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Monday, October 17, 2011

The Law of Disruption Occupies Wall Street



Larry Downes
Larry Downes Forbes Contributor
I cover the Internet industry

Day 28 Occupy Wall Street October 13 2011 Shan...From Tea Party activists to Wall Street occupiers; from the Middle East to Europe and back.  We’re seeing passionate and sometimes violent reactions to the slow pace of institutional change.

Citizens are calling foul on political and social institutions that no longer reflect their values, using technologies, tools, and devices invented in the last decade to organize, coordinate, and speak.

Video: Occupy Wall Street: Voice of the Protesters
 
Around the world, protesters are writing their manifestos on WordPress, arranging marches using Facebook, and chanting on Twitter.  Their weapons of choice are smartphone apps, mobile broadband, and social networks.  (In most cases, it’s well worth noting, these technologies were designed for entirely different purposes, or perhaps with no particular purpose in mind.)

Technology is not only the agent of change; it is also the catalyst.  Indeed, I see all of these movements as fallout from what I coined The Law of Disruption, a principle of modern life that becomes more determinative as new technologies enter the social bloodstream ever faster.  Even though I’ve been writing this column for several months, I’ve never explained what the Law of Disruption is.  Now seems like a good time to correct that failure.

The Law of Disruption can be stated simply:  Social, political, and economic systems change incrementally, but technology changes exponentially. In the widening gap between the potential change technology makes possible and the actual change existing institutions achieve, the likelihood of surprising, radical, and unintended shifts is fast increasing.



Borrowing a term from venture investing, in 1998 I called these surprises “killer apps,” a phrase I intended to be provocative.  If existing institutions didn’t learn to move faster, to adapt more quickly, to make more creative use of new technology, they stood to be victims.  Not so much of start-up businesses but of the technology itself, operating through entrepreneurs.

It was like the old joke about the two campers who hear a bear rummaging around outside their tent at night.  “Why are you putting your shoes on?” the one camper asks the other.  “You can’t outrun a bear.”  “I don’t have to outrun the bear,” the other camper replies.  “I just have to outrun you.”

After a decade of operating principally on business and economic system, the Law is now shifting its focus to law and government.  To see what’s coming in the next decade, it’s useful to begin with a review of what’s already happened in the last one.

The Persistence of “Normal Science”

The Law of Disruption (c. 1998)

Video: Occupy Wall Street: Voice of the Protesters

I first described the Law of Disruption in my 1998 book “Unleashing the Killer App.”  Reviewing dozens of early Internet start-ups who were wreaking havoc on the business models and supply chains of established “brick-and-mortar” industries, I realized that what drove the innovators most was not so much their big ideas or even their youth.  It was the accelerating pace of technological change.

The acceleration was in turn a function of Moore’s Law—Intel founder Gordon Moore’s 1965 prediction that computer power would double every 12-18 months even as price held constant.  Later work suggests Moore’s Law applies equally to other key drivers of the Internet revolution, including communications speeds and data storage.  Together, the relentless push toward the faster, cheaper, and smaller computing made change possible at an exponential pace.

So why, I wondered, did actual change occur so much more slowly?  And why, in particular, were the most entrenched institutions—including government and business—the least able to take advantage of the revolutionary potential of new technologies?

The answer, oddly enough, came from MIT historian Thomas Kuhn.  Just a few years before Gordon Moore’s first articulation of Moore’s Law, Kuhn published the first edition of his seminal work, “The Structure of Scientific Revolutions.”

Looking over the history of major changes in scientific thinking—what Kuhn coined “paradigm shifts”—it became clear that there was a pattern of resistance, counter-revolution, and finally, acceptance.

Kuhn uses the example of Copernican astronomy, which Galileo proved with his new telescope.  Astronomers (and others, including the Vatican) had a vested interest in a view of the solar system in which all solar bodies including the Sun revolved around the Earth.   Galileo’s evidence to the contrary needed to be explained away, even when doing so required revisions to the old model that eventually made it look absurd.

Scientists who had been trained as students in a particular dogma for their field—the paradigm—could not be expected to embrace a radically different paradigm even as evidence mounted of a model that better approximated reality.

That’s because what scientists are trained to do is not to think big thoughts so much as to refine the dominant paradigm—what Kuhn called “normal science.”  Look at professional journals for physicists, economists, biologists and other sciences, and you’ll quickly realize that most academic research reflects normal science—small experiments, gaps in the literature, tiny adjustments to an existing model of how some aspect of the world works.

In fact, Kuhn goes on, a true paradigm shift tends to take at least twenty years to become the new normal, even after the evidence has become overwhelming.  Why twenty years?  That’s the amount of time, Kuhn concluded, for the existing generation of practicing scientists to retire or die off.

The current generation, in other words, never make the shift to the new paradigm; it’s only when the next generation takes over the field that the old paradigm—encoded in textbooks, maps, experiments and training materials–can be discarded.

Looking at business and government reaction to technological revolutions, particularly in information technology, I came to the conclusion that Kuhn’s work had broader application than just the sciences.  CEOs, legislators, judges—all are likewise trained in the dominant paradigm of their age (increasingly at graduate business and law schools).

Like scientists, they spend their careers in the “normal science” of working within the paradigm to achieve modest improvements and relative efficiencies.  A few more percentages of market share, more focused incentives and penalties, clearer statements of rules—these are the normal science of social institutions.

The Computing Revolution’s True Nature

When revolutionary change occurs, social institutions likewise resist, struggling mightily to explain away a new reality in the language of the old way of doing things.  Take information technology.  Business computing began in 1955 with the sale of the first Univac for commercial use—a payroll system for General Electric.

Following that model, computers were long seen as tools for automating existing business practices, offering improved efficiency but not competitive advantage.  (See the wonderful commercial for Univac below.)




In the 1970’s, mainframe computers running back office accounting and manufacturing applications became a cost of doing business, a source of productivity improvement but one that was largely competed away to cost improvements enjoyed by customers.  No one saw computers as revolutionary tools for redefining customer interactions—at least, no one inside large corporations.

But something unexpected happened.  Personal computers moved from the bottom of the food chain to the front line of experimentation, pulling the information it wanted rather than pushing it back up for consolidation and summarization.  Spreadsheets and other “what if” tools became the transitional killer apps, putting computing power in the hands of users to do with what they wanted, not what they were told.

Then followed the explosive growth of the Internet, a non-proprietary data communications protocol that took full advantage of Moore’s Law.  Initially, it was ignored by business and policy leaders alike.

IT departments, well-drilled in “normal science” of incremental improvements and low-risk investing, dismissed it through the early 1990’s as an academic or at best scientific computing tool, not fit for high-volume, high-reliability transaction processing. Technically, they were right.  TCP/IP offered an inferior networking standard compared to proprietary architectures including IBM’s SNA and Digital’s DECnet.

