Two silences followed the pencen tua article — one from those with the most to protect, one from the middle who feel the squeeze but go unheard. All our rice pots are connected. Brunei’s welfare conversation is no longer about generosity. It is about who is still waiting. — KopiTalk with MHO
People who feel the daily squeeze engaged readily — young workers stretching a BND 500 salary across rent, food, fuel and family obligations; retirees quietly calculating what BND 250 actually covers in a month; families carrying ageing parents and growing children at the same time.
The quieter response came from a different direction.
Not necessarily because the argument was wrong.
Perhaps because it landed a little close to home for some.
That observation will stay brief and general. But it is worth sitting with, because silence in a public conversation is itself a form of response.
And this silence is not new.
Some who raised similar questions years ago, through proper channels, to the right people, heard nothing back either.
The silence has a long history.
One reader, however, did not stay quiet.
They raised the hard, uncomfortable realities of reforming welfare in a country like Brunei.
They called them the friction points.
They were right.
So let us go there.
The first friction point is the social contract.
In Brunei, universal welfare is not simply policy.
It is the architecture of an unspoken agreement that has held society together across generations.
Free healthcare. Subsidised fuel and utilities. Free education. A pension in old age. And no personal income tax.
That last point matters.
In countries where citizens pay income tax, the accountability reflex is instinctive. People ask where their money goes because they can feel it leaving.
In Brunei, the relationship runs the other way.
The state’s revenue comes mainly from natural resources, not from citizen taxation.
The state gives. Citizens receive.
Over time, receiving has come to feel less like a policy and more like a settled way of life.
This is why subsidy reform becomes emotionally difficult even when it is fiscally necessary.
Asking the comfortably cushioned to absorb more of the real cost of living does not feel, to them, like a rational adjustment.
It feels like the state breaking a promise.
That perception — however disconnected from economic reality — is a political fact that serious reform must reckon with honestly.
Dismissing it as sentiment will not make it disappear.
The second friction point is the administrative challenge of moving from a universal system to a targeted one.
To redirect welfare toward those who genuinely need it, the government must know things it does not yet know well enough.
Who earns what? Who owns what? Who draws a pension while earning elsewhere? Who is genuinely vulnerable, and who is comfortably managing?
Brunei has made steps in the right direction.
The National Welfare System was a meaningful move. Digital infrastructure is growing.
But tracking informal income, household wealth and secondary earnings across a population is not simple.
Many Bruneians do not fit neatly into official categories.
Some run small businesses. Some freelance. Some earn irregularly. Some help family enterprises without formal protection.
Some will reach old age without enough SPK savings to stand on.
When done poorly, means-testing can create the very bureaucracy, inconsistency, and leakage it was designed to prevent.
The savings from targeting could easily be swallowed by the cost of administering the system if the data foundation is not strong enough.
This is not an argument against reform.
It is an argument for building the foundations properly before building the house.
The third friction point deserves the most attention.
Call it the middle-class trap.
Or call it the second silence.
Because there are actually two silences in this conversation.
The first comes from those who are financially comfortable.
They have the most to lose from a targeted system and the least incentive to engage.
Their silence speaks for itself.
The second silence comes from somewhere more difficult — from the middle.
From households that are not poor enough to be prioritised and not comfortable enough to be indifferent.
From families managing on wages that have not kept pace with the cost of living, carrying obligations in both directions — parents above, children below — with little left over and no real cushion beneath them.
These are the households most exposed to the unintended consequences of reform.
If welfare becomes means-tested, the financially comfortable will barely notice.
The genuinely poor should receive stronger protection.
But the middle — the household earning just above whatever threshold is set, without significant savings or assets — may find itself trapped.
Too comfortable on paper to qualify.
Not comfortable enough in reality to feel secure.
This group is largely silent not by choice, but by circumstance.
They do not feel heard.
They do not see a clear channel through which to speak.
So they absorb the pressure quietly, year by year, without the conversation ever fully landing on what they actually carry.
And here is what makes this more urgent.
Brunei is ageing, and the pace of that change is not always visible in daily life.
The elderly population is not a distant issue waiting somewhere beyond 2035.
It is already arriving.
As more citizens live longer, pensions, healthcare, caregiving and retirement security will no longer be separate issues.
They will become one national pressure.
Many younger Bruneians set this conversation aside because retirement still feels distant.
There is always time to prepare later.
But that instinct is precisely how the problem compounds quietly over time.
