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Wednesday, March 18, 2026

When the Answer Is Not Enough: A Reader Asks the Question Nobody Wants to Answer.

  

KOPITALK WITH MHO  |  Reader Response & Commentary

 

 

 

When the Answer Is Not Enough:

A Reader Asks the Question Nobody Wants to Answer.

By Malai Hassan Othman  |  KopiTalk with MHO  |  March 2026  |  In response to DMAO: 'Day Six of LegCo — Everything Was Answered… But There Is No Continuity, No Follow-Up, No Follow-Through'

 


  

DMAO read the Day Six report and asked one simple question: the answer was given — but then what? Who is still responsible after the session ends? KopiTalk with MHO responds.

 

 

 

DMAO wrote back again. And this time, his message is even simpler.

 

He said: Day Six showed that the system is listening. Ministers answered. Data was given. Issues were acknowledged. All of that is true — and fair. But here is the part that keeps him up at night.

 

After the session ends, after the Hansard is filed, after everyone goes home — what actually changes? 

 

Because if you look at LegCo over the years, you will notice a familiar pattern. An issue is raised. An answer is given. A programme is announced. And then, slowly, quietly — the follow-up stops. Nobody checks. Nobody reports back. Nobody asks: did it work? And in the next session, the same issue comes up again. Different words. Same problem.

 

The question is no longer: was the answer good? The question is: who is still responsible after the answer is given?

 

DMAO puts it plainly: we do not lack plans. We do not lack policies. What we lack is the discipline to follow through — to stay with the problem until it is actually solved, not just until it has been answered.

 

I think about the woman in the Day Six report. Working in the private sector. No written contract. Over time, nobody pays her for. She did not come to LegCo. But her situation was in the room — in the questions raised, in the data presented, in the gaps the Hansard quietly recorded. The answer acknowledged her reality. But the answer did not change it.

 

And her father — still waiting for a care system that has not yet reached his front door. The minister said it honestly: we cannot do this alone. Families will need to carry part of this. He is right that it takes a whole nation. But that whole nation includes her, the same person that the employment system is not fully protecting.

 

So I want to add one thing to what DMAO said. It is not just that nobody follows through. It is that the system was never really built to make anyone follow through. There is no one whose job it is to come back six months later and ask: Did the worker get her contract? Is the elderly care plan off the drawing board yet? Has that BND59.8 million housing arrears figure finally moved?

 

Good intentions do not close gaps. Accountability does. And accountability needs to be built into the system — not hoped for from individuals.

 

Good intentions do not close gaps. Accountability does.

 

DMAO ends with an image that stays with you. A son is still at home. After all the answers. After all the sessions. Still waiting.

 

That is the real test of every LegCo debate. Not how well the questions were answered in the chamber. But whether anything is different for that family when the next session comes around.

 

DMAO named the problem. Clearly. Fairly. Without fuss. And KopiTalk is glad he did — because this is exactly the kind of civic conversation that makes public life more honest.

 

 

 

Editor's Note

This is KopiTalk's second response to DMAO, who has now written two commentaries in response to the KopiTalk 22nd LegCo Tracker series. His first paper asked whether Brunei is confusing budget administration with nation-building. His second question asks who stays responsible after the answer is given. Both are worth reading. KopiTalk with MHO welcomes this kind of public engagement — it is the civic conversation Brunei needs more of.

 

 

 

KopiTalk with MHO  |  Public interest. Plain language. Honest conversation.

What was said, what mattered, and what the public is still waiting for.

  

KOPITALK WITH MHO

Column by Malai Hassan Othman

 

Whose Festival Is It, Anyway?

Every year, foreign traders arrive for Brunei's festive season, make their money, and leave. Local businesses are still here — and still struggling.

Bandar Seri Begawan  |  March 2026

 

Every Hari Raya, the halls are full.
The crowds come. The money flows.

But when it’s over, many local traders are left asking a simple question:

Was this season ever really theirs?

This week’s KopiTalk looks at a growing concern —
foreign vendors come, sell, and leave,
while local businesses struggle to stay afloat in their own market.

The numbers are telling.
The sentiment is real.
And the question is becoming harder to ignore.