That, of course, assumed that the purpose of computing was to codify and automate existing hierarchies and one-way communications.  As with all revolutions, the true potential of Moore’s Law wasn’t realized until a new generation of entrepreneurs, venture investors, engineers and–perhaps the first time—users began to experiment with the Internet, not as a tool for automation but as a technology first and foremost of collaboration.

The Internet, and the devices and applications that sprang up to take advantage of it, allowed for a remarkable range of new kinds of interactions in every conceivable supply chain—whether that meant product design and customer service, government transparency and accountability, or new forms of family and personal relationships embodied in social networks.

Once those new interactions were discovered, they moved quickly from the frontier back to mainstream life.  Customers now demanded access to business information.  And more, they demanded the right to express their views on how products and services performed—and how they ought to be improved.
Values of social, ecological, and open access were articulated.  Markets emerged to supply these and other aspirations; markets that might never have taken shape without disruptive technologies to help define new demands.

Shift Happened

Since the publication of “Unleashing the Killer App,” the revolutionary nature of Moore’s Law has only become more pronounced.  In good economies and bad, booming and busting stock markets, through political upheaval and social change, computing continues to drive deeper into human experience, enabling change even as it redefines the nature of interactivity.

Along the way, many paradigms have been challenged, with predictable responses from those most closely tied to their propagation.  In business, I observed CEOs frustrated both by the ability of start-ups to capture the imagination and loyalty of new customers and their own paralysis to respond, let alone initiate.  Not surprising, that frustration was particularly acute in industries that had long been stabilized by regulation (airlines, communications, utilities, financial services) or cartel (lawyers, doctors, and other professional service providers).


Even when industries were granted dramatic deregulatory freedom, the old paradigm persisted.  Ironically, one of the toughest obstacles to change were existing computer systems, which had embodied obsolete business practices and information flows in inflexible software code that no one was brave enough to hack.

In my role as shaman of the killer app religion, senior executives regularly confessed to me that they simply couldn’t change their way of looking at the business.  In the end, faced with the inevitability of disruptive change, they wanted simply to last long enough to retire and let the next generation figure out what to do.   (My advice to those executives was to retire as soon as possible, which some of them, to their credit, actually did, although never soon enough.)

Traditional businesses had many valuable assets that could be leveraged in competition with the start-ups.  That was the good news.  The bad news was that the valuable assets weren’t the physical ones that determined success in the industrial age.  Few business leaders were willing to accept that the trucks, printing presses, retail locations and other physical plant that dominated the balance sheet had become liabilities overnight.

But online commerce turned the value proposition upside down.  Shopping at home was more convenient than any retail experience, especially in an era where low unemployment translated to incompetent customer service at the point of sale.  Information goods—including news, entertainment, and money, for starters—could begin and end life as bits, traveling cheaply and instantly over phone lines.

The real value for the incumbents was trapped in what I called the “hidden balance sheet”–the transaction data, expertise, and relationships carelessly filed away in the aptly-named data warehouse.  Intelligence about customers and suppliers, deep industry expertise, and brands to which only lip service was paid were the truly valuable assets of the brick-and-mortars.

Few businesses found them in time.  Biting at the heels of every slow-moving Blockbuster was a reckless Netflix, able to cancel out the advantage (if any) of an existing customer base with the decreasing cost of new user acquisition made possible by viral marketing and cheap broadband.  And customer loyalty proved chimerical, especially when businesses tried to secure that loyalty through closed systems and product lock-in.

Either way, in some industries more than others, the paradigm shift occurred, leaving the existing participants at best reconfigured and at worst out of business.

Often, the process took a long time, but the result was never in much doubt.  When Amazon first launched in 1994, it referred to itself audaciously as the “World’s Largest Bookstore.”  Barnes & Noble sued on the ground that calling itself a “store” was false advertising, because it had no retail outlets.

That, of course, was the point of e-commerce.  But Barnes & Noble and other book retailers (like retailers in other categories) were more comfortable suing to protect the old paradigm than to find ways of leveraging their existing assets to compete in a new reality.

Here the law proved a valuable ally, to slow if not to stop the disruption.  Copyright, patent, antitrust, and other bodies of industrial law were called to duty, applied not to their traditional problems but to stop technological progress itself, by any means necessary.  Napster, MP3.com, and even Microsoft were stalled or destroyed.  But YouTube, iTunes, and Google were waiting in the wings.  Technology, as always, adapted faster than law.

Now, less than twenty years later (take that, Kuhn!), the book business has changed utterly, leaving many casualties.  Traditional publishers are still struggling to find their place in the new order, and continue to resist the move from physical to electronic—first of the distribution of books, and now the books themselves.

How do online sales fit in the making of a bestseller list?  How should e-books be priced so as not to cannibalize hardcovers?  You can hear the old heliocentric astronomers at work, tugging at their beards as they fretfully erase and redraw the orbits of the planets to avoid the reality.  There’s a new center of the universe, and it ain’t the Earth.

But, at the same time, what has emerged is a far more convenient and cost-effective experience for customers.  Both my oldest and youngest friend have each adapted quickly to the Kindle’s winning combination of low cost, light weight, readable text, and virtual library available through the Internet.  Sentiment and status attached to the physical book—an artifact of history where books were scarce and literacy a sign of wealth—are fading fast.

Amazon, meanwhile, hacked its own systems, and allowed itself to be taken by the tidal wave of change to wherever Moore’s Law led it.  The company morphed quickly from selling books in a new way to selling everything in a new way, and from there to recognizing itself as a platform—as software—that could be leveraged not just to other merchandise but to other merchants.

The company now offers cloud computing services, extending the platform beyond merchandising to any complex set of interactions.  With the breathtaking success of the Kindle and its successor products, the company has taken the next step in its accelerating evolution, becoming a platform not just for other product categories and other businesses but also for its customers.

The Policy of Disruption

Since 2007, I have been increasingly focused on applying the Law of Disruption to regulation and policy.  Business, for better or worse, is well along on the path to change.  Law is not.  Last year, I published “The Laws of Disruption,” looking at the ten most intense legal battles at the border of traditional existence and digital life.  These included privacy, copyright, antitrust, crime, patents, infrastructure and human rights.


Fights over how to rewrite these sinking bodies of industrial law for our increasingly virtual lives have only intensified in the last two years, and in many ways are converging to a general revolution.

Grumblings over one-sided terms of service, limits on remixing content, government surveillance and excessive patent protections have sharpened into movements and advocacy, including Creative Commons, the Electronic Frontier Foundation, and TechFreedom, a new policy think tank aimed at limiting all forms of regulatory interference with innovation.  (I work with TechFreedom as an adjunct fellow.)

