Even dictatorships have problems and as long as they give the ordinary
people "bread and circuses", they remain in power.

 

When South Africa adopted a decimal currency in 1961, they went to great
lengths to ensure that there was no profiteering.  As a result,
decimalisation was accepted by the population as a "non-political" reform,
likewise with metrication a decade later.

 

The rationale behind the adoption of metrication in Burma is an opening up
of trade - I am sure that the junta has realized that all their neighbours
have prospered and that if they wish to prosper, then they too need to open
their borders.  Like South Africa, the junta need some sort of PR to promote
changes which means clamping down on profiteers.    

 

  _____  

From: owner-u...@colostate.edu [mailto:owner-u...@colostate.edu] On Behalf
Of Carleton MacDonald
Sent: 24 July 2011 21:38
To: U.S. Metric Association
Subject: [USMA:50909] RE: Ditch the viss, govt urges traders

 

I thought Burma was a dictatorship, and assumed that the military junta
could just dictate what they wanted.

 

Carleton

 

From: Kilopascal [mailto:kilopas...@cox.net] 
Sent: Sunday, July 24, 2011 12:51
To: U.S. Metric Association
Subject: Ditch the viss, govt urges traders

 

Burma moves to adopt the kilogram as the basic unit for commodities trade.

 

http://www.mmtimes.com/2011/business/584/biz58401.html

 


Ditch the viss, govt urges traders 


By Ko Ko Gyi 
July 18 - 24, 2011

THE basket, viss, tin and tical would largely disappear from Myanmar if the
Ministry of Commerce gets its way.

At a meeting on the development of wholesale centres held in Magwe last
month, participants agreed in principle to the government's proposal to
adopt the kilogram as the basic unit for commodities trade in all townships.

If implemented, the kilogram would replace traditional, non-metric
measurements that are used widely in domestic trade. The government is
pushing the change to make foreign trade, which is conducted exclusively in
metric measurements, simpler and bring the country into line with its trade
partners.

U Kyaw Htoo from the Ministry of Commerce told traders at the June 24
meeting they should discuss the proposal with "all implementing partners" in
their townships and then present their views at the next meeting, to be held
in Muse, Shan State, in late August or early September.

Despite agreeing to consider the proposal, traders who participated in the
meeting told The Myanmar Times afterwards they thought there was little
chance of it being implemented in the near future.

One 30-year-old commodities trader from Magwe said there would be "many
obstacles" and anticipated strong resistance from farmers.

"It needs to be negotiated with farmers and will definitely take some time
to implement. If there are many objections, how can it be introduced
quickly? If many are willing to support it though, it could be possible," he
said.

A beans and pulses trader from Magwe with more than 40 years experience in
the industry agreed producers were unlikely to accept the shift to the
metric system. 

"In the past we couldn't even shift from using the basket to the viss. Even
today sesame is purchased [from farmers] in Magwe using the basket. When
selling sesame we do so using the viss. Rural people only know the basket
and don't really accept any other measure. If we try to use a measure they
are not familiar with they think they are being cheated," he said.

"If this shift is put into practice right now we would have to use two
different measures: [basket] when and [kilogram] when selling. That's the
only way we could do it without disrupting trade."

However, traders could also prove an obstacle to the changeover. Most use a
scale called a kattar to weigh commodities and would be loathe to replace
all their equipment, said U Kyaw Myint from business information provider
E-Trade Myanmar.

"A large amount of money would have to be poured into manufacturing new
weighing machines. For the country as a whole, the cost would be very high,"
U Kyaw Myint said.

"Exporters already use the metric system. But those who do business locally
just use the prevailing means of measure because it is more convenient."

Dr Khin Mar Zaw from the Department of Vocational Training, under the
Ministry of Industry 2, said the shift to metric system had been completed
in more than 100 countries after the imposition of a law. She noted that, in
some cases, original measuring units continued to be used for some time -
even indefinitely - after the metric system had been introduced. 

She said the United Nations Industrial Development Organisation had assisted
Cambodia and Laos with metrication under a Mekong Region project but was not
sure if Myanmar would be eligible for assistance.

Experts from New Zealand had assisted Myanmar in "adapting" the metrication
laws used in these two countries to Myanmar's "conditions" and a draft
measuring technology law had been submitted to the Ministry of Science and
Technology's standardisation department during the State Peace and
Development Council government, she said.

Dr Khin Mar Zaw said she could not reveal the exact contents of the draft
law.

Myanmar is apparently one of just three countries - along with Liberia and
the United States - that have not yet adopted the International System of
Units, also known as SI, as their legal units of measure. However, many
countries use a combination of metric and non-metric measures.

- Translated by Thit Lwin 

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