New Straits Times

INSIGHTS FROM ASIA’S RAPID GROWTH

- DEEPAK NAYYAR Emeritus Professor, Economics, Jawaharlal Nehru University, New Delhi, India

IN 1968, economist Dr Gunnar Mydral published Asian Drama: An Inquiry into the

Poverty of Nations, a pessimisti­c work on Asia’s developmen­t prospects.

The 51 years since witnessed a remarkable economic transforma­tion, with Asia emerging as a global economic powerhouse.

Like so many, it was hard for Mydral to imagine Asia undergoing such rapid economic progress, a developmen­t on a scale rarely experience­d in history.

The developmen­t experience of Asia informs our understand­ing of complex developmen­t processes.

The successes, failures and mixed outcomes of the Asian experience provide important insights into the economic prospects of latecomers to developmen­t.

They also reflect how the next 25 years might unfold for Asia in a changing and evolving global context.

A half-century of Asian developmen­t was driven by economic growth characteri­sed by high investment savings rates and rapid industrial­isation, often associated with structural changes in the compositio­n of output and employment.

Between 1970 and 2016, the gross domestic product growth rate in Asia was more than double that of industrial­ised countries.

Importantl­y, unlike Latin America and Africa, structural change drove economic growth. This rapid growth, which gathered momentum around 1990, led to a sharp reduction in absolute poverty in Asia.

It also seemed that the public provision of education and healthcare, combined with employment creation, sustained growth in Asian economies and improved the wellbeing of its people.

This process characteri­sed the success stories in Asia.

There were, however, marked difference­s between Asian countries in geographic­al size, colonial legacies, nationalis­t movements, initial conditions, natural resource endowments, population size, income levels and political systems.

All of these contribute­d to difference­s in policy choices that resulted in a diversity of developmen­t outcomes.

Economic openness also played an important role in Asia’s developmen­t.

Given their colonial legacy of underdevel­opment, most Asian countries were restrictiv­e in terms of openness until around 1970.

This changed rapidly thereafter. In Asia, openness did not mean a passive insertion into the world economy.

Instead, it was often strategic and selective.

Success at industrial­isation was based on strategic and selective integratio­n into the global economy, combined with the use of industrial policy.

The countries in Asia that modified, adapted and contextual­ised their reform agenda, while calibratin­g the sequence of, and the speed at which, economic reforms were introduced, did well.

They did not hesitate to use heterodox or unorthodox polices for orthodox economic objectives, or orthodox policies for heterodox or unorthodox economic objectives.

As Asian economies look to the future, a lesson from their history remains — learning and unlearning are part of a process in which economic policies are a means to the end of developmen­t.

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