 

Picture this. It is a few weeks before Hari Raya. Government workers have just received their Kurnia Peribadi. Annual bonuses are in the bank. People are in the mood to spend. The halls at Bridex and the International Conference Centre are packed, shoppers weaving between hundreds of stalls. The atmosphere is festive. The tills are ringing.

 

But ask a local trader how business is, and the answer may surprise you. For many, what should be the best season of the year is becoming one of the most demoralising.

 

The reason is not hard to find. Walk through those consumer fairs and count how many stalls belong to local businesses. Then count the rest. A growing number of Brunei traders and permanent residents — who have spent years building their businesses here, paying rent, licences, wages, and taxes — feel they are being crowded out of their own festive season by vendors who carry none of those long-term costs.

 

This column has received messages on exactly this issue. One veteran businessman put it simply: foreign traders come, sell, and leave with the money. They do not maintain shops. They do not employ locally. They do not reinvest here. And yet they are present at the most commercially valuable moment of the year, often at prices local businesses struggle to match.

 

It is a fair grievance. And the numbers behind it make it harder to dismiss with each passing year.

 

The Numbers Tell the Story

 

The Department of Economic Planning and Statistics publishes a Retail Sales Index every quarter. It is not light reading. But buried inside it is a pattern policymakers should not ignore.

 

In Q2 2021, when borders were closed, retail sales reached BND488.2 million — the highest in recent years. Bruneians could not shop across the border. Foreign vendors could not enter. So spending stayed local. And local businesses thrived.

 

Then the borders reopened. The trend reversed.

 

By Q2 2023, retail sales had fallen to BND446.1 million. In Q2 2024, to BND420.6 million. The latest figure, Q2 2025, stands at BND394.7 million — the lowest in at least eight years, even below pre-pandemic levels.

 

That is not a fluctuation. That is direction.

 

The relationship between open borders, foreign participation, and declining local retail may not be perfectly linear. But taken together, the trajectory is difficult to ignore — especially at a time when costs are rising and local businesses are under increasing strain.

 

Three Pressures, One Reality

 

Consumer fairs are only part of the story. Local traders are facing pressure on three fronts — simultaneously.

 

The first is cross-border spending. A 2024 Universiti Brunei Darussalam study estimated that Bruneians spend around BND1 billion annually in Limbang, Miri, and Sabah. That is almost the size of Brunei's entire retail sector, valued at roughly BND1.2 billion.

 

Why? The answer is simple: value.

 

"Spending BND100 [you get a] half cart here, or spending RM300 [you get a] full cart in Miri — people know how to calculate."

 

Part of that difference lies in the cost of doing business locally. Import delays, processing inefficiencies, and storage costs quietly accumulate — and are ultimately passed on to consumers.

 

"Imagine importing products and getting stuck in the container hub for weeks… you still have to pay for the space… you end up having to jack up prices."

 

The second front is online retail. Platforms like Shopee, Lazada, and Temu allow consumers to bypass local markets entirely — often at prices local businesses cannot match.

 

The third is seasonal consumer fairs themselves — events that can feature hundreds of booths, many operated by short-term vendors. They arrive, trade, and depart — taking their earnings with them.

 

The Kurnia Peribadi alone distributes over BND17 million just before Hari Raya. When a significant portion of that spending flows out just as quickly, it is reasonable to ask whether the intended economic impact is being achieved.

 

A Necessary Balance

 

To be fair, consumer fairs are not without value. They bring variety, competitive pricing, and a festive buzz that many Bruneians enjoy. For consumers, they offer access and choice. For organisers, they drive traffic and commercial activity.

 

The issue is not their existence. It is the balance of participation — and whether the current structure disproportionately disadvantages those who are rooted in the local economy year-round.

 

What People Are Actually Saying

 

This concern is not isolated. It is visible across public discussions — consistent in tone, and increasingly difficult to dismiss.

 

People are not opposed to foreign vendors. What they question is a system that appears to make it easier for outsiders to benefit than for those who have invested locally over decades.

 

"When people have less money, they try to maximise their buying power… one option is to cross the border… The government knows what they need to do… but they are not doing any of those."

