18A Smith Street

Singapore 058932

28th June 2012

Ms. Christine Lagarde

Managing Director

International Monetary Fund

700 19th Street, N.W.

Washington D.C.20431

USA

Dear Ms. Lagarde,

I am the Secretary-General of the Reform Party in Singapore. I am also an economist with a double First Class Honors BA and an MA in Economics from Cambridge University. I have almost 30 years uninterrupted experience in the global finance industry in both Asia and the UK with an unblemished record of registration with the FSA. I am therefore writing to you as an economist, as an advocate for democracy and also as an ordinary Singaporean citizen.

I note your press release dated June 19 2012 at the conclusion of the G20 summit in Mexico. One of the countries you announce as having immediately pledged additional resources towards your goal of building a US$456 billion global firewall is Singapore with a commitment of US$4 billion. In your communiqué you give some of the credit for the successful outcome of the talks to our Finance Minister, Tharman Shanmuguretnam, in his role as Chairman of the International Monetary and Financial Committee.

Meanwhile here in Singapore since February, I have been raising the issue of opacity in our government’s budget, failure to adhere to IMF standards and grave concerns over the constitutionality of our country’s pledge to the IMF, to the same gentleman amongst others, albeit with a considerably less successful outcome.

Under our Constitution our government is required to obtain both Parliamentary and Presidential approval before a loan commitment or guarantee of this nature is granted.

The parliamentary record shows that Parliamentary approval was not sought. In addition the aforementioned Minister of Finance has failed to respond to any of my open letters raising questions and has failed to reasonably provide any accountability or transparency. His Excellency, President Tony Tan Keng Yam, did respond and referred my letters to MAS thereby confirming that Presidential approval had not been sought. The MAS is merely the manager of the official foreign reserves on behalf of the government and not the owner of the reserves. But in any case they have now failed to respond.

Given our grave concerns over the constitutionality of our republic’s loan commitment. I believe that the IMF cannot rightly accept these funds. At least not until the citizens in the Republic from whence it originated have received an assurance that the proper democratic and constitutional steps have been followed.

Even if our government intends to hide behind some loophole, the loan commitments involve the potential use of our reserves or government savings that come from taxes on the people of Singapore. In a robust democracy a government does not hide behind technicalities and dispense with the need to make itself accountable to the people for the use of their money.

Ms Lagarde, let me assure you, in Singapore we do pay our taxes. I realize that to many international institutions and Western governments it must be extremely convenient to have the support of a nation that has managed to build up such a large stock of foreign assets basically by imposing years of unnecessary austerity on its people.

Singapore is presented to the outside world by our government as a very rich country and its high levels of GDP per capita are often cited. However when you drill down to GDP per hour worked Singapore is near the bottom of the league of advanced nations ranking only above the Czech Republic and South Korea. Singapore is really only a city and has no rural areas or population to drag it down. Any viable comparison would be GDP per hour worked in a city of a similar size.

With no minimum wage, no universal health care insurance or free education (indeed no compulsory education beyond primary level) and a minimal social safety net, the median Singaporean is worse off than the median citizen of the Eurozone countries that the additional IMF resources are primarily targeted at.

Please note I am not here raising any objections to the aims behind building the firewall nor adding my opinion to the debate on whether the IMF should be bailing out the Eurozone. My concern over the loan commitment at this stage is only with proper Parliamentary and, in our case, also Presidential scrutiny. Ms Lagarde, I am not unsympathetic but Singapore is allocating more to the IMF than it spent on its own people on health in 2012!

Please bear in mind that Singapore has no Freedom of Information Act and despite regular elections cannot be considered a democracy.

On 14th May 2012, long after the pledge was made, one written question was tabled in our Parliament. The question was put to Mr Shanmuguretnam by an MP who is not only one of his own loyal backbenchers but a member of his own Group Representative Constituency team (I will not bother you with detailing the affront to democracy that GRCs represent). The question and answer was couched in language intended to elevate it out of the reach of the common man. Suffice to say the tabled question was a carefully scripted and stage-managed exercise dispensed with in minutes.

This may have been presented to you as a vigorous debate in Parliament. Make no mistake. In the case of this loan there has been no debate whether robust or sickly. In fact it has been impossible to even hold a decent conversation.

