Monday, December 31, 2012

Improving Workers' Condition: From Another Perspective

The plight of factory workers, notably in China has captured the attention of many people across the world. Sights of squalid living quarters, seemingly unending working hours and absence of basic welfare in these factory towns resulted in rightful calls for better treatment for the most important people in the production lines.

In a rush to support this just cause, we appear to have forgotten one thing and unknowingly have committed a mistake, that is, of asking the workers what they really want in their working life but instead enforcing our definition of what’s best on them.

A TED presentation by Leslie T. Chang gave support to this view. In a series of interviews with workers whom she had established relationships with, Chang found out that while workers probably appreciate improvements in issues raised as examples above, they actually gain higher utility (in the words of an economist) from things/activities that may result in potentially better jobs. Some of these include the opportunity to learn computer skills and English.

As we close 2012 and embrace 2013, I thought this is a good reminder to everyone who has the good intentions of helping someone: never assume but in the words of Ernesto Sirolli (another TED presenter), shut up and listen before we come up with ways to help someone.

Happy New Year Eve!

Tuesday, December 25, 2012

Lessons from Winter

I received a copy of Monocle Alpino this afternoon and had been reading it for the entire evening. I do not intend to promote the publication in this post but just want to share an inspiring essays section in it.

There are ten articles about winter and related topics from so many different perspectives, each teaching me a thing or two about certain subject; on how saw-making needs to consider the “ice factor”, on the existence of a job called ice-meister who is responsible for making sure that the ice surface is perfect for skating and on how the notion of hand-knitted has changed over time.

The world is indeed a very big place and there will always be new things to learn. Merry Christmas everyone and thanks for making 2012 an excellent year. The best is yet to be!

Saturday, December 22, 2012

Report Card for the 21st ASEAN Summit

The ASEAN Summit was concluded almost a month ago. I had wanted to provide a report card of the summit but was delayed until now. As I see it, there were about four main takeaways, each capable of generating endless debate as to whether it is a good or bad thing.

First in the list is the signing of the ASEAN Human Rights Declaration. For many people, it is indeed an achievement considering that the organization did not come into being with the idea of pushing for human rights. In fact, some would even argue that many of the founders of ASEAN were hardly democratically elected. Yet, some would say that the declaration fell short of expectations as many “standard” norms appear to have been excluded.

Second is the ASEAN Economic Community (AEC). As with other recent summits, ASEAN Leaders pledged their continuous commitment to the establishment of AEC in 2015 but implementation process has been hit with several problems. The decision to delay AEC from 1 Jan 2015 to 31 Dec 2015 further proves this point. Officials can argue that AEC will still come into existence in 2015 but seriously, it is not hard to see that it has effectively been delayed by one year and how that will further affect ASEAN’s credibility remain to be seen.

Third is the announcement of the start of Regional Comprehensive Economic Partnership (RCEP) negotiation. On one hand, it gives the impression that ASEAN is serious in pursuing further economic integration with its neighbours but on the other hand, people are questioning whether anything tangible will come out of this considering the proposed timeline of its conclusion, 2015. One, it essentially clashes with AEC and if you cannot even implement one thing with your existing resources, what can you possibly achieve when you need to divide the same resources to handle two things concurrently. Two, there is a potential impact of South China Sea issue on the negotiation process.

This brings us quite nicely to the fourth and last takeaway, which is the South China Sea issue itself. Unlike the above takeaways where something positive can be distilled from them, I frankly do not see anything positive in this issue. It has wrecked ASEAN unity. It has resulted in several incidents that are likely to increase tensions. It has kick-started some military maneuvers and God knows what will come next.

To conclude, this is not a perfect report card but this is not a bad one either. There are certainly troubles brewing but if the relevant stakeholders can just take one step back and look at the bigger picture, I believe ASEAN can right the wrongs and still come out blazing.

P.S: I survive the end of the world.