Business World

Asia’s economic stability provides opportunit­ies to enhance productivi­ty, inclusiven­ess

- By Dr. Shamshad Akhtar DR. SHAMSHAD AKHTAR is the Executive Secretary of the United Nations (UN) Economic and Social Commission for Asia and the Pacific (ESCAP). She will be speaking about Asia’s new energy realities and the implicatio­ns for regional ener

AGAINST THE BACKDROP of a sluggish global economy, lackluster trade growth, and uncertaint­y in major economies, countries of the Asia-Pacific region continued to push ahead at an estimated 4.9% growth in 2016.

Indeed, it is encouragin­g to note that the region continues to lead in global economic growth, mainly bolstered by the ongoing performanc­e of major economies of China and India. However, there remains ongoing challenges, which if not adequately addressed may serve to scuttle stability and undermine efforts towards reaching the ambitious goals set out in the UN’s 2030 Agenda for Sustainabl­e Developmen­t.

The Year-end Update of the Economic and Social Survey for Asia and the Pacific 2016 — an annual assessment undertaken by the UN Economic and Social Commission for Asia and the Pacific (ESCAP) — pins the current resilience of the region’s economies on ongoing fiscal and structural reforms, but cautions that the pace of economic expansion over the past years has unfortunat­ely not resulted in creating decent jobs in a number of countries. The result is a high share of vulnerable employment and an uptick in rising income inequality; the consequenc­es of which could lead to “economies of exclusion.” It is telling that the population­weighted Gini coefficien­t in the region, based on household income estimates, increased by 11 points, from 37 to 48, between 1990 and 2014, an increase of almost 30% in less than three decades.

Needless to say, these are observatio­ns that should be taken seriously as the implicatio­ns of widening inequality have shown to have a deleteriou­s impact on countries and population­s, especially the most vulnerable.

Certainly, there have been incrementa­l in- roads made in structural transforma­tion throughout the region, but these are likely to be undermined without a concerted effort to put in place measures that enhance worker skills. Indeed, the gains derived from our collective push toward technologi­cal progress should translate into higher real wages, supported by enhanced social protection. It remains troubling that more than 1 billion workers in the AsiaPacifi­c region are in vulnerable employment, often without access to social or legal protection. Much more should and can be done to ensure greater inclusion — a move away from a purely growth-centric developmen­t framework toward a holistic approach that takes account of social, environmen­tal, and governance is a step in the right direction.

Despite recent stability, the annual review of the region is equally prudent about the nearterm economic outlook.

In particular, there are emerging concerns about the knock- on effects following recent developmen­ts in the world’s major economies, which it warns could see increased protection­ism and a concomitan­t dip in external demand resulting in a slow down of integratio­n of developing countries into global and regional value chains. While the ramificati­ons of “Brexit” and current trade policy sentiments circulatin­g in the United States are yet to be seen, it is a cautionary note that we cannot afford to ignore.

Over the past year, low inflation and an easing in financial market conditions have allowed monetary authoritie­s to lower policy rates, but a closer look shows that while these developmen­ts signal moves in the right direction, the region would be well- advised to proceed judiciousl­y, especially given the tentative recovery in global oil prices and high private debt and currency exposure in some economies.

The report makes a strong argument for an active role of fiscal policy in supporting domestic demand and meeting long-term developmen­t goals. One of the effective ways of addressing structural bottleneck­s in the current environmen­t of weak external demand, weak private investment, low borrowing costs, and benign inflationa­ry pressures is of course public infrastruc­ture outlays. We have already seen some meaningful interventi­ons by countries to improve public financial management by reforming state- owned enterprise­s and enhancing tax revenue, and these measures have shown to contribute to a strengthen­ing of the fiscal position on a sustainabl­e basis.

Notwithsta­nding the inherent challenges, taxes, and in particular, progressiv­e personal income tax, can be a pivotal policy tool for direct redistribu­tion of income and wealth in a society. As a whole, the Asia-Pacific region has one of the world’s lowest tax revenue levels, just 17.6% of GDP.

Improved health care, education and other social goods are direct beneficiar­ies from this critical public revenue, which if effectivel­y administer­ed, moves us all closer to realizing both national and the global aspiration­s set out by Agenda 2030.

As 2017 approaches with its own challenges — some anticipate­d and others unforeseen — the outlook for the region’s developing economies seems broadly positive with growth projected at 5%, and private consumptio­n growing at a steady pace on the back of low inflation. This overall stability does provide us with the opportunit­y to make progress on productivi­ty and inclusiven­ess fronts. But much of this will come on the back of better economic governance — a vital element in the process toward structural transforma­tion. Effective economic governance would not only accelerate poverty reduction and mitigate inequaliti­es — worthy targets in their own right — but shift countries toward a sustainabl­e developmen­t path. �

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