Fireside Chat with Lim Hwee Hua

Government in Business – Friend or Foe?

Is government involvement in business always good? This has attracted a constant and robust debate. Free market economists have long argued that firms in private hands are superior to those run by a government, hence the privatisation programme in many countries. On the other hand, many state owned enterprises operate no differently from private corporations, with their own boards of directors and with some being subjected to the demands of a stock exchange listing.

Regardless of how they perform, the government has a traditional role of ensuring that national resources are well distributed among the various sectors of the market while maintaining healthy government revenues. Thus, we need a more nuanced approach — to both theory and at a practical level about the ideal relationship between business and government.

Join us for an intimate fireside chat with Mrs Lim Hwee Hua, author of the book “Government in Business- Friend or Foe?” who will share her perspectives to discuss the intriguing issues surrounding the achievement of such a balance for Singapore as well as for other countries.

Mrs Lim Hwee Hua serves as an executive director of Tembusu Partners, a senior adviser to US private equity player Kohlberg Kravis Roberts, an independent non-executive member of the Global Advisory Council of Ernst & Young, an independent director of both Jardine Cycle & Carriage Ltd and Stamford Land Corporation Ltd, and Honorary Chairman of Securities Investors Association of Singapore (SIAS).

She previously served as a Minister in the Prime Minister’s office and concurrently as Second Minister for Finance and for Transport, Deputy Speaker of Parliament and Chairman of the Public Accounts Committee.

Mrs Lim is a Cambridge alumnus and read Mathematics/Engineering at Girton College, Cambridge from 1978-1981. She graduated with an MBA (major in Finance) from the Anderson School of Management, UCLA in 1989.
Date: 21 January 2014
Venue: 2 Goodwood Hill
Time: 7pm – mingling with food and drinks / 7.30pm to commence chat
Charges: $16 per person on a cost recovery basis. Members may bring one non-member guest at a cost of $30 per person.

Click here to sign up!

Kindly contact events@oxbridge.org.sg to verify your membership status, if necessary.

Order for the book may be made at the special promotional price of $25 (inclusive of GST). Please use the form available at http://bit.ly/1jN0BBA. Copies of the book will also be available for sale that evening,

Fireside Chat with David Gerald on 25 Nov

“For the Common Man: Singapore Citizenship Activism at its Best- the Example of SIAS”

25 November 2013, 7pm, 2 Goodwood Hill

David Gerald is the President and CEO of Securities Investors Association (Singapore) or SIAS. In 1999, he gave up a lucrative legal career to found the SIAS, which went on successfully to overturn the Malaysian government’s decision to freeze the holdings of 172,000 Singaporean shareholders in Malaysian companies.

Today, SIAS has 66,000 members. A market watchdog and champion for corporate governance and the rights of the retail investor, SIAS is a unique example of Singaporean citizenship activism that has successfully challenged the status quo, taken on governments and become a leading think tank.  SIAS also educates investors, to the extent of going to the doorsteps of ordinary Singaporeans to teach them the basics of proper financial planning. As Mr Gerald mentioned in a 2011 interview, “I never fear fighting for the common man.”

The Business Times described Mr Gerald as “such a power in the stock market that he is often given the royal treatment companies normally reserve for major fund managers”. He has been featured in international magazines and often appears on television news networks to discuss corporate governance issues.

Before establishing SIAS, Mr Gerald served as a Magistrate, Coroner and Deputy Public Prosecutor, and in private practice as a lawyer in a legal career spanning 30 years.

Join us for a unique intimate chat with David Gerald. Listen to his experiences in establishing SIAS, standing up to PM Mahathir, his views on the corporate governance landscape and the continuing challenges for the retail investor.

Fees for the event:

Members – $20 (cost recovery for dinner catering and administrative costs)
DUAL Members – $25
Guest of Oxbridge/DUAL Members – $35 (limited to one guest per member)

Since we are close to the end of the year, as a concession Ordinary Members who sign up for membership in conjunction with this event will have their membership renewed for both Calendar Year 2013 and 2014.

Please fill up the relevant form and email events@oxbridge.org.sg to renew your membership.

Sign up on the EventBrite page.

October Social @ Loof

It’s been a long summer and we’re feeling a bit twirly – so join Oxbridge Society for after-work drinks with a view on Tuesday, October 8, 6-8pm at Loof (331 North Bridge Road, #03-07, Odean Towers).

There will be a happy hour drinks special – $6++ from 6-7pm and $7++ from 7-8pm for draft beer, house wine and house pour spirits. Don’t waste it!

Catch up with old friends and make new ones. Oxbridge members who have been long dormant are especially welcome!

To RSVP, you should:

– Join our Facebook group at https://www.facebook.com/groups/oxbridgesg/

– RSVP for the event here: https://www.facebook.com/events/580081865386620/

See you there!

Photographs from Freshers’ Mingle 2013 and Fireside Chat with Dr Shaun Martin

We had a fantastic time on 24 August 2013 at the Fireside Chat given by Dr Shaun Martin (DPhil in Mathematics, Oxford), the co-founder of Applied Cognitive Science, who shared with us on the Cognitive Revolution and how the evolving science of the mind is changing how economists, philosophers and businesses view the world.  Many thanks to Shaun for giving the talk, as well as Donald Low, Associate Dean for Executive Education and Research at the Lee Kuan Yew School of Public Policy (LKYSPP) for facilitating the session.

Some freshers who are preparing to make their way up to Oxford or Cambridge also attended and this was a great opportunity for them to connect with older alumni. For those of you who missed the event, some photographs are available on the website. (We will try and get a more professional camera next time!)