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'
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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:
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"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.



