Letters from Taiwan
Observations from a geopolitical fault-line
Wednesday, March 09, 2011
Redirect
Thanks for coming here. Sorry for the trouble but I am now posting at - Letters from Taiwan
Last Post On This Blog - Moving To Tumblr
In the interests of better page loading time, accessibility and navigability for my readers this is my last post on blogger. I am now going to be blogging at my new address:
lettersfromtaiwan.tumblr.com
My new logo is:
I will still be checking into to blogger everyday to catch all my favourite posts and my old site will remain in place. Please can you amend your links to my site so they point to my new home.
A huge thanks to everyone who has followed me and reblogged my posts at this site. I hope you will be able to just as easily follow me on Tumblr.
Best wishes and Jiayo! to all.
Ben
lettersfromtaiwan.tumblr.com
My new logo is:
I will still be checking into to blogger everyday to catch all my favourite posts and my old site will remain in place. Please can you amend your links to my site so they point to my new home.
A huge thanks to everyone who has followed me and reblogged my posts at this site. I hope you will be able to just as easily follow me on Tumblr.
Best wishes and Jiayo! to all.
Ben
Monday, March 07, 2011
Glenn Beck: It's All Starting To Add Up
Fun at Glenn's expense ...
Finally, has US media / right-wing America had enough ...?
Finally, has US media / right-wing America had enough ...?
Sunday, March 06, 2011
Party Politics 101 - Taiwan Green Party: Practice What You Preach
In Taiwan, the main opposition party is the Democratic Progressive Party (DPP). It champions democracy and independence for Taiwan as well as a host of social policies that position it as the party of the blue collar worker, socially disadvantaged and, in more recent years, sexual progressives and environmentalists. Despite this, the party has plenty of critics within its ranks at how the leadership and internal structure of the party are often less than democratic, and plenty of external critics who say its environmental and gender politics, amongst others, are PR gestures rather than being central to the party's platform.
The governing Chinese Nationalist Party (KMT) also claims to be a party of democracy and human rights. It's a party that, like the DPP, is run on a leninist structure. When that is mixed with a potent brew of factionalism and guanxi, the latter (in tandem with the need to save face) of which exerts a great influence on decision making at critical times when the messy business of practicing democracy and protecting human rights is an inconvenience to the achievement of party goals (which is pretty much most of the time). Too often, the party charters of the KMT and DPP are pretty words rather than substantive and imperative rules for the behaviour of the parties and their members.
So too, the Taiwan Green Party.
On Saturday, the TGP held very important meetings to discuss the reorganisation of the party and to elect new convenors and a new supervisory committee. The last seven months have been a very busy period for TGP in which they have hosted the 2010 Asia Pacific Greens Network conference and run five candidates in the Taipei City Council elections (in which four saw their deposits returned, the TGP's best ever election results).
In the last two months the party has focussed on internal reorganisation. Party leadership are facing a new, and tougher, financial situation yet have made plans to actually increase the number of employees. However, their plans for expansion of the payroll have been proposed without presenting a clear plan of how the party will generate a corresponding increase in income to cover the extra employee costs.
This has caused some concern with some of the TGP employees. They have questioned how and whether their jobs can continue after the reorganisation takes effect. I can attest that most TGP employees are hardworking and dedicated to the issues the TGP champions. They work long hours, and often weekends, and have been the less visible backbone of TGP internal organisation, and the necessary bureaucracy that comes with running any form of organisation.
The TGP leadership's reluctance to clarify the employment status of some of these administrative members has exposed both a lack of respect for its employee's legal rights to notice of redundancy or the modification of an existing contract, and a lack of planning, and knowledge of due process, by senior executive members. In some instances, employees are working without written contracts, a practice widely prevalent in Taiwanese companies.
TGP's Charter is essentially a direct copy of the the Global Greens Charter 2001. In that document it states the following:
The TGP has made some elemental mistakes here:
I hope that the TGP, post reorganisation, will take active steps to draw up written contracts for all employees, detailing time span, renumeration and responsibilities. If it continues in the same manner as it has recently, it could well continue to see talent within the ranks depart for more organised and respectful employment opportunities. Finally, speaking of respectful, the Global Greens Charter also says that ...
