not use the relevant terms as precise as he should. He was associating corruption with communism and a clean government with capitalism. The truth is that corruption is a problem in a capitalist society as well. Really, he was comparing the Australian government with the PRC government.

I played the devil advocate. I said the PRC government these days is only communist in name only but in truth, capitalism is making its round there. It is not free market capitalism but it is state capitalism. It is capitalism nonetheless and increasingly so.

To which he replied, “In communism, government officials are rich but the people are poor; in capitalism, government officials are poor but the people are rich.”

Looking at history, that is definitely true. That is the result of application of communist policy. There is more opportunity for government corruption in a centralized economy compared to a market-based economy, with all else the same.

We were approaching the international terminal. I got off and said to myself, I want to blog about this.

And yes, he was honest.

Categories
Economics Liberty Politics & government

[1791] Of popular capitalism is nothing less than a crusade

Margaret Thatcher speaking at the Conservative Party Conference in 1986:

This Government has rolled back the frontiers of the State, and will roll them back still further.

So popular is our policy that it’s being taken up all over the world.

From France to the Phillipines, from Jamaica to Japan, from Malaysia to Mexico, from Sri Lanka to Singapore, privatisation is on the move, there’s even a special oriental version in China.

The policies we have pioneered are catching on in country after country.

We Conservatives believe in popular capitalism—believe in a property-owning democracy.

And it works!

In Scotland recently, I was present at the sale of the millionth council house: to a lovely family with two children, who can at last call their home their own.

Now let’s go for the second million!

And what’s more, millions have already become shareholders.

And soon there will be opportunities for millions more, in British Gas, British Airways, British Airports and Rolls-Royce.

Who says we’ve run out of steam.

We’re in our prime!

The great political reform of the last century was to enable more and more people to have a vote.

Now the great Tory reform of this century is to enable more and more people to own property.

Popular capitalism is nothing less than a crusade to enfranchise the many in the economic life of the nation.

We Conservatives are returning power to the people.

That is the way to one nation, one people.

Categories
Economics

[1787] Of do not blame free market capitalism too fast

Unlike in the realm of physical sciences, one of the most frustrating aspects of economics is its dependency on natural experiments. Far too many hypotheses cannot be tested in sleek laboratories. As a direct result, it may take some time before anyone can comfortably pinpoint the causes of the unraveling financial crisis across the Pacific Ocean.

Yet, hunting season for a scapegoat has begun as the US government unveils the largest plan to intervene in the market since the Great Depression of the 1930s. Sweeping premature conclusions are fast becoming the preferred way of answering questions while scientific methods are thrown out of the window at a terrifying rate; centuries of scientific progress has come to naught.

As some observe the crisis with the valiant intention of pushing the boundary of ignorance outwards to populate the libraries of the world, statists have wasted no time in scapegoating and making sweeping premature conclusions. Their scapegoat: free market capitalism. Their conclusion: greater government intervention in the market.

An honest observer would recognize the fact that candidates for the cause or causes of the crisis cut beyond the rigidity of ideologies and this is where statists find themselves in trouble. While the story revolving the sub-prime mortgage crisis and the current financial crisis may have to do with lack of regulation in the proper place, two major potential causes of the crisis originated from government interventions. The two are bailouts of the past and low interest rates set by the state.

In comprehending how the two factors contributed to the whole fiasco, context is essential and it requires us to go as far back in time as the 1980s, back when another crisis was haunting the US economy.

It was the savings and loan crisis.

It is absolutely crucial to note that crises have happened in the past. Booms and busts are part of business cycles and there is really no reason to say your prayers for free market capitalism. Adherents of the Austrian school of economics may wish for a different path to be followed but the fact remains that such a business cycle is essentially the characteristic of the current setup of the system.

As proven in the past, each time the symbols of capitalism are burned to the ground, the whole system will rise up even stronger. Free market capitalism is a phoenix in the truest sense of the legend.

This is untrue for socialism or most of its variants. Once it is burned, it stays down and is forever maimed. Statists will do well to commit this to memory.

The most important aspect of the 1980s crisis is the action taken in its aftermath. The US government bailed out a number of troubled companies on the pretext that these companies were too big to fail. The idea was that these companies were too entangled in the economy and their failure would send destructive ripples throughout the system. And just before the beginning of the decade, there was the bailout of Chrysler rationalized by the same thinking.

The benefits of bailouts are immediately apparent but the side effect will pop up only later down the line: while bailouts tend to compensate downsides of the business cycle, they adversely affect the structure of the economy. It is a seed for yet another crisis in the future.

Any bailout essentially creates a problem called moral hazard. In a situation when profits are made private and losses are socialized, participants of the market have the incentive to undertake large risks incomparable to its rewards. In the case of the sub-prime mortgage crisis, the manner in which lenders of money swam in the sea of fire was indicative — no, instructive — of an awfully misaligned carrot and stick model.

Statists have called for more regulations to mitigate the effects of moral hazard but it must be highlighted that without the state-created moral hazard, there will be less requirement for regulation; the only regulation required in a situation which the state refrains from interfering in the market, with all else being equal, will be the rule of market Darwinism.

In true free market capitalism, profits and losses are internalized and thus eliminate the source for the explained moral hazard. With a more balanced risk-reward model, the severity of the crisis could have been reduced.

While moral hazard may have a role in the whole mess, an even bigger potential culprit is the low interest rates, courtesy of the state. This is so because the prevalent low interest rates environment in the early 2000s provided cheap financing which in turn fueled demand for, among others, homes. The environment was made possible as the Federal Reserve tried to maneuver the economy to a soft landing after the bust of the dotcom bubble. Needless to say, the Federal Reserve is an arm of the state and therefore, the tweaking of the interest rates is an act of intervention by the state.