As the former French Finance Minister you may regard it as more important to move swiftly to attempt to save the Eurozone than to worry about whether an individual member’s loan commitment has been democratically obtained. I believe that the goals and needs of the IMF cannot ride roughshod over our own citizen’s rights.

I might even accept the view that our domestic struggles with lack of accountability and transparency, directly related to the absence of democracy, may simply not fall within your mandate. That view is considerably weakened by the appointment of our Finance Minister as the head of the International Monetary and Financial Committee.

Singapore announced its support to the IMF goal without even the caveat that they would have to obtain parliamentary approval whereas you announced that countries such as Russia, India, China and Brazil had made private pledges but did not want to go public till they had discussed them ‘back home’. It must be very beneficial to have a nation that can be relied on for support when it comes to funding, without having to worry about troublesome domestic opposition or the speed humps of democracy.

Is there not a potential conflict of interest in the appointment as Chairman of the International Monetary and Financial Committee of a Minister of Finance from a nation that can approve a loan to you without any scrutiny back home and will not even provide basic transparency to its citizens? It concerns me that when you made this appointment you may have been unaware of the lack of democracy and transparency in Singapore. In fact by appointing Singapore’s Finance Minister to a key role at the IMF are you not encouraging a lack of democracy for Singaporeans?

More pressingly, by dismissing the basic issues of transparency and accountability in countries like Singapore in favor of political expediency, you risk creating greater problems for the global economy in the future.

The foreword to the IMF manual sets out an analytical framework for budgets and states that one of the aims of the framework is to provide an early warning system as to when things start to go wrong. Whilst my concerns with our loan pledge are about its constitutionality my concerns with our budgets and the government’s finances center on opacity, omissions and discrepancies.

Specifically the Budget for 2012 as presented to parliament by the same MOF, Mr Shanmuguratnam, Chairman of the International Monetary and Financial Committee, does not even adhere to the IMF’s Special Data Dissemination Standards. Mr Shanmuguretnam uses his Ministry’s own unique method rather than your widely followed one.

I have written to our Finance Minister, published Press releases and sent open letters to the media requesting answers to questions about these troubling omissions and discrepancies and failure to adhere to IMF standards. I have also attempted to get an answer as to the state of our reserves.

There may be a reasonable answer to the many concerns that have been raised. But Mr. Shanmuguretnam has failed to provide even an unreasonable one. This surely falls far short of the standards of integrity and transparency required by the IMF.

The failure to provide the fullest picture of the government’s finances including total investment income and capital receipts from land sales and our sovereign wealth funds, to parliament could be construed as contempt of Parliament. Worse, as your manual points out, by not adhering to the IMF’s analytical framework we are denied that early warning system. How will we know if things are going wrong?

In the current economic climate where a failure in Europe’s banks affects us all in South East Asia and vice –versa, I had expected the IMF to strive to see that IMF Committee heads act as role models upholding the highest levels of clear reporting.

We are not Norway. We do not have any exhaustible resources. Instead our Sovereign Wealth Funds have been built up by a policy of forced saving and government surpluses. The government captures huge economic surpluses from its citizens and returns little to them in the form of social expenditures. Our health and education spending as a percentage of GDP is among the lowest in the developed world. Our chronic current account surplus of around 20% of GDP is another indicator of how much the government takes out of income so as to accumulate overseas assets.

Without accountability there is a real danger that these forced savings, which cause real hardship for many poorer Singaporeans, could be dissipated through poor investment returns before we can do anything about it. This is not merely an idle academic exercise. It was not so long ago that Greece’s accounts were shown to be have been manipulated.

Ms Lagarde, this brings us in a neat circle back to one of the reasons you need that firewall in the first place.

.I would be happy to come to Washington to present my data, provide background information and discuss my concerns with a member of your team.

