The Fat Lady is Singing

Three years ago, when East Meets West Foundation asked me to go to Saigon I started this blog. I had written sporadically over the years and always told myself that I would get around to some serious writing when I had more time. The truth is that we never have more time unless we make it a priority. When I took the EMW job I decided to stop using work as an excuse for not writing and this blog became my discipline. I planned to write at least one entry each week. It’s the old writers’ truism – if I just write 500 words a day I’ll have a whole library by the time I’m 75. I don’t have a library of my own work and I didn’t achieve my goal of blog a week but over these past three years I have managed to post over 100 entries about everything from Saigon traffic to old white predators coming to Asia in search of young girls. I did what I set out to do – get started on a writing project. No more procrastination.

In December of 2012 I finished my work as a full time staff member at EMW. I originally signed on for two years but sometime in Year Two we agreed to add another one. When that was over I agreed to continue work as a consultant on a reduced schedule through 2013. Vietnam, Saigon in particular, is very seductive. The people are interesting and every day is an adventure. I could keep going back year after year; the work is never done. I enjoyed every part of it, but in April when we returned to Seattle EMW and I agreed that with some additional staff support in Saigon the office could succeed without my help. It was bittersweet for me. I feel good about what I accomplished and I loved the people I worked with and the friends I made there. It’s time to move on, but I’m not through with Vietnam. I’ve already agreed to work with PeaceTrees Vietnam on some fundraising, and I’m planning to go back next winter – got to get out of Seattle – to visit with friends and see the sun again.

What are the lessons of Vietnam? Nothing about it is simple. The people are attractive, energetic, ambitious, family oriented, money obsessed, and conniving. Police and government officials are corrupt and individuals can be venal, mean and thieving. The women are the most beautiful in the world until they marry. Then they become strident micro-managers dealing with their lazy, gambling, beer drinking and abusive men. The family is Vietnam’s social safety net because there are no such things as retirement plans or pensions unless you’re a government official. There is no transportation infrastructure. There is one road from Saigon to Hanoi and it’s choked with truck traffic and corrupt police taking bribes. The beaches and resorts are extraordinary but even the most beautiful have to be cleaned daily because of the garbage that accumulates overnight. The Vietnamese don’t seem to know what treasures these beach assets are. They only know that there’s money to be made there.

The war ended in 1975 but the North/South rivalry goes on. It’s not unlike the US – New England vs the Deep South. The northerners think they have the true culture. They’re cold, calculating, and critical of the southerners with their accents and their too sweet food. The southerners can’t stand the imperious, know-it-all attitude of the Hanoians. I’m pretty easy going, but even I had trouble with a couple of female co-workers from Hanoi. They were arrogant, mean spirited, and self-involved. They apparently didn’t think teamwork training had any personal application or see the value of respect and collaboration in social interaction. There is a class structure in Vietnam that condones this arrogant behavior and the increasing spread between rich and poor reinforces it. What’s interesting, in contrast, is the social equality in the expatriate business community. There are no rigid class distinctions based on wealth or position. The only distinction might be your length of time in-country. CEOs mingle with teachers, NGO workers, volunteers, and small entrepreneurs. If I wanted to meet a CEO all I had to do was call up. No gatekeepers. Easy access. These are all generalizations, but they are how I experienced Vietnam.

It has been a great adventure and I think we have learned a lot about the world by being involved there. If I had one wish for young Americans it would be that every young person spend a year or two in some foreign place where they don’t speak the language and have to rely on the kindness of local people to get along. It’s humbling and empowering. It would be a better world if we all saw each other as global citizens and acted accordingly.

So… This is my last blog on this site. The fat lady is singing her farewell song. I’m going to continue to write more but it will be on a different subject on a different site. When I have the new blog established I’ll post the address here. I’m grateful to my friends and acquaintances who have read my stuff and provided feedback. It has been fun. Thanks.

 

How Do We Square the Differences?


I saw both of these things in Saigon last week. The first picture is the interior of a Maybach 62S. Nice car I thought. I had never seen or heard of a Maybach but it looked so over the top I had to look it up. I discovered that it is a luxury car built in Germany with a base sticker price of $423,500. The price is double that in Vietnam because of the import tax. Two well dressed older women got in the back seat and drove away. Easy come, easy go.

