Ecos. etc Q and A--answering at random--
Where you would place yourself in terms of economic thought - i.e., classical,
Keynesian...pragmatic, etc.
Who were your influences?
When I was at the Univ. of Rangoon (later the Inst. of Ecos.) none of
my mentors or other staff members classified themselves publicly by
schools of thought, though generally we knew (as General Honors students
and later graduate students) where each prof. had gone to school, and
what their dissertations had been about, what was their contribution to
the store of human knowledge, even one lecturer reputed to have got his
degree from a Ph.D. correspondence course. This person left for the
Cooperatives Ministry and then I suppose lost his job, but he was
allegedly the pet of Gen. Ne Win's brother U Nyi Nyi, and was also in a
scandal involving the loss of his wife's longyis and a scandal with the
black marketeers. The newspapers even though socialist covered it
extensively and much much later, I heard he was making a living by
telling fortunes
but my real mentors were much more grounded
than this man and had their degrees from well known places like MIT
(Massachusetts Inst of Technology, not myanmar Inst of Theology).
Dr. Maung Shein taught the first honors class in ecos. I ever attended,
in which he spoke of the definitions of ecos, needs and wants, markets
and Jeremy Bentham's "The Greatest Good of the Greatest Number."
At that time my brother had just returned from UK, so he told me about Bentham's corpse still in a glass cabinet.
We could read copies of Dr Maung Shein's thesis, which was about the
Burmese Provincial Contracts when Burma was part of India (to 1937) and a
British colony.
And his argument that Burma was "a milk cow of India" once it became profitable as a colony was very well put.
I still have a copy that I begged from the rector before I left Burma.
--When he became a top party cadre, Dr Shein talked a lot of Keynesian
deficit financing, I guess in an attempt to justify the military
government's deficit budgets.
(To be continued, I have to stop now for lack of time)-
but to jump to conclusions, I would classify myself as a pragmatist.
Most of my academic life has consisting in looking at the problems of
central planning and I have lived in two command economies, Burma and
Poland (before the opening)
and Prof. Herbert Levine a renowned expert on the USSR (and China) was one of my dissertation field examiners--
the Q he asked me, in 1993, was
"How can China learn from the experiences of the USSR"
and I had one week to answer this Q which was left for me in a sealed envelope.
As I had been expecting the reverse, "What can the USSR learn from China?"
I had to think quite a bit before I could write everything in longhand on paper.
(I must look for the xeroxes of my Field Exams)
All of this helped me in 2008--2009 when I was commissioned by the
NCGUB (National Coalition Government of the Union of Burma or Exile
Government
) to compile and write a 20 page paper (manifesto?) on how Burma should reform.
If the NCGUB website is still up, you can find it there by Googling.
Thank you, Sean Turnell, for the Qs.
Like all Qs. yours have also caused me to think more deeply what "I am all about."
Copyright Kyi May Kaung
9-5-2014
www.kmkaung.com
Friday, 5 September 2014
Thursday, 4 September 2014
From me for September--my novella The Rider of Crocodiles
The
Rider of Crocodiles
Dr. Kaung was traveling in Thailand
when a colleague told her his great great grandfather was not killed in Ayuthia
in 1767 when the Burmese invaded, as he knew how to ride crocodiles.
print edition
Kindle edition
Wednesday, 3 September 2014
Why it was "so easy" to write my novel Wolf--
It just occurred to me just now as I was setting out my own dinner, to take a photo.
In the past, just as they had in my novel against the protagonist Mothi Awegoke, people have tried to attack me, stab me front and back, push me off cliffs and try to shut me down for good.
Maybe that was why it was so "easy" to step into his shoes and write my novel Wolf.
It is also partly based on what happened to Chinese democracy activist Wuer Kai Shi of Tiananmen fame--
essentially he was bad mouthed by the media for taking ONE boom box to use himself!
That the hero of my novel endured and I have endured, is in no small measure due to people who helped.
Thank you.
I'm in the last stages of proof reading.
Look forward.
KMKaung
9-3-2014
In the past, just as they had in my novel against the protagonist Mothi Awegoke, people have tried to attack me, stab me front and back, push me off cliffs and try to shut me down for good.
Maybe that was why it was so "easy" to step into his shoes and write my novel Wolf.
It is also partly based on what happened to Chinese democracy activist Wuer Kai Shi of Tiananmen fame--
essentially he was bad mouthed by the media for taking ONE boom box to use himself!
That the hero of my novel endured and I have endured, is in no small measure due to people who helped.
Thank you.
I'm in the last stages of proof reading.
Look forward.
KMKaung
9-3-2014
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