 

Others point to the cumulative burden of regulation and inefficiency:

 

"Starting a business is not easy… regulations, inefficiencies, red tape… even when people have money, they go where there are more options."

 

And the long-term implication is clear:

 

"Businesses couldn't sustain… more Bruneians will join the unemployed pool."

 

Youth unemployment already stands at around 18 percent — among the highest in the region. When local businesses weaken, employment opportunities shrink with them.

 

A Question of Fairness

 

A Malay proverb comes to mind: menepuk air di dulang, terpercik muka sendiri — when you strike the water, it splashes back.

 

When policies unintentionally disadvantage local players, the consequences return to the economy itself.

 

Local traders are not asking for protection. They are asking for fairness — for the ability to compete on reasonable terms.

 

Another proverb says it more starkly: kera di hutan disusui, anak di rumah mati kelaparan.

 

It is a harsh image. But when the system consistently favours those without long-term commitments over those who sustain the economy daily, the question becomes unavoidable.

 

What Needs to Change

 

None of this is beyond correction.

 

Consumer fairs can remain vibrant — but the structure must evolve.

 

First, timing and access. During peak spending periods, local businesses should have priority access to stalls at major venues, at rates they can realistically afford.

 

Second, commitment. Participation should reflect contribution. Vendors who wish to benefit from Brunei's market should demonstrate a meaningful economic presence — whether through employment, longer-term engagement, or reinvestment.

 

Third, promotion. A serious Beli Brunei effort, tied to festive seasons and backed by real incentives, could shift behaviour meaningfully.

 

Fourth, measurement. AMBD and DEPS should quantify the extent of economic leakage linked to these activities. Policy should be driven by evidence, not reaction.

 

The Festive Season Should Work for Bruneians

 

Every year, the halls fill, the crowds gather, and the money flows. For a moment, it feels like prosperity.

 

But when the tents come down, too many local traders are left asking a quiet question: did the season truly belong to them?

 

The people who wrote to this column are not complainers. They are business owners who have stayed, invested, and contributed. They are asking for something simple — a fair chance during the one season that should matter most.

 

If Wawasan 2035 is about resilience and sustainability, then this is not a side issue. It is foundational.

 

Because in the end, a festive season is not just about celebration.

It is about who it sustains — and who it leaves behind.

 

 

KopiTalk with MHO is a public interest column by Malai Hassan Othman.

Readers may write to the column with issues of public concern.

 

— End —

Day Six of LegCo: The Worker Nobody Answered For, And the Parent Nobody Has Yet Made a Plan For.

  

KOPITALK LEGCO TRACKER  |  22nd Legislative Council Session

 


 

 

Day Six of LegCo: The Worker Nobody Answered For,

And the Parent Nobody Has Yet Made a Plan For.

KopiTalk with MHO    Tuesday, 17 March 2026    22nd LegCo, Day Six

 

 


She works in the private sector. No written contract. Overtime uncompensated. At home, her father is ageing — and the care system still cannot reach beyond the hospital walls. Day Six raised both realities in the same morning. Neither answer was really for her. KopiTalk LegCo Tracker — Day Six.

 

 

 

She works in the private sector. She does not have a written employment contract — her employer never provided one. She works overtime regularly and is not compensated for it. She has not complained, because she is not entirely sure who would listen, or whether doing so would cost her the job she needs.

 

At home, her father is in his late sixties. He had a mild stroke last year. He needs regular monitoring. The family manages — just. But she knows it will not always be manageable.

 

For many workers, this is not hypothetical.

 

The Hansard of Day Six of the 22nd Legislative Council session — Tuesday, 17 March 2026 — contains both halves of her reality. The labour rights question raised in Question Time was broad enough to cover her. The elderly care question raised in the same session was honest about the gap that will eventually reach her family. But neither answer was fully framed with her in mind.

 

On the labour side, the answer focused heavily on foreign worker management — LPA licences, employer compliance, and bilateral MOUs. Of the 529 compounds issued in 2025, 344 were for employing foreign workers without a valid licence or using expired permits.