I took the other picture just outside my office. I had watched this guy for a week or so before figuring out that this was his home. I couldn’t reconcile the two things in my mind – the absolute luxury of the Maybach and the almost unbearable poverty and hardship of the sleeping man’s situation.

We talk a lot about income inequality in the US these days. In fact, Occupy Wall Street has spent a lot of time drawing attention to it, but when you see it in a developing country it’s obscene. The recent scandal in China is drawing attention to it as well. “From each according to his ability, to each according to his need.” I wonder how Marx would react to the abuses of state socialism if he could see the situation in Vietnam and China today?

Vietnam and China are changing, and with the economic boom comes the creation of wealth and the “need” to display it. Earlier this month I attended a party to celebrate the launch of the 2012 Porsche 911. It was all glitz and formal dress, champagne and a sea of beautiful models. My friend, Kaci, is the marketing director for Porsche and her targets are the newly rich Vietnamese. She told me it would be crazy for a foreigner to buy a Porsche in Vietnam. The price is double what it is in the developed world. There is only one reason to buy a Porsche or a Maybach in Vietnam – to show everyone that you’re successful and have the money to buy one. If it’s crazy for a foreigner to buy one it is equally crazy for a Vietnamese. There is nowhere in Saigon and probably nowhere in Vietnam where the Porsche could get out of second or third gear. The traffic moves at a snail’s pace, rarely more than 20 miles an hour. But, Porsche expects to have reasonable success in Vietnam this year. I’m sure they’re right.

I’d like to think that the Golden Rule is alive and well in emerging economies, but Wall Street is still fouling it’s own nest and Congress, in the richest county in the world, can’t agree to the proposition that we can afford to provide health care for all of our citizens. If we can’t set an example then how can we expect the rest of the world to do the right thing?

Another Global Encounter

The emblem, flag, and mascot on the left belong to Gamba Osaka an Asian Football League team from Japan. I’d never heard of Gamba until Tuesday morning. It looks like pretty good team from what I can tell, but that’s not where this is going.

On Wednesday morning Marilynn and I were working on our laptops in the airline lounge at the Incheon airport in Korea when a striking looking Japanese businessman approached us. I say striking because, although normal in all other respects this man was wearing a bizarre, royal blue, plastic, stovepipe hat with Gamba Osaka written in large letters above the logo. I can’t do justice to the experience. Here is a nice looking middle aged businessman in a goofy looking hat approaching two American strangers. I only wish I had a picture of Mr. Gamba Osaka.

Mr. Gamba never told us his name or why he picked us out. We think he just wanted to practice his English, but he knelt down next to our table and asked us where we were from. His English was very simple, but he made me wish that I had the same courage to approach strangers in their own languages with the same confidence as Mr. Gamba. Some of our most memorable encounters have been with total strangers in odd places in a mixture of languages. In this case, after ascertaining that we were from the US he proceeded to tell us that he was from Osaka and that Gamba was his team. “Football is my life” he said. “I am traveling to Tashkent, Uzbekistan to see Gamba play the Uzbek champions, Bunyodkor.” How bizarre; but it was clear that he loved his team and would go to great lengths to show his support. I checked the internet this morning and discovered that the Uzbeks overpowered Gamba 3-2. There was even a YouTube video of the goals scored. It looked like a very nice day in Tashkent and there were a lot of empty seats in the stadium. I hope Mr. Gamba had a good time. It’s a long way to go to see your team get its ass kicked.

We didn’t have a lot to say to each other. Mr. Gamba had been to LA and New York a few years ago, and he was surprised and pleased that I had been to Japan and liked it very much. When he found out that we were from Seattle he wanted to know all about Ichiro Suzuki, the Mariner’s superstar from Japan. Did we know him? No, but we assured him we loved to watch him play and we were sorry that such a great player had to endure such a crappy team for his entire career in America. He felt sorry for us that the US didn’t have a good men’s soccer team “but the girls are very good – the best in the world, maybe.” I didn’t want to spoil it by reminding him that the US and Japan have had about the same results in the last two World Cups and both made it to the Round of 16 in 2010.