Despite what existing governments may think, anarchy is not the only alternative to their continued monopoly.  Rather, the revolutionaries–sometimes groping, sometimes articulately—are striving for a new social contract, one based on the unique social and economic properties of information.

The problem with existing law is baked right into the founding of the modern state.  Democratic systems of government, after all, are designed to change slowly and deliberately, through separation of powers and checks and balances that ensure the passions of the day are tempered with wisdom before significant change occurs.

The business of government is truly normal science—a good day in Washington is a day in which absolutely nothing happens.  And for the most part, when it comes to the regulation of innovation, doing nothing is the best way to help.

Governments do best when they establish a healthy environment for entrepreneurs—avoiding taxation of emerging industries, establishing markets that function with minimal transaction costs, incentivizing long-term research and investment and encouraging self-regulation of dynamic industries.

Safe harbors, including a provision of U.S. law that protects online publishers from lawsuits over third party content, establish clear (or clearer) boundaries for acceptable behavior, reducing the risk of failure for new ventures.  A provision of California law that refuses to enforce most non-compete clauses allows talent to flow where it needs to go without undue friction, perhaps a key (but largely unsung) factor in the success of Silicon Valley over other high-tech geographies.

Governments do their worst when they try to intervene and micromanage fast-changing realities, especially when those realities are being shaped by technologies over which they have no experience or expertise.  For then they are fighting the Law of Disruption, asking technology to change at the pace of the modern bureaucratic state.  It’s a doomed combination, like keeping one foot on the dock and the other in a speedboat.

In the last few years, I’ve participated in dozens of hearings and meetings on Capitol Hill to talk about regulating “the Internet.”  There’s a bizarre and worrisome ritual at these meetings.  Elected officials begin the conversation by confessing they’ve never used the products and services they proceed to praise or condemn.  They feel obliged to act, they say, because they know their children are using them all the time.  Why do they take such pride in their ignorance?  And what are they really worried about?

The result isn’t surprising.  The last decade in particular is littered with failed efforts to “solve” problems of on-line life that regulators didn’t define or even understand in the first place.  At the federal, state, and international level, we have a body of worthless law aimed poorly at a range of early artifacts, including spam, spyware, identity theft, privacy, pornography, gambling, intellectual property, bullying, net neutrality.

Many of these issues turned quickly into other issues; some were solved by new technology, or by joint actions of users and providers.  Some got worse.

In every case, new laws and new regulations did nothing to help.  But they are hardly inert.  Laws and rules are fixed in time in ways that technology is not.  So even the best-intended laws can and increasingly do have unintended consequences later on, often exacerbating the very problem they intended to solve.

ECPA, a 1986 law on electronic surveillance, has never been updated, leaving most data stored in the cloud seizable without a warrant by law enforcement agents.  A statute aimed at protecting government computers from hackers has been warped to impose criminal sanctions for violating the terms of service of social networking sites.  Expect more, not fewer, of these perversions.

The Revolution Will be Tweeted

As growing resistance to today’s political institutions suggests, governments have yet to embrace the reality of technology-driven paradigm shifts.  Citizens and consumers alike are making their own rules, writing their own laws, and drafting their own constitutions for digital life.  Some are working constructively on the new; others are more focused on dismantling what they don’t like.
Elected officials would be wise to heed the lessons of history:  Don’t obsess over the speck of dust in your neighbor’s eye, when you have a log in your own.  Give evolving forms of governance the benefit of the doubt.  Embrace the change and the technology that’s causing it.  Or retire, quickly.


As economic, social, and political life migrates to the Internet, governments increasingly feel the gravitational pull to follow.  And there is a role for government in the information economy.

As our digital paradigm evolves, we’ll need wise leaders and sound law to preserve the order of digital society.  The sooner policymakers learn to stop fighting Moore’s Law and leverage their true assets, the more likely existing institutions of governance will find a meaningful place in the new reality.

That, in any case, is the common theme of the revolts and protests happening around the world this year.  Though they have different origins and different grievances, each manifests the Law of Disruption in its frustration with incremental change and unintended consequences.

The stakes are higher now than they were when I first coined the Law of Disruption.  In politics, unlike business, violent revolution is always a last resort for the wielders of killer apps.  That’s a feature we need to avoid as much as possible.

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"Occupy Wall Street": Lessons From and For the Class Struggle, Tahrir Square to Times Square in Over 1,500 Cities Worldwide!


Sunday, October 16, 2011

"Occupy Wall Street": Lessons From and For the Class Struggle, Tahrir Square to Times Square in Over 1,500 Cities Worldwide!

Wall Street Sign. Author: Ramy Majouji


by Art Carden Forbes

A consensus has emerged that there really isn’t a consensus view among the Occupy Wall Street crowd and its assorted offshoots. Occupy Wall Street represents a motley collection of the disaffected and disenchanted from across the political spectrum that is more than just a left-wing version of the Tea Party. From the coverage I’ve seen, the Occupiers make some important points about the apparently never-ending wars and distributive politics favoring the few at the expense of the many. They would do well to take a handful of lessons to heart so that they can channel their frustrations in a productive direction.

First, wealth is not prima facie evidence that wrong has been done. When it is allowed to work free from interference, commerce is a positive-sum game.  Look at some of the names on the Forbes 400. The Gateses and Waltons of the world didn’t get rich by stealing. They got rich by finding newer and better ways to make other people’s lives better—in short, by creating wealth. This isn’t to lionize the wealthy: no doubt, you will find skeletons in every closet and dirt under every rug if you look hard enough. By and large, though, it has been access to the institutions of commercial society rather than access to the institutions of political society that explains some of the vast fortunes about which so many of the Occupiers are so upset.

This raises a second important point originally made by Nobel Laureate Robert Lucas: economic growth, not redistribution, is what raises people out of poverty. If we’re serious about alleviating suffering, eating the rich is a spectacularly unwise course of action. As Lucas writes:

Of the tendencies that are harmful to sound economics, the most seductive, and in my opinion the most poisonous, is to focus on questions of distribution. In this very minute, a child is being born to an American family and another child, equally valued by God, is being born to a family in India. The resources of all kinds that will be at the disposal of this new American will be on the order of 15 times the resources available to his Indian brother. This seems to us a terrible wrong, justifying direct corrective action, and perhaps some actions of this kind can and should be taken. But of the vast increase in the well-being of hundreds of millions of people that has occurred in the 200-year course of the industrial revolution to date, virtually none of it can be attributed to the direct redistribution of resources from rich to poor. The potential for improving the lives of poor people by finding different ways of distributing current production is nothing compared to the apparently limitless potential of increasing production.
Third, a little consistency is in order if we’re going to talk about bailouts. So, for that matter, is a little frankness. Steven Horwitz points out the inconsistency in decrying bank bailouts for agitating for relief from the burden of student loans: “To complain about bank bailouts while also arguing, as some have, for student-loan debt forgiveness would suggest the problem is not that government shouldn’t bail out failed investments, only that it shouldn’t bail out failed investments by corporations.”



