Ho Ching, the Executive Director of
Temasek Holdings, and the wife of Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong, wrote the
following on her FB profile, on the 07th September 2015:
“Ever wondered how SG remains a top-rated
triple-A credit country? There are only
about a dozen triple-A rated countries around the world. Amongst these, SG is the only one in Asia,
and also a rare one with no oil or natural resources, unlike Norway, Australia
or Canada. So how did SG do it?
One key reason is the strict financial
discipline and prudent saving for the future in government budgeting and
spending. Few remember that when the PAP
won their elections to form our first self-government in 1959, they inherited a
budget which was in deficit and the year was about half over. Together, the new government cut government
salaries and allowances, including their own, shelved projects in the remaining
few months, and managed to close the year in a small surplus. Such was their determination not to be owing
money, or borrowing money to spend, right from the start.
This set the tone for subsequent Singapore
governments to always live within their means and never spend wastefully or
frivolously. When PM Lee Kuan Yew was
preparing to pass the baton some 25 years ago, he worried that future
governments may not be as disciplined or financially careful. And so the Singapore Constitution was amended
in 1991 to require each successive government to live within its means,
spending only what they have earned during their term of office. Past reserves saved up by previous
generations and governments before the most recent general elections are to be
locked up. Any spending from such past
reserves would be subject to the approval of the Singapore President.
Do you know we also lock up proceeds from
land sales as past reserves? Land is not
only limited in the islands of Singapore, barely bigger than Lake Tahoe in
California, land is also our common heritage asset and inheritance, belonging
to past, present and future generations of Singaporeans.
Most, if not all, other governments in the
world treat land sale proceeds as revenues to be spent. These include island economies like Hong Kong,
as well as larger countries with large land mass. The IMF also treats land sales as part of government
revenue for spending.
We, in Singapore, treat land sale monies
like some prudent countries treat their oil revenues - a heritage asset
transformed from one physical form (oil or, in Singapore’s case, land) to a
financial form (funds), and save them up in their sovereign wealth funds. But should we completely lock up our past
reserves and not use them at all?
This is like grandpa saving in a long-term
savings and investment account and protecting the original amount and any
interest for his grandchildren. And now
the kids are deciding whether to also save all of the current interests earned
and keep that for their own grandchildren yet unborn, or to spend part of the
current year's interest earned, and use that for present spending for
themselves and their parents or children each year.
Under the Singapore Constitution, up to
half of the returns from investing past reserves may be used for current
government spending. This would include
interests earned from investing in bonds.
In other words, we lock up the principal amount of past reserves,
including from land sales, and try to continue saving part of the investment
returns for future generations, and spend a part of the earnings and returns
for the present generation. This is a
way to have a fair sharing between generations, past, present and future, from
the hard-earned reserves.
MAS, GIC and Temasek too, as three of the
key financial institutions of Singapore, were also required under the same 1991
Constitution amendment to each protect its own past reserves. MAS, GIC and Temasek are key contributors to
the Singapore government budget through the returns earned on our
investments. Last year, the returns from
these financial institutions and other investments, such as interest from
bonds, totalled S$8.6 billion.
This helped to fund the S$8 billion put
aside for Pioneer Generation Package announced by the Singapore government the
previous year. This Pioneer Generation
package will cover healthcare benefits for our Pioneers for the rest of their
lives. It is very fitting that the returns from
past savings and reserves are used this way to provide for our Pioneer
Generation. It also gives meaning to
those of us working in these institutions, past and present, as well as future.”
This was touted in the news as Ho Ching
explaining where all the money goes. No,
Ho Ching did not explain where all the money goes. What she did was explain their accounting
system and how they treated revenue.
There is nothing here about the nature and performance of assets and
investments. We do not know where the
money actually is. So, how do we know
the returns and performance of the funds and underlying assets? This is not the answer we are looking for,
since we are asking a different series of questions. What we should want to see is the balance
sheet. The accounts of the Norwegian
sovereign wealth fund, for example, are transparent. Our
two sovereign wealth funds are not. As such, I remain
sceptical.
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