Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Foreword
- Acknowledgement
- Introduction
- 1 Born a Businessman
- 2 Seeking to Serve
- 3 Seeing the Bigger Picture
- Appendices
- I “Letter to Myself”, by Baey Lian Peck, written on 27 May 1957
- II “A love that has lasted 54 years”, Sunday Times, 28 May 2006
- III An article from Halberstädter Volksstimme, 11 December 2000
- IIIA English translation of the Halberstädter Volksstimme article
- IV Letter to German Federal Minister for Justice seeking justice on behalf of a foreign investor, 11 December 2000
- V English translation of the reply from German Federal Minister for Justice, 10 January 2001
- VI “Kian Ann and MBH share swap on hold”, Straits Times, 15 December 2000
- VII “Singapore checks inflation's rise”, Straits Times, 11 September 1978
- VIII Queries by Baey Lian Peck at the board meeting of Intraco Ltd, 29 April 1986
- IX Offer by Morgan Grenfell (Asia) Ltd for the acquisition of Intraco Ltd shares, 26 June 1986
- X “Productivity — The Key to Singapore's Correctional Rehabilitation”, a report written by W. Clifford, Director of the Australian Institute of Criminology, following a study of Singapore's correctional rehabilitation, posted 18 January 1978
- XI Letter to Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong calling for cross-subsidization as control measure on inflation, 9 February 2008
- XII SCORE dinner speech by Chairman Baey Lian Peck at Cockpit Hotel on 31 March 1979
- XIII Baey Lian Peck's advice to grandson Zhong Yi on the changing political scene in Singapore, through an e-mail exchange, 30 April 2011
- XIV Baey Lian Peck's advice to grandson Yi Wei on the changing political scene in Singapore via an e-mail exchange, 27 May 2011
- References
- About the Author
XIV - Baey Lian Peck's advice to grandson Yi Wei on the changing political scene in Singapore via an e-mail exchange, 27 May 2011
from Appendices
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 21 October 2015
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Foreword
- Acknowledgement
- Introduction
- 1 Born a Businessman
- 2 Seeking to Serve
- 3 Seeing the Bigger Picture
- Appendices
- I “Letter to Myself”, by Baey Lian Peck, written on 27 May 1957
- II “A love that has lasted 54 years”, Sunday Times, 28 May 2006
- III An article from Halberstädter Volksstimme, 11 December 2000
- IIIA English translation of the Halberstädter Volksstimme article
- IV Letter to German Federal Minister for Justice seeking justice on behalf of a foreign investor, 11 December 2000
- V English translation of the reply from German Federal Minister for Justice, 10 January 2001
- VI “Kian Ann and MBH share swap on hold”, Straits Times, 15 December 2000
- VII “Singapore checks inflation's rise”, Straits Times, 11 September 1978
- VIII Queries by Baey Lian Peck at the board meeting of Intraco Ltd, 29 April 1986
- IX Offer by Morgan Grenfell (Asia) Ltd for the acquisition of Intraco Ltd shares, 26 June 1986
- X “Productivity — The Key to Singapore's Correctional Rehabilitation”, a report written by W. Clifford, Director of the Australian Institute of Criminology, following a study of Singapore's correctional rehabilitation, posted 18 January 1978
- XI Letter to Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong calling for cross-subsidization as control measure on inflation, 9 February 2008
- XII SCORE dinner speech by Chairman Baey Lian Peck at Cockpit Hotel on 31 March 1979
- XIII Baey Lian Peck's advice to grandson Zhong Yi on the changing political scene in Singapore, through an e-mail exchange, 30 April 2011
- XIV Baey Lian Peck's advice to grandson Yi Wei on the changing political scene in Singapore via an e-mail exchange, 27 May 2011
- References
- About the Author
Summary
Dear Kongkong and ZY [Zhong Yi],
Not sure if you have seen this, but I just watched this short clip that my dad linked me to and felt that it was quite insightful. Thought to share it with everyone.
I share the same sentiments as ZY — hasn't the PAP been doing a decent job all these years? What is all this whining about?
Perhaps a reason why we think in this fashion is because we have been blessed with being “the fortunate lot” in Singapore. And although we probably do have some awareness of the less fortunate, we can never fully empathize with what they have to live with. According to this video, they are apparently quite oppressed. This makes a lot of sense — an economically driven country like ours putting less economically productive people at the bottom of the food chain. Or is that fallacy?
Just some food for thought.
http://english.aljazeera.net/programmes/101east/2011/ 05/20115494458152827.html
Love,
Yi Wei
Date: Fri, 27 May 2011 16:20:27 +0800
From: “Dr. Baey Lian Peck”
Subject: Re: Hello from Perth!
Dear Yi Wei,
What the PAP had achieved is water down the drain. Over time, people forget especially those who had not lived through the period of development. Politics like a family is a living thing, it has to change with the times. What is important is that the people who are asking for changes should fully understand the difficulties the country or organizations have gone through and try to put themselves in the same situations.
Take for example NTUC Welcome Consumers Co-operative Supermarkets. Dr Goh Keng Swee mooted the idea of a consumers’ co-operative to combat the seemingly uncontrollable inflation due to [the] decision by OPEC (Organization of Oil Producing Countries) in the middle of nineteen seventies to increase the price of oil from $1.50 to $11.50 per barrel resulting in serious worldwide inflations, particularly in Singapore with no natural resources when prices of essential food shot up over 200% overnight.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Serving a New NationBaey Lian Peck's Singapore Story, pp. 145 - 148Publisher: ISEAS–Yusof Ishak InstitutePrint publication year: 2013