A lot of people are learning that describing their spending on higher education as “failed investments” is probably to err on the side of charitable interpretation. It might be more reasonable to say that attending an expensive school to earn a boutique degree with limited employment possibilities is consumption, not investment.

As Horwitz also notes, this should also make us reflect a bit on what it means to give “power to the people.” Suppose you have spent several years picking up a degree in a field where there are no jobs, and you find that the concatenation of the people’s voluntary choices in the marketplace means that your most attractive opportunities involve waiting tables or making lattes.

Why should you be upset? I modify here something that I first read on Duke University economist and political scientist Michael Munger’s blog. “Power to the people” is apparently all good and well until “the people” start making the wrong decisions. In that case, power will accrue to those who know what is really best for “the people.” There might be dissenters, sure, but you can’t make an omelet without breaking a few eggs.

Fourth, as Sheldon Richman explains, “Wall Street Couldn’t Have Done It Alone.” Malfeasance was enabled or encouraged by government. In his book The Housing Boom and Bust (which I review here) Thomas Sowell explains how today’s cause for protest and outrage–banks making loans people didn’t understand to help them buy houses they couldn’t afford–was yesterday’s policy objective.

While a lot of people envision a model of politics as a form of noble savagery that is corrupted by evil people who stubbornly refuse to play the game the “right” way, the kinds of intrigue that have the Occupiers (and the Tea Partiers) so exercised are (to borrow from Steven Horwitz again) features of political society, not bugs. As the economist Gordon Tullock has argued, what should puzzle us is not that politicians are for sale. What should puzzle us is that the supply side of the market for political favors is so competitive that favors can be had for such low prices.

In light of economic conditions, it isn’t surprising that people are angry. It’s important, though, that they be angry about the right things. Blaming “greed” is unhelpful; as economist Lawrence H. White has written, blaming “greed” for economic malaise is like blaming gravity for plane crashes. Reality is much more complex, and simple rage, no matter how well organized, isn’t likely to do us much good.

OccupyWallStreet
The resistance continues at Liberty Square

From Tahrir Square to Times Square: Protests Erupt in Over 1,500 Cities Worldwide

Posted Oct. 16, 2011, 1:08 a.m. EST by OccupyWallSt
Tens of Thousands in Streets of Times Square, NY

Tens of Thousands Flood the Streets of Global Financial Centers, Capitol Cities and Small Towns to "Occupy Together" Against Wall Street Mid-Town Manhattan Jammed as Marches Converge in Times Square

New York, NY -- After triumphing in a standoff with the city over the continued protest of Wall Street at Liberty Square in Manhattan's financial district, the Occupy Wall Street movement has spread world wide today with demonstrations in over 1,500 cities globally and over 100 US cities from coast to coast. In New York, thousands marched in various protests by trade unions, students, environmentalists, and community groups. As occupiers flocked to Washington Square Park, two dozen participants were arrested at a nearby Citibank while attempting to withdraw their accounts from the global banking giant.

"I am occupying Wall Street because it is my future, my generations' future, that is at stake," said Linnea Palmer Paton, 23, a student at New York University. "Inspired by the peaceful occupation of Tahrir Square in Cairo, tonight we are are coming together in Times Square to show the world that the power of the people is an unstoppable force of global change. Today, we are fighting back against the dictators of our country - the Wall Street banks - and we are winning."

New Yorkers congregated in assemblies organized by borough, and then flooded the subway system en mass to join the movement in Manhattan. A group calling itself Todo Boricua Para Wall Street marched as a Puerto Rican contingent of several hundred playing traditional music and waving the Lares flag, a symbol of resistance to colonial Spain. "Puerto Ricans are the 99% and we will continue to join our brothers and sisters in occupying Wall Street," said David Galarza Santa, a trade unionist from Sunset Park, Brooklyn. "We are here to stand with all Latinos, who are being scapegoated by the 1%, while it is the bankers who have caused this crisis and the banks who are breaking the law."

While the spotlight is on New York, "occupy" actions are also happening all across the Midwestern and the Southern United States, from Ashland, Kentucky to Dallas, Texas to Ketchum, Idaho. Four hundred Iowans marched in Des Moines, Iowa Saturday as part of the day of action:

"People are suffering here in Iowa. Family farmers are struggling, students face mounting debt and fewer good jobs, and household incomes are plummeting," said Judy Lonning a 69-year-old retired public school teacher. "We're not willing to keep suffering for Wall Street's sins. People here are waking up and realizing that we can't just go to the ballot box. We're building a movement to make our leaders listen."

Protests filled streets of financial districts from Berlin, to Athens, Auckland to Mumbai, Tokyo to Seoul. In the UK over 3,000 people attempted to occupy the London Stock Exchange. "The financial system benefits a handful of banks at the expense of everyday people," said Spyro Van Leemnen, a 27-year old public relations agent in London and a core member of the demonstrators. "The same people who are responsible for the recession are getting away with massive bonuses. This is fundamentally unfair and undemocratic."

In South Africa, about 80 people gathered at the Johannesburg Securities Exchange, Talk Radio 702 reported. Protests continued despite police efforts to declare the gathering illegal. In Taiwan, organizers drew several hundred demonstrators, who mostly sat quietly outside the Taipei World Financial Center, known as Taipei 101.

600 people have begun an occupation of Confederation Park in Ottawa, Canada today to join the global day of action. "I am here today to stand with Indigenous Peoples around the world who are resisting this corrupt global banking system that puts profits before human rights," said Ben Powless, Mohawk citizen and indigenous youth leader. "Native Peoples are the 99%, and we've been resisting the 1% since 1492. We're marching today for self- determination and dignity against a system that has robbed our lands, poisoned our waters, and oppressed our people for generations. Today we join with those in New York and around the world to say, No More!"

In Australia, about 800 people gathered in Sydney's central business district, carrying cardboard banners and chanting "Human need, not corporate greed." Protesters will camp indefinitely "to organize, discuss and build a movement for a different world, not run by the super-rich 1%," according to a statement on the Occupy Sydney website.

The movement's success is due in part to the use of online technologies and international social networking. The rapid spread of the protests is a grassroots response to the overwhelming inequalities perpetuated by the global financial system and transnational banks. More actions are expected in the coming weeks, and the Occupation of Liberty Square in Manhattan will continue indefinitely.