TGP Rule No. 1: Check your ego at the door.
TGP Rule No. 2: NEVER verbally abuse the people that hold your organisation together.
TGP Rule No. 3. If you lose your temper, take a time out and then apologise to those you have offended.
This should be obvious. TGP: I support your goals and your Charter but you've got to practice what you preach.
Footnote:
No-one asked me to write this post. In fact I was specifically asked not to but I was disinclined to acquiesce to the request. I have supported and helped the TGP in the past year and will be happy to do so in the future if I can be sure that the party is able to operate and stand by its own values. I write this post as a heads up to the TGP's senior members in the hope that they can reflect on what has gone wrong and get it right in the future. Taiwan needs the TGP.
The governing Chinese Nationalist Party (KMT) also claims to be a party of democracy and human rights. It's a party that, like the DPP, is run on a leninist structure. When that is mixed with a potent brew of factionalism and guanxi, the latter (in tandem with the need to save face) of which exerts a great influence on decision making at critical times when the messy business of practicing democracy and protecting human rights is an inconvenience to the achievement of party goals (which is pretty much most of the time). Too often, the party charters of the KMT and DPP are pretty words rather than substantive and imperative rules for the behaviour of the parties and their members.
So too, the Taiwan Green Party.
On Saturday, the TGP held very important meetings to discuss the reorganisation of the party and to elect new convenors and a new supervisory committee. The last seven months have been a very busy period for TGP in which they have hosted the 2010 Asia Pacific Greens Network conference and run five candidates in the Taipei City Council elections (in which four saw their deposits returned, the TGP's best ever election results).
In the last two months the party has focussed on internal reorganisation. Party leadership are facing a new, and tougher, financial situation yet have made plans to actually increase the number of employees. However, their plans for expansion of the payroll have been proposed without presenting a clear plan of how the party will generate a corresponding increase in income to cover the extra employee costs.
This has caused some concern with some of the TGP employees. They have questioned how and whether their jobs can continue after the reorganisation takes effect. I can attest that most TGP employees are hardworking and dedicated to the issues the TGP champions. They work long hours, and often weekends, and have been the less visible backbone of TGP internal organisation, and the necessary bureaucracy that comes with running any form of organisation.
The TGP leadership's reluctance to clarify the employment status of some of these administrative members has exposed both a lack of respect for its employee's legal rights to notice of redundancy or the modification of an existing contract, and a lack of planning, and knowledge of due process, by senior executive members. In some instances, employees are working without written contracts, a practice widely prevalent in Taiwanese companies.
TGP's Charter is essentially a direct copy of the the Global Greens Charter 2001. In that document it states the following:
5.9 Will work to require corporations to abide by the environmental, labour and social laws of their own country and of the country in which they are operating, whichever are the more stringent
6.13 Uphold the right of all workers to safe, fairly remunerated employment, with the freedom to unionise.None of the above clauses directly refer to the issues faced by TGP junior employees. The TGP Charter does not explicitly state that its own employees shall enjoy which specific rights but it does concern itself with the actions of corporations. Should not political parties also abide by the environmental, labour and social laws of their own country? Are they exempt? Is this an omission in the Global Greens Charter or was it taken for granted at the time of writing that the values expressed would automatically include the organisation and internal values of the party?
The TGP has made some elemental mistakes here:
- It did not provide written contracts with specific terms for all of its employees.
- Upon request, it has failed to clarify the status of employment within a reasonable period of time which would allow employees to make an informed decision about their future employment within the TGP.
- It has not taken action to give 1 month's notice to employees that their status and contracts will change, and has only entered into tentative discussions only a week before the reorganisation meetings.
I hope that the TGP, post reorganisation, will take active steps to draw up written contracts for all employees, detailing time span, renumeration and responsibilities. If it continues in the same manner as it has recently, it could well continue to see talent within the ranks depart for more organised and respectful employment opportunities. Finally, speaking of respectful, the Global Greens Charter also says that ...
