Singapore Democrats

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Monday, 06 April 2009

Singapore Democrats

As major changes emerge in the effort to resuscitate the battered world economy following the recent G-20 summit in London Singapore, together with other tax havens, has been put on notice to clean up its banking and financial sector.

"We have agreed that there will be an end to tax havens that do not transfer information upon request," said the host British Prime Minister Gordon Brown at the end of the summit. "The banking secrecy of the past must come to an end."

The Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD) has identified Singapore as one of the territories that "have committed to the internationally agreed tax standard, but have not yet substantially implemented" the measures.

OECD Secretary-General Angel Gurria said:"We now have an ambitious agenda, that the OECD is well placed to deliver on...I am confident that we can turn these new commitments into concrete actions to strengthen the integrity and transparency of the financial system."

In response, the Government has quickly moved to assure the OECD that it "intends to implement the standard by effecting legislative amendments later this year." (See Singapore vows to change tax laws to remove havens)

Morality and money

Within the short period when Dr Chee Soon Juan first raised the issue of Singapore's banking industry where the wealthiest of the wealthy are attracted with banking laws designed to provide utmost secrecy, the fate of Singapore's future as a financial centre has taken a dramatic turn.

But how does the move away from being a tax haven benefit Singaporeans? Should one care about morality when there is money to be made? Why are the Singapore Democrats so concerned about Singapore becoming a secrecy jurisdiction?

The era where business claims amorality is over. The laissez-faire attitude towards the rich in recent decades and how they make their dollars have resulted in misery being brought upon the common folk.

Just ask those who lost their life savings over the financial rubbish that they bought from the now-defunct Lehman Brothers. It was precisely the lack of moral underpinnings that allowed the rich to exploit the masses by selling them these dud products.

What about the bankers in Wall Street? Already millionaires many times over, these people were still scheming to make even more money by generating fraudulent financial products that eventually became toxic assets. This proved to be the undoing of the world's economic system.

The one ingredient that was missing in all the rush to make money: moral principles.

Losing the way

In Singapore, the opposition must be ever-vigilant about where the PAP is taking us. Tax havens, while a lucrative enterprise as long as no one questioned the morality (not to mention the soundness) of the practice, is neither good business nor smart strategy. It is a get-rich-quick scheme that is destined to fail.

Building a financial industry on such a shady and shaky premise will open us to backlash that no one can predict.

Singapore has seen in recent years the influx of unaccounted money, aggressive promotion of hedge funds, and the trading in highly volatile derivatives and toxic financial products. We have also witnessed the mushrooming of millionaires and billionaires, mostly foreigners, with an insatiable appetite for ultra-luxurious properties and recreational facilities in exclusive areas, including integrated resorts with casinos.

All this has driven up the cost of living for Singaporeans who continue to struggle in one of the most expensive cities in the world.

It is clear the PAP has lost its way. With the world financial and economic undergoing a fundamental shift in the way it operates, we need a new model upon which to build our future. That model is one based on transparency and accountability, one where the people come first. 

 

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Comments (6)
  • Robox
    I want a successful Singapore as much as anyone else.

    However, I refuse - on moral grunds - to succeed at the expense of citizens of other countries where many of the poor are.

    Money made in countries like Indonesia has to be returned to Indonesia as taxes to benefit the poor there.

    That money has no business in Singapore banks.

    Congratulions to the SDP for raising a very sensitive issue, and for the moral victory in this issue.
  • VP - Tax haven is good for Singapore, maybe?
    Moral principles play no part in politics

    If those people have decided not to put their money in their own countries, they will not do so even if Singapore banks do not accept their deposits here.

    Politics is not about moral principles

    It's about gaining the power to help yourself so that you can eventually rule the country better, if conscience for your countrymen still exists when you are in power at that time.
  • Robox - To VP
    What the heck do you mean when you say that "Moral principles play no part in politics"?

    Isn't that the reason advanced for hate laws against gays, and by the PAP government themselves?

    I don't consider hate laws against gays to be a moral issue; it is a human rights issue.

    But if you want to claim that morality has no place in politics, then I'm going to question you about why politics, and the the political process are being used to enact laws against murder.

    Those of us who consider murder to be a crime do so on a moral basis.

    If morality has no place in politics, I want to see you lobby against laws that criminalize those who commit murder.
  • Muhammad Shamin - Ocean of Secrets
    It is true that we have lost our way. In fact, we lost it a long time ago. We are a country with first world infrastructure and a third world politics.

    Not only there is secrecy about the riches that goes in and out of the country, even those who are against the government are silenced in secrecy.

    And oh yes, some citizens have their passports confiscated due to suspicion of being involved with "terrorist". That too, done in secret.

    A small island with and ocean of secrets. I wonder what's next?
  • Kai Xiong - re: Tax haven is good for Singapore, maybe?
    [quote=VP]It's about gaining the power to help yourself so that you can eventually rule the country better, if conscience for your countrymen still exists when you are in power at that time.[/quote]

    Better for whom and in what way?

    The question is inescapably a moral one. What one gains, another may lose.
  • AnnA - VP
    You must be a zombie..

    Moral values = Responsibilities & Respect

    "Moral principles play no part in politics" were for PAP. You must advise the Lees not to exaggerate on Asian values because real Asian values has moral.

    Your comment has just answered this article's title. Yes, we are lost.
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