Occupy Wall Street is a people powered movement that began on September 17, 2011 in Liberty Square in Manhattan’s Financial District, and has spread to over 100 cities in the United States and actions in over 1,500 cities globally. #OWS is fighting back against the corrosive power of major banks and multinational corporations over the democratic process, and the role of Wall Street in creating an economic collapse that has caused the greatest recession in generations.The movement is inspired by popular uprisings in Egypt, Tunisia, Spain, Greece, Italy and the UK, and aims to expose how the richest 1% of people who are writing the rules of the global economy are imposing an agenda of neoliberalism and economic inequality that is foreclosing our future.

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Saturday, October 15, 2011

Changing the international monetary system

2007 $1 Washington coin reverse.


THINK ASIAN By ANDREW SHENG

ON Oct 5, 2011, the Triffin International Conference celebrated the 100th year of birth of Robert Triffin, a Belgian economist who was trained in Harvard, worked in the US Fed, taught in Yale and then returned to Europe to help work on European monetary integration.

He was of course famous for the Triffin Dilemma, defined as the inconsistency between the domestic needs of the reserve currency country and the external needs of the world that uses the reserve currency. Put in another way, Triffin identified that the reserve currency country would have to run a current account deficit in order to provide the world with greater liquidity.

Over the long term, running cumulative current account deficits becomes a large debt overhang that is called the Global Imbalance.

Triffin wrote about the Dilemma in the late 1960s, when the United States was struggling whether to maintain its peg to gold, which it abandoned in 1971. This removed the anchor of the Bretton Woods system of fixed exchange rates, which had been in existence since 1947.

The succeeding Bretton Woods II, or non-system as some critics call it, has become a system of flexible exchange rates, plagued by financial crises every decade in the 1980s (Latin America), 1990s (Mexico and East Asia), 2007-9 (US subprime) and today, the European debt crisis.

Today, there is sufficient awareness that the shift from a unipolar world to a multipolar global financial system carries with it great risks and unknowns. The unipolar world of dominance by the US dollar had a lot of advantages, as long as the US remained the unchallenged hegemonic power. The US dollar became not only the standard unit of account for global trade, but also the deepest and most liquid market and an important store of value.

The price of oil, gold and other important commodities are all measured in US dollars. The US Treasuries market is the most liquid and efficient clearing system, which is one fundamental reason why the dollar remains superior to the euro, which does not have a single eurobond market, being divided into different national (German, French, etc) bond markets.



According to the BIS (Bank for International Settlements) April 2010 survey data, the US dollar today still accounts for 85% of global foreign exchange trading, compared with 39% for the euro, 19% for yen and 13% for sterling (because FX transactions are paired, total turnover sums up to 200%). By contrast, the Hong Kong dollar accounts for only 2.4% and the yuan 0.9% of turnover.

Because of its dominance in international trade and payments, the US dollar still accounts for nearly two thirds of total foreign exchange reserves. China alone reputedly holds roughly US$2 trillion in US dollar assets in the foreign exchange reserves and holdings by Chinese banks and state-owned enterprises.

In 2009, People's Bank of China Governor Zhou Xiaochuan called for the use of the SDRs (International Monetary Fund's Special Drawing Rights) as a possible global reserve currency. The logic for a globally issued reserve currency as opposed to a nationally issued reserve currency is impeccable. Nationally issued reserve currencies are subject to the Triffin Dilemma, because countries, however strong, will sooner or later go into deficit.

In other words, the whole global financial system is stable when the national reserve currency country is strong, but it will go into crisis, when the national reserve currency country goes into crisis. This is the current state of affairs.

The four reserve currency countries (US, euro area, Britain and Japan) accounting for just under 60% of world GDP are all in deep trouble. The US is running a current account deficit in excess of 3% of GDP and a fiscal deficit over 9% of GDP in 2011. At the end of 2010, the US had a gross foreign liability of US$22.8 trillion or 157% of GDP. Thank goodness that most of the debt is in US dollars, so that it can devalue its way out of debt.

The euro area as a whole has a smaller current account deficit of 0.5% of GDP, but if you look deeper, there are deep imbalances within the eurozone. Germany, the Netherlands and a few are in surplus, whereas the smaller countries like Greece, Portugal, Ireland and Spain all have net foreign liabilities exceeding 50% of GDP, an indicator of crisis using the Asian crisis experience as rule of thumb.

Britain has a fiscal deficit of 8.8% of GDP and gross debt of 81% of GDP. Its one advantage relative to the Euro is that it can devalue its way out of debt.

Japan, on the other hand, has a net foreign surplus of 50% of GDP, being a major net lender to the rest of world, since it runs a current account surplus of 2.3% of GDP. Its vulnerability is, however, its large domestic gross debt of 220% of GDP, growing larger every year with fiscal current account deficit of 8.3% of GDP in 2011. This means that the domestic debt is vulnerable to bubble implosion, because if interest rate rises, the debt becomes unsustainable.

In sum, the reserve currency countries are in a double trap. They have to run loose monetary policy to keep interest rates low, so that their fiscal debt will not run out of control. But their central banks also know that exceptionally low interest rates are distorting not only global financial markets, they also have very distortive impact on their domestic resource allocation.

This is the liquidity debt trap that Japan got into in 1990 when its asset market bubble burst following the sharp rise in the yen exchange rate. Japanese GDP growth never fully recovered after that. Reserve country status has not been a privilege, but a curse.

The emerging markets are struggling because the present international monetary system has become unstable and unsustainable. How should this essentially unipolar system be reformed to a multi-polar system where yuan plays a role will be the subject of the next column.

l Tan Sri Andrew Sheng is president of the Fung Global Institute.

Malay Politics Playing a Different Tune!

Siti NurhalizaCover of Siti Nurhaliza


Politics playing a different tune

ANALYSIS By JOCELINE TAN

Malay politics is very personality-driven but it is also becoming celebrity-driven and the trend has caught on as both Umno and PAS vie to attract glamorous names to their side.

SOME people imagine that election fever is about to descend on us but for political parties hoping to cover new ground, it has been a case of celebrity fever.

Umno Youth’s latest celebrity connection is via pony-tailed Malay rocker Awie.

Awie and several other entertainment personalities have come onboard Umno Youth chief Khairy
Jamaluddin’s latest brainchild – a sort of Justin Bieber-inspired music talent show where aspiring artistes upload their performances on the Internet.

The established artistes will then pick through the videos and the finalists will vie for the top spot at a finale at the Umno PWTC headquarters.

Khairy described it as a new approach to source for talents in music.