The middle class today are the pensioners of tomorrow.
If wages remain stagnant, if SPK contributions are not enough to build a meaningful retirement floor, if informal workers remain outside proper protection, and if the cost of living continues to outpace income, then Brunei is not only managing a pension challenge today.
It is quietly building a larger one for fifteen or twenty years from now.
Fixing the pension for the elderly without fixing the conditions of the working middle is not a solution.
It is a postponement.
Healthcare adds another layer.
An ageing society does not only need cash support.
It needs clinics, carers, elder-friendly homes, accessible public spaces and preventive healthcare that reaches people before illness becomes expensive.
Non-communicable diseases such as diabetes, hypertension and obesity already place pressure on families and the healthcare system.
As the population ages, that pressure will grow.
This is why welfare reform cannot be treated only as a budget exercise.
It is also a care question.
Who will care for the elderly? Who will pay for that care? Who will train the caregivers? Who will support the families already doing that work quietly at home?
These are not abstract policy questions.
They are questions that will enter more Bruneian homes, one family at a time.
This is where individual responsibility enters the conversation — not to shift blame from the state to citizens, but to complete the argument.
Reform of the welfare system is the state’s obligation.
But financial literacy, retirement planning and savings discipline are the citizen’s contribution to their own future security.
Compassion from the state and prudence from the individual are not competing ideas.
They are two legs of the same journey.
A more precise welfare system creates room for stronger targeted support.
Citizens who build their own resilience reduce future dependency on that system.
Both matter.
Neither is enough alone.
One reader asked what may be the most honest question this series has produced.
Is anyone willing to be a political martyr to make this reform happen?
My honest answer is that martyrdom is probably not the mechanism.
Change of this kind rarely comes from one dramatic public stand.
But the question of whether quiet, persistent movement is enough in this day and age deserves equal honesty.
Silence from institutions and caution in corridors have not, historically, produced the urgency this issue demands.
Perhaps what is needed is neither martyrdom nor silence.
Perhaps it is the recognition that all our rice pots are connected.
We are not individual kitchens cooking in isolation.
We are fields sharing the same water source.
If the comfortable protect their harvest by allowing the vulnerable’s crops to fail, the consequences do not stay contained.
A workforce that cannot build financial security becomes an elderly population that needs rescue.
An elderly population without adequate support becomes a burden that falls back on the very middle class already squeezed.
If you poison your neighbour’s field to protect your own, the water that flows through is the same water.
Protecting one periuk nasi means ensuring the others stay full too.
That is not charity.
That is the arithmetic of a connected society.
Maqasid Syariah has something to say here that goes beyond economic calculation.
The protection of wealth — Hifz al-Mal — is not about preserving what the comfortable already have.
It is about ensuring that wealth serves the dignity and welfare of the whole community.
A system that protects the comfortable more reliably than the vulnerable is not fulfilling that obligation.
It is simply wearing its name.
Justice in this framework is not about giving everyone the same.
It is about giving each according to what they genuinely need.
That is the standard Brunei’s welfare system must now work toward — not as a principle to be cited, but as a commitment to be delivered.
Reform requires data, coordination, political will and honest public communication.
It requires explaining to people — carefully, consistently and with respect for what they have built their lives around — that the purpose of change is not to take from them, but to redirect care toward those who need it most.
In a society where trust between the state and the people is the foundation of everything, that explanation is not optional.
It is the reform itself.
There is an old parable worth remembering.
In hell, everyone is given giant chopsticks — too long to feed themselves. They sit surrounded by food and starve, fighting over what they cannot reach.
In heaven, the chopsticks are exactly the same length.
But instead of feeding themselves, they reach across the table and feed each other.
The chopsticks Brunei holds are not different from anyone else’s.
What changes everything is the direction they are pointed.
The comfortable may stay quiet.
The middle will keep absorbing.
And those at the bottom will keep waiting.
But the conversation has started.
And conversations, once started honestly, are difficult to undo.
That is, perhaps, where hope lives — not in the silence of those who have the most, but in the voices of those who have been waiting the longest to be heard.
―
Note: This essay is the fourth in a series on Brunei’s pension and welfare debate, developed in response to public comments on the earlier KopiTalk columns — BND 500 Is Already There, and Pencen Tua Was Born in a Different Brunei and BND 500 for Whom? The Pension Question Brunei Still Has to Answer