After about 20 minutes kneeling by our table Mr. Gamba stood up and said goodbye. We wished him and his team success in Uzbekistan and he wished us safe travels home. As he walked away another Japanese businessman seated nearby looked over at us and smiled as if to say “You never know who you’ll meet in an airline lounge, but the world is getting smaller every day.”

Gordon Gekko Nguyen?

Remember Gordon Gekko, the Michael Douglas character in Oliver Stone’s Wall Street? He’s the one who proclaimed that “greed is good” at a shareholder meeting. Wall Street hasn’t changed much since the 1987 film. Those nice folks who brought you the sub-prime housing crisis, the Great Recession, the too big to fail bailouts, and the obscene bonuses are still bilking all of us. America is still run by the fat cats and special interests. So is Vietnam and cynically “greed is good” could also be the national tagline in Vietnam. The cynical view doesn’t take into account the incredible industry of the people, their positive outlook on life, or their willingness to sacrifice their own welfare for the welfare and education of their children. But, greed and corruption are huge problems in the country and in some ways seem to be driving the culture. It used to be unmentionable but recently it’s more and more a topic of concern and conversation along with the Bo Xilai corruption scandal in China.

Every economist who discusses the business forecast for Vietnam mentions corruption and infrastructure as two of the major obstacles to growth. They go hand in hand. Every major construction project is fraught with corruption from the permitting process to the substitution of materials. Everyone takes a piece of the pie and the final product is often delayed and inferior. In 2007 we rode our bicycles from Saigon to Hanoi. There was one national highway, Highway 1, connecting the two largest cities in the country. Most of the way it is two lanes and all of the commerce north and south takes place on it. In 2005 Sandy Northrop, an American journalist and filmmaker, released a three part video series on Vietnam and Part One included a report on a second highway being built to handle north south traffic. Sandy’s video said the new highway would be completed by 2007. It is now 2012 and I haven’t heard or seen anything about the second highway in the last three years. My guess is that it has become so costly because of corruption that it’s completely stalled and may not make sense any more.

I have an Australian friend who runs a logistics company that moves freight around the country. He told me that his company has a line item, a big line item, in its budget for bribes his drivers have to pay in order to get from A to B on the highway. Another friend in the know told me that the police have to pay the government to get exclusive rights to a section of Highway 1. The buy-in is three years salary but the payoff is enormous. Every time he stops a truck he gets 500,000VND ($25USD). An average day or night is worth about $800USD, and that’s just for his section of the highway. The driver has to travel 1500 miles. Imagine.

I had dinner at a British friend’s house last year and he pointed out the houses on either side of his in an exclusive gated compound in District 2. His neighbors, he also pointed out, were both local police officers. Real estate in this neighborhood is not cheap. Most of the villas in the compound are in the million dollar range. Not easy on a government salary of $300-500 a month.

On the local level, it’s fascinating to watch what happens when a policeman pulls over a motorbike. There is a short conversation. I’m imagining a lecture on safe driving or mechanical soundness. Then the officer asks for the driver’s papers which are tendered but include 200,000VND neatly folded between the pages. The papers are scrutinized and returned with a stern warning and both drive off. Transaction complete.

My own experience is limited, but on returning to Vietnam last month I had a small visa problem. Mine was issued in San Francisco with the wrong expiration date, a date that was earlier than my intended return date. I had a copy of the email with the correct dates and was told by the Vietnamese consulate in San Francisco that with my email confirmation it would be corrected on arrival in Saigon. It was corrected but not before the first immigration officer asked me for $50 to fix it. I pointed out that I had already paid for the visa and that the consulate had made the mistake. He did not have the stamp to make the official change, so he reluctantly took me over to another immigration line where I was told it could be done for $10. I saw the handwriting, so to speak, and rather than wait an hour for the process to work I handed over the $10 in order to speed the process up. No receipt was given but I did get the visa fixed and went on my merry way.

