It’s All For Profit Not People
from: http://malaysiakini.com/news/39308
Urban woes due to profit emphasis, says prof
Fauwaz Abdul Aziz
Aug 20, 05 1:15pm
Kuala Lumpur is ‘a city in crisis from pollution to poverty’ as a result of many public amenities no longer being seen as social services to be provided by the government but as purely economic commodities to garner profit, an anthropology professor observed today.
“Roads used to be a government responsibility. Now everybody has to pay toll. The only way you can make roads is if you make them into a business and make them profitable,” said Professor Emeritus Clive S Kessler.
“Now, the way roads are built up is not the way what drivers need or what the public needs. They are built up based on what the concession-holders require and the level of profitability to be maintained,” he said.
Public health facilities were similarly affected as illnesses are ‘not sexy’ from the economic point of view and those diseases that are not going to make a lot of money do not get research funding.
“The effect is that we no longer live in a society that has an economy. The society is there to serve the economy rather than the other way around,” said Kessler.
He was speaking to malaysiakini after delivering a talk to commemorate the 10th anniversary of the Universiti Malaya’s Institute for Malaysian and International Studies (Ikmas) which made him an Overseas Fellow following his retirement from University of New South Wales, Australia.
Dominant discipline
Expounding further he said from pollution to poverty, problems plaguing societies – including Malaysia‚Äôs – derive in large measure from the way economics and its technocrats have been allowed to determine the world view and rules which shape our lives,.
He said as long as such technocrats and economic considerations maintain their hold over the formulation of social policies, distortions will continue to affect us.
“In different ages, there have been dominant disciplines. In different ages, religious theory and theology was the dominant discipline and everybody had to reconcile their thinking to what theology allowed or didn’t allow,” said Kessler.
“At a later age, philosophy became the dominant discipline. Now, economics has that role and economists in our age are the priests and theologians of the earlier ages.”
Although economics provides powerful and valuable tools and techniques by which to measure one aspect of human activity, many people forget that this is merely one dimension of society which should not determine the other areas, Kessler expounded.
“Economics tells us how society works. We have economists saying society needs to work the way markets do, that if theories can help us to explain markets, then our economic theories would also be our social theories,” said Kessler.
“They think that laws of economics are built into the structure of the universe and part of human nature, but they are not. The problem is that the longer economists have this political power, the more they force us to act in the way their theories require of us.
“Economic theories, in this way, have distorted social policy,” he noted.
Book launched
In his lecture, delivered as part of Ikmas’ Bangi Public Lecture series, Kessler paid tribute to former Ikmas director the late Professor Ishak Shari.
Ishak and his work, said Kessler, represented a ‘third way’ of approaching economics and society ‘not as dichotomous or even integrated but as identical, as a complex and ultimately undifferentiated unity’.
The event also saw the launch of the book Elections and democracy in Malaysia, which looks at the objectives and effects of elections and the electoral system in Malaysia within a broader historical and socio-cultural context.
Its editors, Mavis Puthucheary and Norani Othman, are senior fellows at Ikmas.
END


For a country that has been self adminstering for less than 50 years, I think we’ve come pretty far and headed on a reasonable track. The aggressive social engineering and creation of a sizable middle class (when compared to most countries in this SEA with similar backgrounds) will catalize (not immediately create) a situation where social policy will not be geared to pump up the economy.
E.g., already people are starting to realize:
a) Public schools are sub par.
b) The nice holiday spots in the hills and seasides are being razed for development.
c) Air should be colorless, odorless and shouldn’t be chewable.
So, all you kids (there must be several thousand) that come to the shows, please consider doing the following:
a) Go to college. Most of you can either afford to or will get scholarships if you’re smart enough. If for some reason, you’re the next Nobel prize winner, you have no money and by some strange quirk of fate can’t get a scholarship because you’re the wrong race and none of the component parties that represent your particular race will hand you a buck. Stop feeling sorry for yourself, get a part time job and go to college part time.
b) Graduate, get a frikking job. Earn some decent money. With that money:
c) Work, travel, learn and most importantly understand. Learn to communicate properly in English, Malay and optional language of your choice, so’s people can understand what the fuck you’re saying.
d) Once you’re smart enough, climb your corp ladder, set up your own business – employ people, enter politics. Which ever frikkin organization or party floats your boat.
e) Wear a frikkin suit and work your way up until you can set policy to address whatever you want.
You can take off your suit at the end of the day and come to Paul’s and be a punk ass mother fucker in the evenings and weekends. (Try not get accused of fucking anyone in the ass, getting bitch slapped then and incarcerated if you’re doing the politics thing)
f) Try not to bitch too much while you’re doing (a)-(f). It won’t be easy.
While having a necessary role in the scheme of things, there’s only so much you can do as a pure activist.
This is analogous to computer hacking. If you wanted to hack, say a Unix system, you’d learn the basics, develop tools, work within the protocols, use the right syntax. Then when you’re good and ready, unleash your good (or evil) on the system.
Syed Tan.
thanks syed. the choice is there. has always been there. easily seen from afar but as usual, instantly dismissed by some as it involves so much more than sloganeering, while the rest just can’t see themselves mingling and kow-towing with the “enemy”; preferring to keep on keeping on; without giving any concessions even though the goings looking pretty bleak and unfanthomable.
One would then ask his or her self whether he or she will sleep so soundly ever again especially after shaking so many spineless swines’ sweaty palms, dancing to their tunes and licking their lard-caked butts; inching towards that ladder, hoping for a time where a certain standing awaits from whence some good (or bad) will be able to be unleashed, as you suggested.
And one will always wonder if the journey will be caring and kind enough for the original agenda to be carried forth with much conviction and for it to be intact; not eroded, de-fanged and subverted into some form of “adult” in-joke; dismissing it all swiftly as “oh, that was my folly of youth! my phase of idealistic zeal! my juvenile years of ridiculous angst! all i needed was to get laid! Ha! Ha! Ha!”
that said, the road is waiting and to those who wanna take it, i salute thee!