We promote the building of respectful, positive and responsible relationships across lines of division in the spirit of a multi-cultural society.I like the idea of 'building of respectful, positive and responsible relationships'. I think that in any workplace managers and senior staff have the necessity to enable and facilitate an environment in which those kind of relationships flourish. If managers and senior staff verbally abuse an employee, out of frustration or because they imagine the employee to be deliberately uncooperative, they are achieving the direct opposite of the Charter's goals and are instead building an environment of fear and resentment. It is NEVER appropriate to curse someone in a working environment, especially when people not in the TGP are present. What kind of impression does that give about the values of the leadership? What does that say about a person's tolerance, patience, compassion or empathy? What does it say about that person's party?
TGP Rule No. 1: Check your ego at the door.
TGP Rule No. 2: NEVER verbally abuse the people that hold your organisation together.
TGP Rule No. 3. If you lose your temper, take a time out and then apologise to those you have offended.
This should be obvious. TGP: I support your goals and your Charter but you've got to practice what you preach.
Footnote:
No-one asked me to write this post. In fact I was specifically asked not to but I was disinclined to acquiesce to the request. I have supported and helped the TGP in the past year and will be happy to do so in the future if I can be sure that the party is able to operate and stand by its own values. I write this post as a heads up to the TGP's senior members in the hope that they can reflect on what has gone wrong and get it right in the future. Taiwan needs the TGP.
Quotes of the Week - Lessons Not Learnt
When the Governor of the Bank of England stands up and says that many banks are still unhealthy institutions that extract profit at the expense of stability, you know that the problems of the 2008 financial crisis haven't gone away. These are some of the comments of Mervyn King:
Britain risks another financial crisis unless it undertakes fundamental reform of the banking sector, the governor of the Bank of England has warned. Mervyn King said "imbalances" in the banking system remained unresolved and were "beginning to grow again".
He criticised high street banks for routinely exploiting their customers and urged them to take a longer-term approach to their business rather than simply trying to "maximise profits next week".
"We allowed a [banking] system to build up which contained the seeds of its own destruction," King has told the Daily Telegraph.
"We've not yet solved the 'too big to fail' or, as I prefer to call it, the 'too important to fail' problem. The concept of being too important to fail should have no place in a market economy."
"The problem is still there. The search for yield goes on. Imbalances are beginning to grow again."
King's comments are a warning to the chancellor, George Osborne, as a government commission considers whether to force high street banks to sell off their investment banking arms. Osborne is thought to be against such a plan but King is due to become ultimately responsible for banking regulation. His remarks come weeks after Osborne signed Project Merlin under which it was agreed that in return for banks lending more money and showing restraint on bonuses, the government would not take any more action on pay and profits. King criticised the culture of short-term profits and bonuses in the banking system, suggesting that traditional manufacturing industries had a more "moral" way of operating.
"They care deeply about their workforce, about their customers and, above all, are proud of their products," he said.
"[With the banks] there isn't that sense of longer-term relationships. There's a different attitude towards customers. Small and medium firms really notice this: they miss the people they know.
"If it's possible [for financial services firms] to make money out of gullible or unsuspecting customers, particularly institutional customers, that is perfectly acceptable [to the banks]."
The governor argued that good businesses "keep a clear vision of who their customers are and are run by people who don't think they should simply maximise profits next week".The rebuttal to Kings' comments from banking representatives appears to be more heads in the sand posturing:
Angela Knight, chief executive of the British Bankers' Association, disagreed with King's comments.
"The banking industry recognises that some of its number got it badly wrong during the crisis. Since then the industry has reformed radically," she said.
"We work closely with our customers and in doing so have created one of the largest financial centres in the world and a great contributor to the British economy. We achieved this together by doing our business well – not by doing it badly.
"This is a responsible industry which believes in working with its customers of all shapes and types."Yeah, right.
Labels:
2008 crash,
Banking crisis,
deception,
financial institutions,
fraud,
instability
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