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Sir
John Cowperthwaite
Sir John Cowperthwaite, Hong Kong's
Financial Secretary from 1961 to 1971 passed away on 21 January at
the age of 90. A firm proponent of laissez-faire government, Sir
John held strong views on the compilation and use of statistics.
I joined Government on 12 May 1971 as a
statistician, having spent about a year as a Demonstrator in
economics at the University of Hong Kong after graduation. I had the
privilege of being the person appointed to fill the only new post of
statistician created that year in the Census and Statistics
Department to assist in a new initiative to do research in relation
to national accounts statistics. To me then the job as a
statistician, and particularly one specialising in national
accounts, was the best alternative to what was very much a failed
attempt to pursue an academic career in economics, since the
economist grade was then still non-existent in Government.
One of the first tasks given to me was to
prepare display charts identifying gaps in national account
statistics in Hong Kong and showing how by filling those gaps we
could develop a better understanding of the functioning of the
economy. These charts were to be displayed at prominent places in
the office of the Department then located in the International
Building in the western part of Central. Apparently there were to be
a number of VIP visits to the Department, and the new initiative on
national accounts statistics was to be an important item for
discussion with the VIPs. With the typical naïve passion of someone
embarking on a new career I dutifully designed a few charts, the
details of which I have long forgotten, but the theme, I can still
recall, included a subtle message that it may not be in the public
interest for Government to be an ostrich when it came to statistics
on the economy. Little did I know that one of the VIPs to visit the
Department was the then retiring Financial Secretary Sir John
Cowperthwaite.
He did not really chastise me on seeing those
charts when he toured around the office. But I was left feeling
distinctly uncomfortable, standing next to the charts, paralysed by
his piercing look and equally sharp questions, after receiving that
towering figure of over six feet with his somewhat chubby face.
Indeed, how would those numbers help govern Hong Kong better? Wasn't
there a saying (Marquis d'Argenson in 1858) that: Pour
gouverner mieux, il faudrait gouverner moins (In order to govern
better, we ought to govern less)? And wasn't there the other saying
(also d'Argenson) that: Laissez faire, telle devrait etre
la devise de toute puissance publique (Laissez faire should be
the motto of every public authority)? These were of course difficult
issues for anybody, not least a fresh graduate aspiring to be a
practising economist. It took me a long time and much soul-searching
to recover; by then Sir John had already retired and been replaced
by someone who was a lot more sympathetic towards statistics, having
also started his career as a statistician. It was during that
soul-searching period that I was asked belatedly by the then
Commissioner for Census and Statistics, Kenneth Topley, with a grin
behind his beard that was almost cunning, to read carefully the
record of the Budget debate on 25 March 1970. Therein lay the origin
of my first and invaluable lesson in public office - do your
homework - and the origin of my first job in Government.
An excerpt from the speech by Sir John
Cowperthwaite in the Legislative Council on 25 March 1970 is
attached for those interested in reading it. Although he was against
the compilation of national accounts statistics and was of the
opinion that "national accounts are a proper subject for
academic rather than official research", as the last sentence
of the excerpt suggests, he did agree to "give ... assistance
... in furtherance of such research", to the extent of allowing
the Census and Statistics Department to employ an additional
statistician for this work. Thank you, Sir John, for opening the
doors for me to pursue a satisfying career.
Joseph
Yam
2 February 2006
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