 

The second largest category — 100 cases — involved improper placement of foreign labour. The enforcement system described — NLMS, inspections, licensing — remains strongly anchored around regulating foreign labour flows.

 

The local private sector worker without a written contract, working overtime without pay, having wages cut without authorisation — she appeared only briefly in the answer, through general provisions on employment contracts and complaint channels. The emphasis, however, still sits heavily elsewhere.

 

On the elderly care side, the Health Minister was commendably frank. By 2050, nearly 29 per cent of Brunei's population will be over 60. Geriatric services remain largely hospital-centred. The Step-Down facility in Tutong is still in planning. The main constraint: shortage of specialised manpower.

 

And then came the key admission — this cannot be handled by the Ministry of Health alone. It requires a whole-of-nation approach.

 

In practical terms, that means families will carry a significant part of the burden. The same families where working adults are navigating fragile employment conditions.

 

Both halves of this reality were present in the Hansard. Day Six did not invent them. It simply placed them side by side.

 

What Was Raised

 

Four issues carried genuine public weight on Day Six.

 

 

Labour rights — the question was broad, the answer narrower in focus.

 

Dayang Hajah Safiah and Pehin Orang Kaya Laila Setia Awang Haji Abd. Rahman raised concerns about worker exploitation. The response was data-rich — inspections, compounds, and enforcement actions. But the distribution of violations revealed where enforcement attention is concentrated. The majority relate to foreign labour licensing and placement. Only a smaller portion touches conditions that affect all workers, including locals.

 

 

Elderly care — honesty acknowledged, readiness still emerging.

 

Awang Zainol bin Haji Mohamed asked about long-term care. The response confirmed a system still in transition — hospital-centric, workforce-constrained, with community support structures still developing.

 

 

Apprenticeship schemes — real numbers, unanswered protection question.

 

11,588 participants across schemes. 70 per cent placement. Strong outcomes on paper. But Day Six leaves open a deeper question: what happens after placement?

 

 

Fiscal sustainability — signals of realism emerging.

Acknowledgement that revenue does not automatically follow growth. Early-stage study on tax reform. A subtle but important shift in tone.

 

What the Answers Revealed

 

Day Six was more candid than most days. That matters.

 

The Health Ministry outlined real constraints — ageing population, manpower shortages, and the need for integrated care. The Finance side acknowledged structural limits in revenue capture.

 

But the labour response revealed something more structural.

 

It told a story of system strength — but not entirely the story the question was asking for.

 

The emphasis remains on regulating foreign labour systems efficiently. Protection mechanisms for local private sector workers exist in law, but the lived experience of enforcement and access remains less visible in the exchange.

 

The labour answer told a story of system strength — but not entirely the story the question was asking for.

 

The gap was not meaningfully pursued further within the exchange.

 

A Balancing Signal — Where the System Is Improving

 

Day Six also showed where the system is moving forward — and this should not be ignored.

 

Efforts to streamline labour and immigration processes, digital systems like NLMS, and broader ease-of-doing-business reforms are improving efficiency and investor confidence. These are real gains. They matter for economic growth, job creation, and long-term competitiveness.

 

But efficiency on the business side and protection on the worker side do not always move at the same speed. Day Six suggests that this gap is where the next phase of reform will need to focus.

 

What the Public Is Really Asking

 
  • If enforcement is structured around foreign labour management, what is the lived pathway for a local worker facing unfair conditions?
 
  • If elderly care will depend on families, what support systems will reach those families before capacity expands?
 
  • If apprenticeship leads to placement, what ensures protection after entry into the workforce?
 
  • If fiscal reform is under study, when does it translate into tangible relief?
 

The Signal of the Day

 

Day Six produced a structural signal.

 

At the beginning of working life, protections exist — but do not always reach the ground with equal clarity.

 

At the later stage of life, care systems exist — but are not yet fully extended into the community.

 

These are not separate issues. They sit within the same household.

 

Day Six was substantive. The candour was real. The data was meaningful.

 

But the person at the centre of both discussions — the worker balancing fragile employment and family responsibility — was still only partially visible in the answers.

 

A budget debate that has now run six days has begun to reveal something deeper.

 

Not a lack of plans.