Yours sincerely,

Kenneth Jeyaretnam

Secretary-General

References

An Open Letter to The Finance Minister, http://thereformparty.net/about/press-releases/an-open-letter-to-the-minister-for-finance/< %rFa>

A Further Open Letter to The Finance Minister, http://thereformparty.net/about/press-releases/a-further-open-letter-to-the-minister-for-finance/

An Open Letter to The President, http://thereformparty.net/about/press-releases/an-open-letter-to-the-president-of-singapore/

A Further Open Letter to The President, http://thereformparty.net/about/press-releases/a-further-open-letter-to-the-president-of-singapore/

The President’s Response to My Open Letters, http://thereformparty.net/about/press-releases/the-presidents-response-to-my-open-letters/

The Reform Party’s Response to Budget 2012-Part One, http://thereformparty.net/about/press-releases/budget-2012-part-one/

The Reform Party’s Response to Budget 2012-Part Two, http://thereformparty.net/about/press-releases/budget-2012-part-two/

Singapore’s pledge of US$4 billion to IMF http://article14.blogspot.co.uk/2012/06/singapores-pledge-of-us-4-billion-to.html

Interview with Singapore’s first Elected President in which he describes how often he only became aware of decisions where his approval should have been sought by reading about them in the newspaper, http://www-cgi.cnn.com/ASIANOW/asiaweek/magazine/2000/0310/nat.singapore.ongiv.html

‘Loan offer to Indonesia breach of Constitution’, Straits Times 21st November 1997 http://www.singapore-window.org/1121st.htm

‘Indonesian loan does not go against Constitution’, Straits Times 22nd November 1997 http://www.singapore-window.org/1122st.htm

 

You May Also Like

MP Louis Ng shares tribute post about two COVID-19 infected migrant workers, where one died of injuries at Khoo Teck Puat Hospital, another died of heart attack

On Tuesday (28 April), Member of Parliament (MP) of Nee Soon Group…

Is a change in SMRT leadership just a cosmetic change made to fob off critics or is there real commitment for revamp?

Reading reports on a media briefing given by the new SMRT CEO LG (NS)…

再一宗死亡车祸 摩托车骑士头部遭辗身亡

今早8时49分,惹兰文礼通往裕廊渡头路发生致命车祸,摩托车与拖车相撞,骑士头部遭辗身亡。 根据网民拍摄视频,可见摩托车明显损毁。民防部队救护人员赶赴现场,宣告骑士不治。 民防人员则尝试将死者遗体从拖车底下取出。 警方也证实一名37岁男骑士在上述事故中身亡,调查正在进行中。 就在两周前,实里达高速公路也发生另一宗涉及摩托车的严重死亡车祸,一名45岁摩托车骑士遭重型拖车碾过,现场血肉横飞,骑士当场死亡。

冒用新加坡送餐员账户非法送餐 二马国男遭捕

据人力部于昨日(5月15)发出文告表示,两名马国男子日前作为空腹熊猫(Foodpanda)与户户送(Deliveroo)的非法送餐员,目前已依法拘捕。 文告表示,人力部于上月24日在乌节路313@Somerset展开突击行动,逮捕一名24岁马国男子;另外,于4月30至5月7日期间分别狮城大厦、宏茂桥城、东陵商城、挪威那广场、Nex商场捕获另一名21岁马国男子。 初步调查显示,两名涉案者持社交准证入境,利用新加坡送餐员的账号送餐,并从中获取部分收益。 人力部也指出,他们也正向相关公司进行调查,同时呼吁所有在线点餐外卖公司严格监督工作流程,以免送餐员账户遭非法使用。 人力部外来人力管理署雇佣稽查处处长王家安也强调,持社交访问准证的外籍人士,禁止于国内接下任何雇佣工作。他表示,“人力部将对漠视法律的外籍人士与雇主采取严厉的行动。” 根据马国《星报》与我国《新报》报道,Deliveroo的发言人说明,公司内送餐员必须是新加坡公民或永久居民,即使是替补送餐员也必须符合条件。 “送餐员有义务知道这些条件,而公司目前正在彻查此事,如发现任何职员将其账户分包给未持有工作准证的人,将会立即终止合约。“发言人表示。 空置账号多,非法送餐员趁虚而入 据联合早报报道,一名男子郑国进(34岁,经理)日前通报指有一群来自马国的送餐员在市区非法送餐,人数超过20人。 他表示弟弟也从事送餐工作,发现本地送餐元账号常出现空置账号,马国男子看准这一点,到处租用多余账号并让他们抽成5巴仙。 “除了自己送餐,他还从马来西亚招揽人手,将收集到的账号分给他们,每人抽取30%佣金,一天下来他便能净赚200元到300元。” 据郑国进所知,该马国男子持有效工作准证入境,在本地有其他工作,送餐员只是他的兼职。他说,只有本地人或永久居民才能合法从事送餐工作,因此骑着马国注册电单车的送餐员,显然是非法送餐员。…