Wednesday, 17 September 2008

Hourglass Economy- prelude to the NEP

continuation of an older article by the same title.


The better off Malay groups would be those living in commercial areas, the ports, the capital where the kings resided. Here the Malays were traders, artisans, craftsmen, fishermen, agriculturalists. They represented the more advanced, enterprising , vigorous sections of the Malay community. They were the middle class of ancient Malay regime.

When the Europeans came, Portuguese, Dutch and eventually English, the Europeans controlled international trade. Immigrants who had by then settled into these trading centres thrived and later moved into mainland areas.

The British had minimal contact with the common people. They were here, first of all on an economic mission. To exploit to the maximum, what the Malay peninsula had to offer. Their interactions were limited naturally with the Malay elite( those on the higher rungs of feudal hierarchy).

Like ruling elites all over the world, the Malay ruling elites psychological constitution was very porous. By this, we mean, members of the ruling elites were malleable elements who could be easily neutered and softened by easy living. In our modern times, progenies of these malleable and pliable elements are still hanging on to this tradition of living off other people. Feeding off their emotional enslavement which made them really, into the happy oppressed( an oxymoron right?). The most prominent example would be the DPM who champions the retention of this parasitic tradition, the tradition of the happy oppressed.

The British saw the importance of the immigrants both as comprador capitalists and intermediaries to the hinterland Malays. While the immigrants’ role in the economy became more pronounced and they became richer, the small time Malay capitalists, were pushed further into the hinterland. This was crowding out effect in practice.

The ruling elite by then realised the dividends/blood.sweat and tears money, exacted from the nascent Malay commercial class were minuscule compared to rents received from the British and the immigrant class. They found a new cow which they could milk easily. In my mind, the ruling elite readily embraced the immigrants as a new and bigger source of easy wealth. By virtue of their economic strength, the immigrants bought themselves the most important accreditation- patronage and protection of the royal houses in the Malay peninsula.

Success at buying their way into royal patronage, in fact meant that ever since from the early part of the 19th century, the ruling elite had accepted the immigrants, especially the Chinese as their citizens. Wealthy Chinese were willing economic sycophants ever ready to extend financial favours to the Malay feudal elite. In modern times, when members of the royal houses state that Chinese are also their rakyat and therefore deserving of equal treatment, they were stating what was in fact practiced since the olden days.

While ethnic, cultural and religious identity provided the link between the Malays and the ruling elite, economic power bought the immigrants their kerakyatan a long time ago. So don’t pat ourselves in the back by thinking that this cultural link between us and the ruling elite, is a better guarantee than economic power, to retain our lead in claiming first place in the hearts of the ruling elite. Or to claim this is our country. The lesson learnt here is, without economic power, all other claims are just easily overshadowed.

Indeed, all these posturing about nationalism and more so of Malay nationalism are all political devices used by ruling elite, either of old or present, to remind the people of the existing ethnic, cultural and religious affinity. Enough to keep Malays happy and contented.

These are important, but sheer economics rule the day. At the end, powerful economics counterweight non pecuniary ties to qualify being accepted as citizens. This consideration alone, i.e. the realisation that the non Malays are crucial in providing economic comfort and security, moved a member of the ruling elite in modern times, to issue a proclamation that they, the non Malays are also our citizens.

The sobering reminder to the Malays- without your own economic power, your natural claim of citizenship based only on ethnic, cultural and religious sameness, can be easily neutralised.

1 comment:

  1. I solemnly agree. The feudal system betrayed us.

    And some idiot among us demand to empower the royals?!*&$)#

    ReplyDelete