KopiTalk with MHO
June 2026
Part 5 of the KopiTalk series on local economic participation in Brunei
From Ali Baba to Ali Chandran to Ali Bangla — the name has changed three times. The question underneath it has not moved an inch.
By Malai Hassan Othman
When this series began, Brunei was in the middle of another familiar cycle.
A viral complaint.
A new name.
A round of outrage on WhatsApp and TikTok.
Fingers pointing at foreign-run shops, foreign workers, foreign operators quietly building networks in spaces that local enterprise had left vacant.
The name this time was Ali Bangla.
But the name was never the problem.
It was never Ali Baba either.
Or Ali Chandran.
The name is what we reach for when we are not ready to say what we actually mean.
What we actually mean is this: Brunei has watched others organise inside its own market — systematically, patiently, effectively — while local economic participation has remained fragmented, cautious, and too often dependent on government support rather than commercial discipline.
That is not a complaint about foreigners.
It is a description of a structural failure that belongs to us.
Five parts.
One argument.
Part 1 named the pattern — how the same complaint has resurfaced under different names across decades, and why the name change is not the story. The story is why the system keeps producing the same outcome.
Part 2 explained the mechanics — how what looks like a shopfront is often the visible tip of a supply chain, and how the real competition is not between individual operators but between organised ecosystems and isolated individuals.
Part 3 placed the responsibility — who wrote the policy, who runs the system, who issued the licences, who rented them out, who chose the foreign stall over the local one. One finger pointed outward. Three pointed back.
Part 4 asked the harder question — so what do we build? And answered it: purchasing alliances, cooperative structures with commercial discipline, commercial spaces designed for small local businesses, financing pools, and a fundamental shift in what we count as progress. Not licences. Businesses that last.
Part 5 closes the circle.
Everything this series has examined — retail, food and beverage, construction, commercial property — tells the same story from a different angle.
In retail, the organised network survives on margins that would close an isolated shop.
In construction, the visible subcontractor is often the front of a labour, hardware and transport chain that stretches far beyond the project site.
In commercial property, shophouse lots in some of Brunei’s newer developments have been priced at levels that price out the local entrepreneur before they even open the door. When commercial space costs what it costs, and when banks will only lend against a leasehold with sufficient years remaining, the local operator starting alone is already at a structural disadvantage before the competition begins.
The pattern is the same in every sector.
The organised network absorbs cost, shock and risk across the chain.
The isolated individual absorbs it alone — and often closes.
This is not a coincidence.
It is what happens when a market is left to fill itself without a deliberate strategy to build local economic ecosystems alongside it.
The series has also been honest about something more uncomfortable than the structural failure.
The local licence holder who rents out his licence is not a victim. He made a calculation — that passive income is safer and easier than building a business. He was right, given the conditions. But the conditions were shaped by a policy environment that rewarded nominal ownership over active enterprise, that measured licences issued rather than businesses built, and that never asked, year after year, how many of those registered enterprises were actually running.
The local consumer who queues at the foreign stall is not disloyal. She made a calculation — that the price was better, the service more consistent, the product more reliably available. She was right, given what was on offer. But the offer was shaped by a market where organised operators had built the supply chain to compete on price and consistency, and where local enterprise had not yet organised itself to match.
The local contractor who hires foreign labour is not unpatriotic. He made a calculation — that the workers were more available, more willing, and often less expensive. He was right, given the labour market. But the labour market was shaped by decades of discouraging locals from entering certain trades, by a culture that associated certain work with status rather than skill, and by an education system that pointed everyone toward a desk job and called it aspiration.
In every case, the individual made a rational decision.
In every case, the system made that decision rational.
That is the reckoning the series has been building toward.
Not blame.
Not anger.
A clear-eyed look at how a system produces outcomes, and what it would take to produce different ones.
The regional lesson is worth repeating one final time, plainly.
Indonesia’s Benteng Policy gave preferential licences to indigenous citizens to build a merchant class. It produced rent-seekers, not entrepreneurs. It was abolished as a failure.
Malaysia’s affirmative action policy gave preferential treatment in contracts, equity and licensing. It helped some. It did not build a commercially disciplined entrepreneurial class. Decades later, the same conversation continues.
Singapore faced the same structural weaknesses in its Malay-Muslim business community and chose a different path — consolidation, professionalisation, shared infrastructure, institutions capable of competing at scale.
Brunei has had all three case studies available.
The question has never been whether we knew.
It has always been whether we were honest enough — and organised enough — to act.
So where does this leave us?
Not in despair.
The argument of this series has never been that Brunei cannot build a stronger local economic ecosystem. It has been that Brunei has not yet organised itself seriously enough to do it.
That is a different problem.
It has a different solution.
The solution is not a new policy name.
It is not another entrepreneurship programme.
It is not a crackdown on foreign shopfronts that leaves the underlying conditions unchanged.
It is local supply chains with local hands at every link.
Cooperatives governed like businesses, not committees.
Commercial spaces affordable enough for a local entrepreneur to survive long enough to become competitive.
Financing that reaches the people who need it.
KPIs that measure whether businesses lasted, not whether licences were issued.
And it is the consumer who chooses local — not out of guilt, but because local enterprise has organised itself well enough to deserve the choice.
The man in Muara who started with a barber shop understood something simple.
You do not wait for a policy to build an ecosystem.
You start with what you have.
You learn the trade.
You add one business.
Then another.
Then another.
One decade at a time.
That method is not foreign.
It is not complicated.
It is not beyond Brunei.
It just requires something that no policy document can mandate and no enforcement agency can deliver:
The decision to stop pointing at the name — and start building the thing.
The pattern is known.
The responsibility is ours.
The blueprint already exists.
The only remaining question is whether we are finally prepared to use it.
KopiTalk with MHO • Malai Hassan Othman
Substack: kopitalkwithmho.substack.com • LinkedIn: Distribution
Concluding part of the five-part KopiTalk series on local economic participation in Brunei.