 

But the harder question is how those plans meet real lives.

 

 

 

KopiTalk LegCo Tracker covers the 22nd Legislative Council session from a public-first perspective.

What was said, what mattered, and what the public is still waiting for.

Tuesday, March 17, 2026

  

KOPITALK WITH MHO  |  Reader Response & Commentary

 

 When a Reader Writes Back:

This Is Exactly the Conversation Brunei Needs.

By Malai Hassan Othman  |  KopiTalk with MHO  |  March 2026  |  In response to DMAO: 'When Budgets Become Projects — But Nation Building Requires Outcomes'

 


 

📱  SOCIAL MEDIA TEASER

A reader read the Day Five LegCo report. Then he sat down and wrote a serious, structured paper in response. That paper asks one uncomfortable question: is Brunei confusing budget administration with nation building? KopiTalk with MHO reads it carefully — and responds.

 

 

 

A reader wrote back.

Not a complaint. Not a compliment. A paper. A serious, structured, uncomfortable paper that took the KopiTalk Day Five LegCo Tracker and asked a question I had been circling for days but had not yet named cleanly: Is Brunei confusing budget administration with nation building?

When I read it, my first thought was — this is exactly the conversation we should be having. My second thought was — I should respond. So here we are.

DMAO — a long-time supporter of this column and someone whose thinking I have come to respect — titled his paper 'When Budgets Become Projects — But Nation Building Requires Outcomes.' He begins with something every engineer, contractor and civil servant will recognise instantly: the project management triangle. A project is considered successful when it is delivered within budget, to specification, and on time. Cost. Specification. Time. Clean. Measurable. Final.

Then he asks the question that makes the triangle uncomfortable: is this how we should be measuring whether a nation is developing?

Because a bridge delivered on time, within budget and to specification is a completed project. But a country with working bridges, employed graduates, food on its own tables and industries that did not exist ten years ago — that is something different. That is a nation that is building itself. And DMAO's point is that we have, over time, become very good at the first thing while remaining less certain about whether we are actually achieving the second.

 

He puts it plainly in the paper itself:

 

"A project can be delivered perfectly and still leave the nation unchanged.

Nation building requires something more: institutions that produce outcomes,

not just activity." — DMAO, 'When Budgets Become Projects'

 

From there, DMAO proposes three shifts, he says, are necessary to close the gap. The first is cognitive — stop asking only whether the budget was spent properly, and start asking whether the spending changed the future. The second is a priority shift — move from measuring activity to measuring outcomes: jobs created, food produced locally, industries built, young people employed in work that matches what they studied. The third is behavioural — move institutional culture away from defending procedures and toward solving problems together.

And he adds a fourth dimension to the project management triangle: the expansion of national capacity. Not just was the project completed, but did it make the country stronger, more resilient, better prepared for what is coming?

Read it once, and it sounds like good governance theory. Read it twice — against the backdrop of five days of LegCo proceedings — and it sounds uncomfortably accurate.

What I Think About It

DMAO is right. And he is right in an uncomfortable way, which is the best kind of being right.

Sitting through five days of the 22nd LegCo session — reading the Hansard, listening to questions and answers, tracking what was raised and what was revealed — I have been struck by exactly the pattern he describes. The system is articulate about what it has done. It is considerably less articulate about what has changed as a result.

Questions about youth unemployment were answered with information about programmes implemented. Questions about food security were answered with statistics on export growth and infrastructure investment. Questions about inclusive education were answered with counts of institutions, certifications, and training sessions delivered. All of this information is real. None of it is false. But none of it fully answers the question that was actually being asked.

The question being asked is whether something has changed in the life of the person the programme was designed to serve. That question kept getting answered with evidence that the programme exists.

DMAO names this gap with precision. And precision matters, because vague unease about government delivery is easy to dismiss. A clearly articulated framework — cognitive shift, priority shift, behavioural shift — gives the unease a structure that can be engaged with, argued about, tested against evidence, and eventually acted upon.

That is what good public thinking does. It gives language to what people sense but cannot quite articulate. And in doing so, it moves the conversation forward.

