- yellow knifeTop contributor
- Posts : 6980
Join date : 2014-03-27
Re: Malaysia : The failure we copy
Had Sri Lanka braved to construct highways in 1970s?
Malaysia the Muslim majority country developed separate Casino den Genting Highland in 1969.
Had Sri Lanka reclaimed sea and developed Port City for Casinos in 1969?
At least do we understand the difference now?
=================================
Anyway next study will be on What went wrong with Mahathir and why SL followed and following the same model.
- HUNTERTop contributor
- Posts : 1935
Join date : 2014-07-14
Re: Malaysia : The failure we copy
BTW:
I've heard in Sri Lanka, before 1978, there were some efforts to initiate manufacturing; for example, steel corporation, paper, and other state initiatives.... and some medium scale private manufacturers.
And I've heard mr. Upali W. tried to manufacture cars also here (I guess Upali FIAT).
I still can remember some radios made by 'Upali' (Unic or some similar name).
So I guess there were initiative here but something went wrong big way.
Most of the people put the blame on H.E. JRJ.
- yellow knifeTop contributor
- Posts : 6980
Join date : 2014-03-27
Re: Malaysia : The failure we copy
i personally dont like to find a scapegoat for all our own failures.. So JRJ is not the scapegoat.. Even if so what are we doing now instead of correcting the failures..
Again one common character between General Park Chun Hee (South Korea) and Deng Xia Openg ( China) is both were military leaders leading their platoons in massive war operations. War Victorians know one thing... when you take the reins you cannot blame for past mistakes done by anyone.. So during their state rule they never blamed anyone for past actions but steered the country forward from where they started.
We may talk about past of SL just to study.
Since you talked about Upali Wijewardena I agree with you and I even mentioned his name when I talk abut Ananda Krishnan . Yes Upali was into manufacturing. He really manufactured Upali Fiat, Unic TVs, Radios and Tingle soap.
Since you are interested in Sri Lankan manufacturing I would mention now that Anagarika Darmapla wanted SL to become a manufacturing nation. I really wanted to have a study on Upali Wijewardena and Anagarika Darmapla at the end.
For the time being I will leave you a nice research book which talk about Anagarika Darmapla
" ENTERPRISE SUPPORT SYSTEM'
-An International Perspective
-by Mathew J manimala
Jay Mitra
Varsha Sing
If you can refer Page 46 on wards you will find the effort done by Anagarika Darmapla on making SL a manufacturing nation.
Sorry to say at the moment University Dons specially at Colombo Campus are NGO beggars who research on male chauvinism, ethnocentrism, Micro Finance and other feminine works...
At the same time I am really happy to mention that Dr. Travis Perera of PIM is a researcher on SL entrepreneurs and no wonder that's his article which I recommend to read from above book.
EVERYONE BLAMES SOMEBODY WHEN NOBODY DOES
-Mirror Business
Page 4
(15 Oct 2016)
- yellow knifeTop contributor
- Posts : 6980
Join date : 2014-03-27
Re: Malaysia : The failure we copy
" I decided to adopt Japanese and Korean strategies and methods for developing Malaysia" But what he did was completely different.
Born and raised in Alor Setar, Kedah, Mahathir excelled at school and became a medical doctor. He became active in the United Malays National Organisation (UMNO), Malaysia's largest political party, before entering Parliament in 1964. He served one term before losing his seat, subsequently falling out with the then Prime Minister,[1] Tunku Abdul Rahman and being expelled from UMNO. When Abdul Rahman resigned, Mahathir re-entered UMNO and Parliament, and was promoted to the Cabinet. By 1976 he had risen to Deputy Prime Minister, and in 1981 was sworn in as Prime Minister after the resignation of his predecessor, Hussein Onn.
Born and raised in Alor Setar, Kedah, Mahathir excelled at school and became a medical doctor. He became active in the United Malays National Organisation (UMNO), Malaysia's largest political party, before entering Parliament in 1964. He served one term before losing his seat, subsequently falling out with the then Prime Minister,[1] Tunku Abdul Rahman and being expelled from UMNO. When Abdul Rahman resigned, Mahathir re-entered UMNO and Parliament, and was promoted to the Cabinet. By 1976 he had risen to Deputy Prime Minister, and in 1981 was sworn in as Prime Minister after the resignation of his predecessor, Hussein Onn.
- yellow knifeTop contributor
- Posts : 6980
Join date : 2014-03-27
Re: Malaysia : The failure we copy
This happened to Mahathir Bin Mohamed who had genuine interest in developing his country. He read Kenichi Ohamae's The Border-less World which preach the merits of globalization and allowing globalization.
He asked his underlings to read the same book.
Mahathir found hismelf a new and influential friend in the McKinsey management consultant, the futurologist adn author Kenichi Ohmae.Although Japanese, Ohmae was a vehement critic of old-school dirgiste Japan, he looked forward to a globalized world in which national identity would be unimportant. Open Markets provide equal opportunity. This sanguine outlook was an early conceptualization of the view now associated with Thomas Friedmans 2005 book The World is Flat.
Despite its being entirely at odds with the industrial polices that made Japan rich.
Mahathir's honest belief on Ohmae and his book was such he forced all around him to read the book and Asmat Kamaludin, woh became the top bureaucrat at Malaysia's Ministry of International Trade and Industry in that period , recalls " You felt safe if you were walking around with that book. "
- yellow knifeTop contributor
- Posts : 6980
Join date : 2014-03-27
Re: Malaysia : The failure we copy
- yellow knifeTop contributor
- Posts : 6980
Join date : 2014-03-27
Re: Malaysia : The failure we copy
Germans had two thesis to select. Either Marx or List. Germans selected List. In return they became a great Industrialized nation. Japan copied them.
