11
The illusion
of goodness
inally, after many years of criticism, the government
F
has come forward with a land law reform and an urban
planning system.
Contrary to all past official policies, the government
now believes that public tenders and public auctions are the
preferential methods for land concessions. It took them nine
years to realise that this makes for the most transparent system.
Well, better late than never, but it’s still curious that it all
happens in the final year of this government.
We now hope that the study into the new system is not
a repeat of the Macau Health study that cost millions of patacas
and produced nothing more than a few headlines in government
friendly newspapers
A curious fact, very typical of Macau: the aforementioned
health study was not needed for the government to understand
the importance of a public hospital in Taipa; the same hospital
the government did not build, leaving the private sector
to do it instead.
Edmund Ho realised that the public really wanted the
hospital and the government went back on its word, promising
a 100 beds hospital in Taipa. It’s probably not a coincidence
that Kiang Wu, a private hospital, got the green light to increase
its bed capacity to 100 more units, likely earning many more
million patacas from the public coffers. The compensation
system is alive and well in Macau.
We agree that public and private hospitals should be
supported and that private institutions should receive incentives
within certain limits - which sometimes does not happen
as we all know but that’s another story.
december 2008
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