3 Comments to “Petrol Ver 2.7”

  1. ruehyinn

    Jun 13th, 2008

    I do agree with you about Singapore’s purchasing power. We’re just so behind and government is thinking that the rakyat is stupid enough not to realized that our earning per capita is actually low compare to others. Sigh..I think they have to give new excuse. The rakyat are much more informed now. However, I think the price oil increase is inevitable. I just hope government government will prudently used the money saved from subsidy from now.

  2. Diarmuid Curran

    Jun 16th, 2008

    All in all, there are so many kickbacks, removals and leakages down the chain in the economy. Take pharmaceuticals. Go to a doctor, they are getting commission. They will prescribe a rake of drugs, you pay, and they get a kickback from the pharmaceuticals for selling their product.

    Go to a bar, the prices are high because of excise duty. They then have to pay kickbacks to the police, and city councils to operate.

    Even restaurants do not escape. Kickback to operate, kickback for licence. A Bunga by any other name would smell so sweet. And they expect, and want investment……What happens now….people get frustrated and say “Forget it, I will go to Thailand/Phillipines/Indonesia/Vietnam/China. Malaysia was MILES ahead of these places in 1997-1998, and took pride in looking forward.

    Each element of these corrupt practices represents money taken and removed. People want things on the cheap. Life becomes cheap. People are not respected. People at the lower strata struggle to survive.

    Its now so ingrained in Malaysia, and we are all suffering from it. There is an escape valve that has always been open to those who can innovate adapt and survive. Unfortunately, the way out is Malaysian Airlines…..hardly low fares either.

    Could the last one with a brain, please leave. Pak Lah and his cronies can keep it.

    The oil price increase is inevitable. Subsidies are lethal nasty rotten socialist vehicles. They are economic poison. Everyone seems to have their beady damned eyes on Petronas, and then compare the price of petrol to the likes of Nigeria and Venezuela.

    The Nigerian Government makes the Malaysian Government look like the model of honesty and good governance by comparison, and they are desperately poor. As for Venezuela, don’t get me started on Hugo Chavez. His economic policies have caused a 32% inflation rate in 2007.

    Take the medicine. Remove the subsidies. Its painful now, but its far better than having the IMF knocking on the door when the subsidies have bled the Treasury and the Bank Negara dry by 2014. Oh….the cronies and the cabinet, of whatever colour won’t have Ringgit Malaysia bank accounts. Its going to be in any currency except the Ringgit. In an ideal Malaysia with honest governance, the money saved from subsidies would go on Health, Education, Transportation and Housing. Of course, people are too myopic to see that the subsidies are so damn wasteful, that they will turn the Malaysian economy into a train wreck.

    I foresee dark days ahead for Malaysia, lasting 2 years. But without an honest Government, its just looking worse. It just seems its been downhill here since 1998.

  3. Gallivanter

    Jun 22nd, 2008

    ruehyinn We’ll just have to wait and see I suppose.

    Diarmuid Curran Derm, I don’t know where to start with your comments seeing that there’s so many points to discuss. Anyway, I’ll just say thanks for your thoughts. :-)