NOVEMBER
3, 2000 VOL. 26 NO. 43 | SEARCH ASIAWEEK
Questioning
Our Feudal Loyalty
Malaysians
are a new people
By
SABRI ZAIN
Sabri is an independent Internet writer from Malaysia
ALSO
Struggle: Why Asia's battle
against cronyism is taking forever
Connections: Li Ka-shing
has got them
Fall: Suharto's buddies
are fighting their way back
Reformers: Crusaders
wage war against corruption
Cronyism in Asia: A primer
For most Malaysians, the word 'cronyism' is associated with big business
and politics. Massive privatization projects being awarded to the elite
few with the right political connections; lucrative government projects
being awarded to people with precious little know-how but an abundance
of "know-who"; massive public "bailouts" of floundering captains of
industry endowed with more political clout than business acumen.
But at the root of cronyism is not economics but feudal loyalty
more specifically, political loyalty to the ruling elite. It is this
sheep-like loyalty that has turned many a hard-nosed businessman into
a servile crony. This mad "kowtow" disease brings many economic advantages.
Licenses that might normally take months, or even be refused, can be
miraculously processed in days with clinical efficiency if you
know the right politician. Friendly loan officers can be transformed
into the most generous and accommodating of folk.
Some critics cite Malaysia's New Economic Policy (NEP), the affirmative
action that was launched in 1971 following race riots in Kuala Lumpur,
as the ultimate form of the country's cronyism. Designed to spread the
economic cake more fairly among the races in Malaysia by granting economic
privileges, advantages and quotas to ethnic Malays, it embraced everything
from welfare, education and housing to licenses, government contracts
and corporate equity. The goal: that Malays should own at least 30%
of the country's business capital. Whether it is the profitable government
contract that keeps a Malay businessman afloat or the generous scholarship
that sends his children to England for their degrees, the government
never misses an opportunity to remind Malays that they all are, essentially,
its cronies and should be grateful to be so blessed.
Prime Minister Mahathir Mohamad once remarked that "all Malaysians are
my cronies." He was fending off accusations that his government had
financially bailed out his friends. There is perhaps more than a grain
of truth in Mahathir's statement. We Malaysians are victims of our own
success. Decades of rapid development have given Malaysians confidence
a confidence expressed in that cry of "Malaysia Boleh!" ("Malaysia
can!") which has become the national motto. That confidence turned to
arrogance and greed which bred the cronyism that has become a
cancer in our society. There are those who say cronyism works, that
the cronies can actually deliver. Just look at our privatized superhighways,
our breath-taking airports, our glittering tower blocks the highest
in the world! All done by so-called cronies and all monuments to our
greatness.
But most Malays long ago discovered that some cronies were more equal
than others. The bulk of the promised riches went to an elite few rather
than the masses. Far from being an affirmative action program that helped
the poor, it seemed like a patronage network of shadowy political and
business relationships. It made the rich wealthier and helped keep the
elite of the United Malays National Organization (UMNO) in control.
But just as cronyism in Malaysia is rooted in politics, its eventual
downfall may be brought about by politics as well. The sacking of former
deputy premier Anwar Ibrahim in September 1998 unleashed a storm. He
launched a nationwide movement for reformasi reforms calling
for greater democratic freedoms, economic reforms and sweeping social
changes. Anwar's call fired the imagination of Malaysians of
all races who were tired of decades of corruption, nepotism and
cronyism.
Whatever the political outcome, Malaysia is today a new country. Malaysians
are a new people. An increasingly popular alternative media - such as
the opposition newspaper Harakah and the Internet-based Malaysiakini
(Malaysia Now) is beginning to ask questions and air public calls
for greater openness, transparency and accountability. The opposition
is building a formidable check-and-balance to government excesses and
abuses.
More importantly, more Malaysians are questioning that feudal loyalty.
A glimmer of change can be seen in the way Malays have reacted to the
thorny issue of privileges and the NEP. When Chinese associations renewed
a call for a review of the NEP in August, UMNO organized protests calling
for Malays to defend their privileges. After the erosion of support
from Malays for UMNO during last November's polls, many saw this as
an attempt to whip up outrage that would bring Malays back to the government
fold. Opposition Malay parties were even invited to join the protests.
But they refused. This time, the rabble-rousing and sabre-rattling didn't
work. The groundswell of outrage didn't materialize. Times have changed.
Perhaps there is a chance, a small hope, that Malaysians now no longer
want to be cronies.
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