It’s easy to get discouraged, and doing business in Vietnam can be a sordid affair. On the other hand, America has a formalized and codified brand of corruption. It’s called lobbying and it’s corrupting Congress and preventing the legislative branch of government from acting in the national interest. If 75% of Americans believe we should have universal health care and that banks should be closely regulated to prevent another financial crisis how can we explain to to the world that Republicans are vowing to repeal the healthcare law and stonewall financial reform if they win in November? Are those things in the national interest? I have a hard time seeing how either America or Vietnam are going to fix themselves, but I think I have more confidence that Vietnam can do it than I think America can. How’s that for the cynical view?

Like Bali or Goa 30 Years Ago

I’ve missed a few chances over the years to be in the first wave of travelers to “discover” a place before the hordes arrive. In the 70’s I had a ticket to Bali but decided to trek in Nepal instead.

Nepal was amazing but I felt I had missed its “undiscovered” phase. Others had been there when it was even less civilized. As it turns out I’m glad I chose Nepal. For 23 days a friend and I walked from Pokhara to the Tibetan border, from Mansalu and Dhaulagiri to the Mustang area. It was unspoiled and the only other Westerner we saw in those 23 days was a German woman I knew from Berlin. But, I’m a beach rat and I always regretted not seeing Bali, Goa, and the Seychelles in those days.

Last week we took four days off to visit Phu Quoc the largest of the Vietnamese islands. It’s a 40 minute flight south from Ho Chi Minh City on Air Mekong, which as a matter of interest and security contracts with Delta’s commuter airline SkyWest for its cockpit crews. All of Vietnam’s islands have been subjects of territorial dispute. Phu Quoc is no exception. It lies just 12km south of Cambodia in the Gulf of Thailand. Cambodia claimed it. The French colonized it, and Vietnamese fishermen and farmers settled it. It’s physically closer to Cambodia than it is to Vietnam but in the French, Cambodian, Vietnamese tug of wars it ended up under Vietnamese control – mostly because the Vietnamese settlers had a numerical advantage. Until tourism started to gel it was known for pepper and fish sauce. It’s local fame comes from the its reputation as the source of the Vietnam’s finest fish sauce, that ubiquitous add-on made from anchovies and served with almost everything from pork to pizza. Those two products are still important but tourism is overtaking them in importance to the local economy.

During the various wars that raged in the 20th Century a small island off the south tip of Phu Quoc housed a notorious prison. It was not as infamous as the tiger cage prison on the island of Con Dao, but the treatment of prisoners was the same. During the “American War” the prison’s inmates were Viet Cong insurgents and supporters of Ho Chi Minh.

Phu Quoc has now been discovered. It’s a favorite destination for people living in Vietnam and it’s drawing more and more European travelers. Washington State’s Governor, Christine Gregoire, stayed here after her trade mission to Vietnam in 2010 but most Americans still haven’t found it. We only saw one other American couple during our stay. What is cool is that the island is very much like Bali and Goa were 30 or 40 years ago. There are a couple of luxury resorts. La Veranda (the second photo) is only 5 years old, but it is built in the style of the French Colonial villas of the past. I felt like we were stepping back in time. Graham Greene would have been comfortable with a G&T at the bar. But, if you step out onto the beach and walk 100′ in either direction you find another less luxurious but very vibrant island. You can still find a bungalow for $20-30. You can eat fresh seafood and quaff a frosty Tiger at a rickety wooden table on the sand. You can be massaged for an hour in the sun for $4 or get a manicure for $2. Sure, the hygiene standards might not include auto-claved instruments but the experience can’t be found many other places these days. The water is clear and it’s hotter than hell. This is April and Phu Quoc is 10 degrees north of the equator. We’re nearing the end of the dry season and you can almost feel the approaching rainy season. I love the sun but even I can’t take more than a few minutes of direct sun. It’s a scorcher. Great for afternoon naps in the tile-floored rooms with ceiling fans and mosquito nets (La Veranda has A/C; Goa didn’t).

We have stayed in eleven Vietnamese beach resorts over the last 5 year. Phu Quoc is one that I would happily revisit. I didn’t discover it, but I like to think I got to see it before it became wall to wall luxury hotels like China Beach.