If the setting of interest rates was left to the means of the market, it would have gone up and not down as lenders seek to compensate the prevailing risk.

With demand built-up fueled by cheap sources of funds, as well as several other factors which are mostly irrelevant to the issue at hand, the housing bubble grew and grew until the exuberance caused by the state was met with the cold logic of the free market. Slowly but surely the market overcame the interventions of the state, and brought about unintended consequences. The bubble burst and along with it the inability of borrowers to repay their mortgage loans.

The sub-prime borrowers were the first to suffer and as the borrowers defaulted on their loans, the lenders who suffered from moral hazard — no thanks to the actions by the state — began to realize the gravity of the crisis.

With the two factors considered, would it be fair to make free market capitalism a scapegoat and call for greater government intervention in the market?

In any case, it is unlikely that Malaysia will suffer the full brunt of the crisis. That, however, does not mean that there is nothing to learn from land of the free.

First, it is that past interventions have the potential of adversely affecting the future. Malaysia has had its fair share of bailouts and the fact that a majority of large companies in Malaysia are owned by state-sponsored enterprises offers many with an exciting if not scary natural experiment in a case of system-wide crisis. It would definitely be interesting to measure the moral hazard co-efficient in this country.

Secondly is the independence of Bank Negara. It is unclear how independent the technocrats on Jalan Dato’ Onn are from the politicians in Putrajaya. If Putrajaya has considerable influence over the central bank, the pressure to lower interest rates when it should be high would be present. With that possibility comes the possibility of a bubble.

Even more important is the requirement for Bank Negara to refrain from tweaking various interest rates and instead to let those rates float to their free market levels. Only the market has the processing capability to calculate the right interest rates for a particular environment while considering all variables.

Mohd Hafiz Noor Shams. Some rights reserved Mohd Hafiz Noor Shams. Some rights reserved Mohd Hafiz Noor Shams. Some rights reserved

A version of this article was published in The Malaysian Insider.

Categories
Economics

[1776] Of capitalism is here to stay

This must be some kind end of an era.

Lehman Brothers, Bear Stearns; names which are familiar in the realm of economics are no more. New prints of textbooks are required because the old ones are already outdated.

I spent almost continuously for four years living in the Michigan Union and every year, I would pass through its proud hallway. In front of doors along the hallway so full of memories, premium names would appear. Each year without fail, these institutions would visit Michigan for recruitment purpose.

It was here how I learned of these names. And what I did not know, I later learned more comprehensively in classes and later, through wider readings, sometimes in the libraries and usually on the internet.

During senior year, the highfliers were talking of joining these names, of joining the Lehman Brothers. I could only look at them enviously.

This is definitely not the first time names such as the Lehman Brothers have been swept away by time and carved only in history now. Drexel Burnham Lambert is another prestigious name which suffered the same fate approximately 20 years ago. Michael Lewis in Liar’s Poker skillfully described that era when he was with the Salomon Brothers.

In this time of collapse, doomsayers are sprouting like mushrooms after the rain. The end of capitalism, they say. Look around, the sky is falling.

On the contrary, no. The sun will rise again tomorrow and so shall we.

There is pain involved but all this is part of capitalism. It is to some extent a free market. Though the Austrian-inclined would deride what mainstream economists would call business cycle, the periods of exuberance and pain are just part of the game. We reap what we sow.

Similar crisis happened in the past in the 1980s in form of savings and loan crisis. In the aftermath of the crisis, market reforms were carried out, resulting in stronger market and renewed confidence in capitalism. The same will follow the subprime mortgage crisis after the dust settled.

Business failure is typical in capitalism. There is risk in business, as in life, and failure humbles us all. It reminds us that we cannot win forever and ever. Any state effort to artificially eliminate risk will only make us arrogant. Mark my words, the bailouts of Bear Stearns, Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac will be the seeds of future disaster.

There is really no need to overly worry and panic each time businesses fail in a free market because each time it happens is one more time for all of us to learn something new, or to relearn something which we forgot.

It is still sad to watch everything that is familiar going down in flames. Watching people, especially honest hardworking smart people, losing their jobs is always heartbreaking for me but losses and failures are bitter medicine. It is sad but let it fails. The invisible hand is at work and it knows better. After all this, we will emerge stronger.

So, here is to capitalism for there is none else better. We have reached the end of history.

Categories
Economics

[1415] Of Malaysian sovereign funds sit that far?

Interesting graph:

Fair use. Financial Times.

Not particularly about Malaysia but if you are interested:

The sovereign funds remain far smaller than official foreign currency reserves (approximately $5,600bn). But the expectation is that these funds will grow rapidly, possibly to exceed official currency reserves in a number of years. If recent growth were to continue, the total value would reach $13,000bn over the next decade. This might then be 5 per cent of total global financial wealth.

How is the money used? Here the report distinguishes funds by their transparency and by the active, or strategic, nature of their approach to investment (see chart). Norway’s fund is conventionally invested (with widely distributed ownership) and transparent. Singapore’s funds are defined as transparent, but look for large ownership positions. Qatar’s fund is defined as non-transparent and strategic, as is China’s. But Lou Jiwei, chairman of the China Investment Corporation, insists that the new fund will operate on commercial lines. [The brave new world of state capitalism. Martin Wolf. Financial Times. October 15 2007]

As for me, I find sovereign funds confusing because it blurs the line between privatization and nationalization.