By Daniel John Jambun
The decision by the Government Employees  Co-operative Society Berhad (Kopeks) recently to settle debts owed by  its members to Ah Longs to the hefty tune of RM500,000 made one wonder  if Kopeks is not actually encouraging its members to go into debt,  because it could easily bail them out anytime when the situation becomes  critical. The bailout was a precedent that set a bad example of  co-operative fund management.
It also reminded us how bad the economic  situation in the Sabah is right now. If government servants can go into  serious debt in spite of earning salaries, imagine the situation for  those without jobs, and those in the rural areas who have to live off  the land just to keep body and soul together. In this period of high  inflation even those with salaries are in fact living below the poverty  line.
There is an ongoing, hidden depression  going on in Sabah. They have suffered so long but have partly resigned  to their fate knowing they is nothing they can do. The government has  simply failed them. A fifty-ringgit note doesn’t last very long, doesn’t  buy a lot these days. People have very little saving and for those who  struggle to make ends meet, the money runs out long before payday. What  is more depressing is that we all know the government has not an iota of  plan to solve the problem; all so-called anti-poverty actions are just  ad-hoc programs. Solve this and this, and wait for the next one to  surface! The government is confused because it doesn’t have the  financial capability to solve the problem and it doesn’t understand all  the factors affecting the economy, globally or locally. So they have  become experts in coming up with lame explanations and playing the blame  game, like they blame youths for being unemployed because “they are  choosy.” What a load of nonsense!
So in desperation, the people who need  to settle their financial problems have to resort to Ah Longs, or loan  sharks. And loan sharks come to the fill up the market because there is a  huge need for their service. A profusion of loan sharks, the rise of  MLMs, get-rich-quick schemes and gambling businesses are a clear  indication of serious economic problem in any country. People need a way  out to escape financial pitfalls and hope to fulfill their dreams by  buying lottery tickets as a way to comfort their troubled souls. The  latest way to become rich overnight today is to find the tokek lizard  and make millions overnight!
I would challenge the BN government to  undertake a statistical survey of the situation and give us the accurate  figures for unemployed secondary school leavers and graduates, the  number of sandwich families and the grand total of amounts they spend  from their parents’ income, the number of Sabahans who are working in  the Peninsular and Singapore, and most importantly to give an economic  blueprint for Sabah to solve unemployment and poverty in the short term.  Or is the government itself is too cash-strapped to undertake these  surveys? How much does it cost to pay IDS to do them compared to  providing for some road buildings in which the cost are doubles of  tripled for the benefit of some political bosses? How much money has  been stashed overseas, robbing us of economic trickle-down effects? We  can only imagine the terrible losses we have suffered and our children  will suffer in the future because of our government’s corruption and  mismanagement!

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