But who is he kidding? It is Umno Youth’s latest attempt to get the attention of the young and it is a pretty cool idea. And if all goes well, Khairy should get the prize for most original idea by a political party to get Generation Y’s attention.



Umno Youth’s effort is a value-added response to Bob Lokman joining PAS in February.

Bob does not have the rocker appeal of Awie but he was famous in the Malay entertainment scene and his grandfather was the revered Tok Kenali of Kelantan.

He acted in a variety of movies including as an ustaz. He had a popular series called Taxi Tunai and his last major showbiz appearance was as a jury in the reality show Raja Lawak. He is also the composer of mega-hit Isabella, made famous by Search.

But Bob, now 47, has walked away from all that and is making waves as a crowd-puller at PAS ceramah. He has helped to modernise the party’s image among the Malay middle ground.

His physical appearance has become more PAS than even the long-time PAS members. He is rarely seen without his white kopiah and now sports a bushy and wiry black beard.

Bob, whose real name is Mohd Hakim Lokman, has been used as the “opening act” at PAS ceramah all over the country. There is no denying his impact.

He is said to have gone through some family crisis and his talks often start with an account of how religion gave him a new lease in life, and how PAS has met his spiritual needs.

PAS considers him such a big catch that he is featured alongside Datuk Nik Aziz Nik Mat on banners.
PAS has come a long way since the day s when it frowned upon music at its functions.

Earlier this week, Bob was hauled up by the Selangor Islamic Religious Department (Jais) for giving a religious talk in a mosque in Hulu Langat without tauliah (accreditation).

Jais does not care whether the speaker is a famous mufti or a celebrity; it is very strict about people from outside the state preaching without tauliah.

Umno Youth’s celebrity hook-up is somewhat different. It is borrowing on the fame of Awie while drawing in the younger cohorts through music and entertainment and via a channel that has become such an integral part of young lives – the Internet.

“It’s a way to attract young and first time voters.

“Young Malays have different aspirations; they are not keen on politics or serious issues, let alone ideology. Music and showcasing people like Awie will help us tap into this group,” says Pasir Salak politician Dr Faizal Tajuddin.

Many celebrities are actually quite wary of being associated with any particular political party. The Malay consumer market is not as extensive as, say, Indonesia; and if the supporters of one party reject you, it could take a huge chunk out of one’s marketability.

However, says Dr Faizal, some of entertainment’s biggest names have no qualms about being associated with Umno.

Film maker Tan Sri Jins Shamsud­din is a Barisan Nasional senator, crooner Jamal Abdillah signed on with Umno recently and songbird Datuk Siti Nurhaliza has performed at Umno gatherings.

Bob is not the first rocker to associate with PAS. Before him, there was the long-haired rocker Akhil Hayy, whom PAS people called the “ustaz rocker”.

But his appearances at PAS events dwindled off after he divorced his first wife to marry another celebrity, Wahida.

Malay politics, already personality-driven, is also becoming celebrity-driven.

Observers of subcontinental In­­dian politics say it is hardly new. Some of India’s most successful politicians were movie stars, such as the late MGR and former leading lady Jayalalita, who is currently the Chief Minister of Tamil Nadu.

The White House had Ronald Reagan and California had the Terminator Arnold Schwarzenegger. And who can forget former Philip­pines president Joseph “Erap” Estrada, whose politics was more colourful than his acting career.

The day when a Malaysian artiste makes it big in politics may not be too far away, and as one cynical journalist put it: “After they become politicians, they can continue to entertain us with their antics.”

Can politicians also make the transition into acting? Why not? So many of them are already such good actors.
But the reality is that most politicians are actually quite staid and serious.

Otherwise political parties would not be trying to attract artistes and entertainers to add glamour and glitz to their agenda.

Friday, October 14, 2011

The 1911 Xinhai Revolution, a defining moment for China


Midweek By Bunn Nagara

The 1911 Xinhai Revolution’s 100th anniversary, more than any other event in China’s long history, marks its modern coming of age.

GIVEN their shared history of war, few events marked by both Beijing and Taipei are happy occasions with common aspirations.

The 1911 Xinhai Revolution and its anniversaries are perhaps the greatest of these exceptions.



The 100th anniversary of this historical event, marked on Monday, shows the mainland and the outlying island at their closest point politically.

Chinese on both sides of the Taiwan Straits hail the Xinhai Revolution for throwing off 2,000 years of oppressive dynastic rule. The event 100 years ago practically created modern China.

In contrast, the 1949 communist revolution is only 62 years old, and merely characterised contemporary China.

Characterisations of a nation, particularly of a large country with a rich history and culture, tend to be more limited in scope and impact.

Besides, the birth of Mao Zedong’s communist movement is celebrated only on the mainland, and even then by a diminishing circle of the party faithful.

It is almost universally rued in Taiwan.

The Xinhai Revolution however, as a defining moment for the Chinese nation, has also become a unifying factor for Chinese history and culture.

Its 100th anniversary in particular shows the event to be the biggest political occasion for both sides of the straits, while acting as a bridge between them.

It also serves as fertile ground for nurturing modern Chinese nationalism. This year’s anniversary pays great tribute to Dr Sun Yat-sen, a leading pioneer of the Xinhai Revolution.



Beijing stressed two key goals for the Chinese nation: rejuvenation and reunification. President Hu Jintao traced the pursuit of national rejuvenation to Dr Sun’s struggle, while his emphasis on peaceful reunification drew from an aspect of China’s “peaceful rise”.



In swift response, Taiwan’s President Ma Ying-jeou identified the Xinhai Revolution as the common heritage of Chinese on both sides of the straits.

Besides endorsing Hu’s call for more cooperation to ensure peace and development, Ma also touched on the common concern that no party should disrupt the status quo.

This accords with Beijing’s two major priorities: that both sides abide by the “1992 consensus”, and that there should be no “Taiwan independence”. These themes are well accepted in Taipei.

Ma’s presidency over the past three years has seen steadily improving relations across the straits. His Kuomintang party is nationalistic, which gels with the mainland’s current tendencies.

Communist ideology is a “product” with declining popularity on the mainland, particularly as a capitalist-based economy continues to make giant strides.

It is a “sunset industry” despite the best efforts of the Communist Party of China, and few others know it better than party leaders themselves.

Hu and his colleagues, more as national than party leaders, realise that the structural integrity of the nation is an even greater priority than the viability of the party.

The main priorities are therefore political stability and national unity, whether this means reviewing some traditional controls or asserting a firmer grip on specific issues.

This has meant party hardliners like former premier Li Peng receding into the background, in terms of both public visibility and government posts.

It also means that leadership style has changed in the context of modernisation.

Deng Xiaoping was a landmark leader who ushered in a new, pragmatic, post-Mao China.