South Korea copied from German and Japan.
Malaysia asked from Japan and Korea to develop them.
Fredric List never believed in laissez-faire or let things happen alone.
- yellow knifeTop contributor
- Posts : 6980
Join date : 2014-03-27
Re: Malaysia : The failure we copy
- yellow knifeTop contributor
- Posts : 6980
Join date : 2014-03-27
Re: Malaysia : The failure we copy
- yellow knifeTop contributor
- Posts : 6980
Join date : 2014-03-27
Re: Malaysia : The failure we copy
Following is the factory layout of POSCO, the South Korean steel factory.
The location is almost in a harbour and factory is U shaped where raw materials and end products can be met with shipping requirements from different ends.
This shows that from the inception factory is designed to export.
- yellow knifeTop contributor
- Posts : 6980
Join date : 2014-03-27
Re: Malaysia : The failure we copy
From the inception factory is not designed to export.
- HUNTERTop contributor
- Posts : 1935
Join date : 2014-07-14
Re: Malaysia : The failure we copy
Thanks a lot for your book titles. I am in to reading most of them though couldn't locate the one by Mathew J manimala which oncludes about Anagarika Dharmapala.
Friedrich List's seems to be interesting. Apparently, Sri Lanka also have had similar thinkers that time but the thinking process han't created a trend due to some reasons. You may remember the poem
'...අලුත් අලුත් දෑ නොතනන ජාතිය ලොව නොනගී....'
- yellow knifeTop contributor
- Posts : 6980
Join date : 2014-03-27
Re: Malaysia : The failure we copy
If you happen to give gifts to small children give them tool kits with toys to remove piece by piece and to assemble them back.. even less value mobile phones are ideal...
For the matured people ask them to read books on Japan, Germany, and South Korea..
We'll take child steps towards a different SL
- yellow knifeTop contributor
- Posts : 6980
Join date : 2014-03-27
Re: Malaysia : The failure we copy
The University educated head master's son knew that, in order to compete, Malaysia had to engage in industrial learning, but he failed to organize the process anything like as effectively as the peasant-born Park Chung Hee. When Mahathir stepped down in 2003 Malaysias GNI per capita was no longer the same as Korea's -it was USD 4,160 versus USD 12,680 in Korea.
- yellow knifeTop contributor
- Posts : 6980
Join date : 2014-03-27
Re: Malaysia : The failure we copy
Malaysia went to steel factory with cars in mind.
South Korean government did Steel Factory well neglecting World Bank reports to abandon operations and the success of POSCO was one secret behind the success of Hyundai cars and other vehicles.
Failure of Perwaja one reason to assign for the failure of Perodua and Proton.
Perodua cars
Perodua old Logoa
Perodua New Loga
Its worth to study the economic history of other countries as it sometimes directly link with some shares we invest here in SL.
https://forum.lankaninvestor.com/t6226-uml-n0000-united-motors-lanka-plc?highlight=uml+n0000
- yellow knifeTop contributor
- Posts : 6980
Join date : 2014-03-27
Re: Malaysia : The failure we copy
- yellow knifeTop contributor
- Posts : 6980
Join date : 2014-03-27
Re: Malaysia : The failure we copy
Both POSCO (KOREAN) AND PERWAJA (MALAYSIAN) had the same Japanese partner assisting. That's Nippon Steel.
When Japanese engineers gave plans for POSCO to develop the factory at Pohang, POSCO and Korean government paid BHP the Australian mining firm to check the plan.
But Mahathir took no precautions.
Nippon Steel had zero operational experience of the gas technology it is selling to Malaysian steel.
When it comes to Koreans, they rejected the initial fully computerized operations suggested for POSCO stating that they want to go manual in order to study the operations of steel manufacturing. POSCO learned nuts and bolts of operations in steel before later moving into advanced technologies.
But Malaysia straightly went to more advanced operations without understanding even the basics of operations.
Finally what happened to Malaysian steel is, instead Malaysians learning the art of steel making from Japanese, Its the Japanese Nipppon steel that learned from Malaysians at the cost of Malaysian Ringgit.
Dr. Tan TatWai, one of three industry experts assembled into emergency task force by the government when the plant hit trouble , concluded :
" I think Mahathir got taken for a ride by Japanese. "
This is what happen when you take things for granted from experts.
- yellow knifeTop contributor
- Posts : 6980
Join date : 2014-03-27
Re: Malaysia : The failure we copy
- yellow knifeTop contributor
- Posts : 6980
Join date : 2014-03-27
Re: Malaysia : The failure we copy
Now its again proving almost like MR era and any other post independence era , its the same dirty journey like Malaysian Business...
නන්දන ලොකුවිතානගේ දුරකතන සංවාදයක් එලියට.. අගමැතිගේ නමත් පනී..[Vudeo]
April 25, 2018 at 6:28 am | lanka C news
ඩුබායිහි මැරියට් හෝටලයේ හිමිකරු නන්දන ලොකුවිතාන සහ තවත් පුද්ගලයෙකු අතට වන දුරකතන සංවාදයක් ජාතික සමගි පෙරමුණේ නායක අසාද් සාලි මහතා විසින් මාධ්ය වෙත හෙලි කරනු ලැබීය.
අගමැතිවරයා සම්බන්ධයෙන් වන කතාබහක්ද එම ඇමතුමේදී සදහන් වනු ඇසින
- nihal123Top contributor
- Posts : 6327
Join date : 2014-02-24
Age : 58
Location : Waga