Bringing It to Ground

What I want to add to DMAO's framework — as a columnist rather than a policy analyst — is the ground-level texture of what these shifts would actually look like if they happened. Because frameworks are necessary, but they live at an altitude. At some point, they need to come down to street level, kampung level, kitchen table level.

What does the cognitive shift look like at ground level in Brunei today?

It looks like a ministry's annual performance review that leads with the question: how many people found sustainable employment because of what we did this year — not how many workshops we held or how many participants attended.

It looks like a school that measures its inclusive education programme not by the number of Individualised Education Plans filed, but by whether children with special needs are genuinely progressing — and what changes when they are not.

It looks like a food security strategy that is judged not by the kilometres of irrigation built, but by the percentage of Brunei's daily food consumption that is produced on Brunei's soil.

What does the behavioural shift look like at ground level?

It looks like an officer who surfaces a failing programme early, before the money runs out and the results cannot be recovered, and is thanked rather than sidelined for it.

It looks like a ministry that, when a member of the Legislative Council asks a pointed question about outcomes, responds not with a defence of its procedures but with an honest account of what is working, what is not, and what it intends to do differently.

It looks like a culture in which 'we are still gathering data' is understood as the beginning of an answer — not a complete one.

These are not revolutionary demands. They are the reasonable expectations of a patient public, that continues to believe in the potential of its institutions, and that is simply asking those institutions to be as serious about outcomes as they are about procedures.

On Participatory Governance — and Why This Exchange Matters

There is something worth pausing on in the fact that this column is publishing a response to a reader's response to a column.

DMAO did not write to complain. He did not write to flatter. He read a piece of public-interest journalism about the LegCo session, sat with it, and produced a structured, serious, evidence-informed response that extends the conversation into territory the original column did not cover. That is precisely the kind of civic engagement that Brunei's national conversation needs more of.

Participatory governance is a phrase that appears regularly in policy documents. It is often understood as formal consultation — surveys, town halls, structured feedback mechanisms. These are valuable. But participatory governance also happens informally, in the space between a published idea and a citizen who takes it seriously enough to write back.

When a reader engages seriously with public-interest journalism — when they bring their own expertise, their own framework, their own thinking to the conversation and offer it back — that is participation. That is citizenship in action. And this column is genuinely glad to be part of it.

KopiTalk with MHO does not claim to have all the answers. It claims only to ask the questions honestly — and to welcome, with equal honesty, the answers that thoughtful readers bring.

If the 22nd LegCo session has demonstrated anything, it is that Brunei has people — inside the chamber and outside it — who are thinking seriously about the country's future. Members who ask pointed questions. Ministers who respond with increasing frankness. Readers who write papers. Columnists who respond to them.

That is a healthier civic ecosystem than the one we had a decade ago. It is not yet the ecosystem we need. But it is moving in the right direction. And movement in the right direction — even when it is slower than we would like — deserves to be acknowledged.

A Final Word

DMAO ends his paper with a gentle invitation: perhaps this is the conversation we should be having, over kopi.

I accept the invitation. And I extend it to every reader of this column.

Brunei does not have a shortage of plans. It does not have a shortage of intelligent people. It does not have a shortage of commitment among those who serve in its institutions and its public life. What it needs — and what pieces like DMAO's help to build — is a shared language for the gap between what is planned and what is delivered, and a shared culture of honesty about closing it.

The three shifts DMAO describes — cognitive, priority, behavioural — will not happen because a paper was written about them, or because a column responded. They will happen because enough people in enough institutions decide that the old way of measuring success is no longer adequate for the country they want to build.

But conversations like this one are where that decision begins. Over a column. Over a paper. Over kopi.

 

 

 

Editor's Note

KopiTalk with MHO welcomes responses, commentaries and public contributions from readers who engage seriously with the issues raised in this column. The paper by DMAO, 'When Budgets Become Projects — But Nation Building Requires Outcomes,' was written in response to the KopiTalk LegCo Tracker Day Five report of 16 March 2026. It is reproduced and engaged with here in the spirit of open, public-interest discourse.

 

 

 

KopiTalk with MHO  |  Public interest. Plain language. Honest conversation.

What was said, what mattered, and what the public is still waiting for.