Then post-Deng, China no longer has any charismatic, ideologically domineering “paramount leader”.

Chinese leaders today are professional technocrats tasked with national administration.

Former president Jiang Zemin and former prime minister Zhu Rongji were both engineers, the latter with a good practical knowledge of economics.

Current President Hu and Prime Minister Wen Jiabao are also both engineers, the latter with a working knowledge of geology.

Their successors, respectively Xi Jinping and Li Keqiang, are a chemical engineer and a lawyer-economist.

Next year’s succession also makes the 100th anniversary more significant.

That is why Jiang has appeared publicly with Hu at this week’s anniversary, to emphasise a sense of continuity.

In politics as in cross-straits relations in particular, continuity is crucial because it signifies stability and growth.

They are both cause and effect of improving ties between Beijing and Taipei.

Thursday, October 13, 2011

Startup Lets You Save and Share Parts of Web Pages



No need to copy and pasteClipboard employs advanced Web technology to let users save the part of a page they want.
A graphical despiction of a very simple html d...
The Web may make it easy to communicate with people thousands of miles away and put libraries full of knowledge at our fingertips, but plenty of simple things are still surprisingly hard to do online. Take saving a piece of a Web page. That specific task is trickier than it sounds. A startup called Clipboard is building a simple solution using some rather sophisticated Web technologies.

Clipboard allows users to select and store pieces of Web pages in a cloud-based account. Users can comment on items, tag them, and search them. The site allows people to keep clippings private, share them with specific people, or offer them to the public. The new site has been in stealth mode until today, but it's now opening up for a private beta test (readers of Technology Review are invited to participate and can sign up here).

The site's founder is Gary Flake, who previously founded Microsoft's Live Labs, Yahoo Research, and Overture Research. Flake says that Clipboard grew out of his own needs. He couldn't find a satisfying way to save and share information he found while searching the Web. In fact, he describes a laborious process that will sound familiar to many Internet users: After finding something interesting online, he says, he would highlight it, hit control-C, open a word processor or e-mail program, paste the content in, and save or send it. "That's the state of the art for saving things on the Web," Flake says. "For me, there was a huge void waiting to be filled."



Of course, plenty of existing services let people save and share things they find online. People often post links to social networks such as Facebook, Tumblr, and Twitter, or to dedicated bookmark sites such as the newly revived Delicious. Services such as Evernote allow people to build up a digital memory cache loaded with notes, photos, and saved information from websites.

But when he went through what's already out there, Flake says, he couldn't find anything that met all of his requirements. He wanted to save items from the Web in a form that preserves the way they look, so that he can benefit from his visual memory of the page. He wanted the clips to continue to work—links should function and video should play. Finally, he wanted the things he saved to be portable, stored in the cloud, and easy to put there from a browser on any computer.

Flake describes Clipboard as a Web service that sits on top of the Web pages open in the browser. To use it, a person installs a bookmarklet in the browser. However, clicking the button doesn't take the user to a new Web page—it launches Clipboard's lightweight JavaScript application. When running, the application lets a user select portions of an open Web page. It then runs an extraction algorithm that analyzes the page and figures out how to write HTML and CSS that will re-create what the user selected.

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Wednesday, October 12, 2011

A 10-step plan to improve inefficient civil service in Malaysia!


A 10-step plan to excellence

Question Time By P. GUNASEGARAM

Cutting the numbers, raising salaries of good employees and emphasis on efficiency are some of the keys to improve the civil service.
FF14:  Civil Service
COMPARISONS with other countries indicate that we have too many civil servants for the population (about 25 million). Some 1.3 million civil servants, together with retirees, accounted for nearly two-fifths of the Federal Government’s operating expenditure last year of over RM150bil.

A bloated civil service not only sends the wrong message by keeping too many people unoccupied, it also leads to a considerable waste of government revenues and needlessly high expenditures which could have been better utilised elsewhere.

There are two sides to a large, inefficient civil service. As the numbers come down, you need to increase the rewards to retain the better people and improve the quality of entrants.

For illustration, if you cut the number of people in service by 50% and increase salaries by 50%, you actually save 25% in costs.

That may be too drastic a cut even for the civil service but a target to reduce it by a third over five years by natural attrition, getting rid of incompetent, lazy staff and very selective and prudent hiring is possible.

To encourage people to stay in the service and to recruit new, more able people, the salaries can potentially be raised by a third over five years.

Despite the salary increase, there will still be savings in costs of about 11% – if you don’t believe me, you can work it out yourself.

Remember too that the one-third salary increase need not be – indeed should not be – across the board.

It should be tweaked to give good ones better increases and bad ones smaller or no salary increases at all.
But this needs to be done under a clearly specified framework to prevent abuse.

As with many other institutions, the civil service has become highly politicised and some top civil servants have taken after the image of their political masters, demanding special treatment, special privileges and keeping their noses in the air.

They have come to consider themselves a law unto themselves and not only neglect the rakyat who they are supposed to serve but treat them with contempt, disdain and disrespect, leading to an outpouring of complaints against them, which they coolly ignore.

That attitude needs an about-turn.

It is therefore very timely that the Budget is now addressing some issues surrounding the civil service, including a mechanism to remove non-performers in the civil service. Hopefully, something will come out of that.



Meantime, here’s a list of 10 things which are imperative for change in the civil service and a move towards excellence.

1. Eliminate corruption and patronage. As has been pointed out, delays are in themselves a cause for corruption because people will seek to use nefarious means to avoid them, such as pay to put a file on top of the pile. While efficiency builds up, it is necessary to take a strong stand against any kind of corruption and patronage at all levels. The best way to do this is to issue a stern warning and take action against anyone found to be flouting the rules.

2. Recruit, reward and retain the best. You can’t have an excellent civil service without excellent people. You must recruit the best people, give them the right rewards and incentives and do your best to retain them by giving them more responsibilities, promoting them and giving them incentives.

3. Make service the aim. Considering the shabby treatment that many Malaysians receive at government departments, including the police, it is clear that the concept of service is alien to many civil servants. They exist for the public, not the other way around, and their assessment must include how well they satisfy the public in the performance of their service. This leads us naturally to our next point.

4. Encourage and act on public feedback. All counters which deal with the public must have ready feedback for public complaints. If a member of the public feels he has been badly treated, he must be given the immediate right to speak to a superior and make a complaint on the spot. Video cameras can be installed to help obtain the actual sequence of events. Superiors must act on public feedback and if a civil servant treats badly a member of the public, he must be punished.

