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Old 07-07-2012, 08:53 PM   #8
S.T.D.

Join Date
May 2008
Age
42
Posts
5,220
Senior Member
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You cannot just suka suka make any commitment to loan without seeking the proper authority. In this case, it is obvious that MAS didn't seek approval from both parliament and President before it made such commitment.

Imagine if MAS has made such commitment but in the end, parliament or President didn't agree to make the loan when the loan is demanded by IMF, what will happen? It will affect Singapore's international image and credibility.

MAS didn't deny this. Please read MAS' reply to this issue. Its reply is crap. It claims that the Constitution only limits the government from raising loans, not giving loans. This is really crap. If the government don't even follow the law and Constitution, there can be no Rule of Law at all.

Goh Meng Seng
Ahem, can you ask George Osborne and the other finance ministers of the other countries why they never seeked parliamentary approval from their parliaments (some have more than 1 house) before pledging more than Singapore's contribution?
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