The Bankrupt Icons Of The RM10 currency note
On the obverse side of the RM10 note are three
icons of "Malaysia Boleh":
MAS, the LRT, and MISC. When the currency note was introduced a few years ago, it represented the
"Malaysia Boleh" vision of an
industrialised nation by 2020. Today, like so many other icons of this
vision, all three are bankrupt;
the government rescued the first two and Petronas the third. The printer's name is missing from the
RM10 note, indeed of any
denomination.
Malaysia's currency
notes were printed through the years by three security printers, Thomas de la
Rue, Bradbury Wilkinson and, briefly, a Belgium printer whose name my poor
eyesight could not make out. But the new
Malaysian currency notes carry no printer's name. Why? Not just
the RM10 note, but also the higher and lower denominations. Indeed, the
government retired the RM1 note and introduced the RM1 coin because, so we
were told then, the ringgit note had a short life and the coins longer
lasting. Yet, we have brought back the RM1 note, looking much inferior
amidst rumours that it is printed locally. Why?
This is not all.
Malaysian currency once had an issuing date. That was removed to keep
in line with international practice. Then it was redesigned to show pride
in Malaysia's march to an industrialised future. Why is the printer's
name removed now? That is not international practice. Is it a
prelude to locally printed notes? Who prints the RM1 note?
Compare it with the RM5 notes and higher denominations, it seems of poorer
paper? It may not be, and my touch may be deaden. But the government
should explain why this note is brought back. Has the government discovered
that the RM1 coin is hazardous to health, or did it appoint a courtier, crony
or sibling of the establishing so
that he or she could earn some pocket money?
For all we know, there
might be nothing to it. But I look at it with trepidation. The
government goes for gimmicks and innovations which ensures a good commission
to
whoever recommends it, and to the officials who
approve it. But once installed, it is discarded a few years down the line
because the gravy train had stopped and there is no
money allocated to maintain and keep it
going. Traffic cameras were bought at much expense and installed at
traffic lights to photograph motorists who beat traffic lights.
But the multimillion ringgit investment is wasted,
the cost of the films too high to
keep it active, and is now abandoned.
The government burdened motorists by insisting that motorcars must have the
third brake light. Once installed, it is ignored; but some
interested parties made quite a lot of money over it.
The government
announced privatisation with much fanfare, handing over choice government
assets not by open bidding but handed over to cronies, courtiers and siblings
of the establishment. Every single one is
in trouble. Look at the North-South Highway, now saddled with RM30 billion in
debt and the cost of using it continually rising. The government which
proudly proclaimed that it should not be in the business of business now eats
crow and buys it back from its
favoured sons so that they would not be bankrupt.
The government's
rescue of not MAS but its controlling shareholder, Tan Sri Tajuddin Ramli,
like the 1999 general election results, threatens the survival of the
government.
It brings the nation to the level of the
bankrupted assets. Malaysia is in
deep financial straits, but the government masks it by announcing major projects costing billions of
ringgit with neither the intention to see it
through nor to even begin to construct it. Public works projects are
held back because the PWD, for lack of funds, cannot even begin
work.
The government cannot
justify the bailout of its cronies, courtiers and siblings of the
establishment. Some could have been but how would you justify the
bailing out of
a crony like the Super Bumiputra aka
international business man of unquestioned reputed, one Tan Sri Dato' Seri
Vincent Tan? Danaharta, to those interested, now controls the
Berjaya Group, with 30 per cent of the company's
shares, while the Great Man holds just over seven per cent. Why?
The finance minister,
Tun Daim Zainuddin, should come clean and state unequivocally the state of
Malaysia's financial and fiscal position at the next session of Parliament,
due mid-March. He would not, of course. The government does not
believe in keeping its people informed, preferring to drug them with
intentions of good faith. But this
is not his only problem.
Many privatised, and
almost all bailed-out, projects are
indirectly linked to him. But UMNO members also want to know what happened to the assets UMNO had
in a company it
owned called Hatibudi, which had the
privatisation of the highways now under the Renong-UEM combine. Since
Tun Dam is treasurer of UMNO, the pressure is on him to reveal where
that estimated RM1,000 million is, and how well
it had done in the decade or so it was under his control. Removing of the
printer's name from Malaysian currency notes shows
desperation than prudent fiscal management.
M.G.G. Pillai
pillai@mgg.pc.my
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