5. Make it Malaysian. The statistics indicate that before 1970, the civil service was more Malaysian in that it better reflected the racial composition of the country compared to now when an estimated 80% or more of civil servants are bumiputras. This often leads to allegations of bias and a civil service that is not always sensitive to the needs of different races and cultures. Efforts should be made to recruit more non-bumiputras into all areas of the civil service. With an accompanying improvement in salary and benefits, it should not be a problem.

6. Use measurable standards. For performance appraisal, it is always good to use a measurable goal such as number of people seen in a day for a counter service, or number of projects approved. The goals will be different for different departments and for different levels within the same department but an effort should be made to quantify effort, even if work also has to be assessed qualitatively. The important thing is to keep any kind of bias out.

7. Reward good work. For any organisation to be vibrant and vital, it is important that good people are rewarded by offering them better increments, promotions and being put on the fast track for movement up the organisational ladder. That helps to ensure that as they progress, there will be increasingly better people at the top.

8. Punish poor work. The first part in dealing with poor work is to try and remedy the situation by pulling up the person, helping him, and giving him the means, the time and help necessary to do the job properly. If this does not get improvement, then it is necessary to reflect this in his benefits, clearly explaining what he will have to do to get back on the growth path. Sometimes even this fails, which leads us to the next point.

9. Get rid of deadwood and incompetence. If sufficient effort has been made to rehabilitate a worker and if that still fails, then the Government has no choice but to sack the worker. Clear procedures must be put in place so that there is no discrimination and that all inquiries are properly conducted before dismissal.

10. Keep political interference out. Sometimes, it is the politician who keeps the civil servant from performing his job. Politicians should set policy with input from the civil service and in the process they must have respect for the expertise developed within the service. Once policy is set, they must allow the civil service to implement it without hindrance, only interfering if the civil service baulks at implementing policy.

Few countries have become world class without an excellent and efficient civil service to support the transformation. If we don’t elevate our civil service significantly to much higher standards, we are all going to be losers.

> Managing editor P. Gunasegaram loves how he can renew his passport in just one hour, a clear indication that the civil service can perform.

Tuesday, October 11, 2011

Learning from Steve Jobs: from Garage to World Power!


Learning from Steve Jobs

Ceritalah by KARIM RASLAN

Before we can start talking about the need for innovation or speak of the need to create geniuses, we have to learn that creativity and innovation are first and foremost cultural phenomena.

STEVE Jobs is dead. Apple’s co-founder did more than anyone – and this includes his arch-rival Microsoft’s Bill Gates – to make computing manageable for everyone. Indeed, even my seventy-something mother owns a well-used iPad2.

Jobs’ brilliance lay in his ability to look at technology from the viewpoint of the user, stripping down the complexity and jargon until a machine became a tool in the hand of the user.

He asked straight forward but critical questions: what do consumers want and need? How can I meet these demands?

Instead of producing computers that flaunt their sophistication, Jobs made his devices ever more accessible and simple.

Apple products were the perfect marriage of form and function. They were sleek, intuitive and useful – objects that we enjoy touching and holding so much so that we develop a strange emotional link with them.

In order to achieve this aim, Jobs also upended the way we’ve traditionally thought of music, books and films – freeing them from their analogue formats. He discarded the old-fashioned ways of receiving entertainment and placed his products – the iPod, the iPhone and iPad at the heart of future solutions.

His success was prodigious and extraordinary. At one stage last year, Apple briefly eclipsed ExxonMobil in terms of market capitalisation.



Indeed, it’s estimated that well over 100 million iPhones and 25 million iPads have been sold to date. That the Indian government, on the day he died, rolled out its own tablet computer, called the Aakash (or “Sky”) is a greater tribute than the legions of obituaries.

The global outpouring of grief on Jobs’ death is hence a measure of the man’s reach even in death. It’s also a testament to his iconoclastic style as well as his breath-taking ability to think unconventionally.

Furthermore, Jobs executed his ideas with flamboyance and flair, disregarding the consequences as his various inspirational ideas wrought havoc with long established industries.

Standing back from the man’s achievements, it’s hard to deny that all entrepreneurs have a little bit of Steve Jobs in them.

They all possess a modicum of his verve, dynamism and, yes, madness. Wouldn’t they have become bank managers or civil servants otherwise?

However, we can’t deny the element of luck either: had Jobs died in the 90s, he would probably have been consigned to history’s footnotes, yet another businessman ousted from a company he had founded.

Also, as the son of a Syrian emigrant, Jobs was lucky he was born in America, where the opportunities to succeed were more pronounced than anywhere else.

Indeed, it’s hard to see where else a college dropout could turn a company that he started in his parent’s garage into a multinational with a market capitalisation of US$222.12bil (RM694.78bil).



This is not to say he was some kind of secular saint. His paranoia and abuse of friends and subordinates alike were well-documented. Neither was he a flag-waving patriot either.

Unlike Henry Ford, most of Apple’s products were contracted out to East Asian manufacturers, particularly China, where allegations of sweatshop labour and poor working conditions continue to haunt the tech-giant even today.

Nevertheless, no one can deny that Jobs displayed the individualism and entrepreneurial spirit that are the hallmarks of the American character.

Indeed, if we shift the discussion from Jobs to the idea of entrepreneurialism, we have to acknowledge that we are all shaped by the environment we are born into.

We can separate ourselves from the world that surrounds us on our birth.

So as we start talking about the need for “innovation” in Malaysia’s economy or speak piously of the need to “create” geniuses we have to address the national condition.

Let me ask a question then: what if Steve Jobs were born in Malaysia? Could he have reached the same dizzying heights or would he have been consigned, like so many others, to dead-end jobs.

Alternatively, would he have directed his prodigious talents to chasing after government contracts? I’m not joking.

If Malaysia is to compete in the future, we have got to learn that creativity and innovation are first and foremost cultural phenomena. These are things that you cannot pay for or legislate into existence.

Creativity cannot thrive in an environment where the balance between risk and reward is skewered. Can we truly say we’re allowing people to reach their fullest potential when our obsessions with race and religion are so dominant?

Innovation in Malaysia is hampered by our Government’s constant interventions: protecting and bailing-out businesses and individuals that ought to have gone bust ages ago.

There’s absolutely no incentive for people to think unconventionally if the most important criteria for creating wealth is your “know who” rather than “know how”.

How many Malaysian Jobs’ or Gates’ or Zuckerberg’s have we smothered because they lacked connections or were born in the “wrong” community?

Prime Minister Datuk Seri Najib Tun Razak has declared 2012 to be the “National Innovation Move­ment” year, but it won’t count for much unless we start really rewarding hard work and genius rather than mediocrity or mindless conformity.

Related Posts:

Internet Mourns Steve Jobs' Death: From garage to world power, Life and times!
Steve Jobs' Legacy To Democracy
Apple’s Iconic Steve Jobs passes on