The East Asian Growth Regime and Political Development. Kenichi Ohno (GRIPS)

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Transcription:

The East Asian Growth Regime and Political Development Kenichi Ohno (GRIPS) July 2007

East Asia s Achievements and Issues Diversity in performance Participation in the regional production network Policy as key to economic success Authoritarian developmentalism as a dynamic and temporary regime The exit problem Democratic developmentalism?

High Performance No doubt about high average growth in recent decades Per Capita GDP (Measured in 1990 international Geary- Khamis dollars) Source: Angus Maddison, The World Economy: A Millennium Perspective, OECD Development Centre, 2001. 4000 3500 East Asia 3000 2500 2000 Africa 1500 1000 500 0 1950 1960 1970 1980 1990 1998

Diversity in Political and Economic Development Governance, WGI2005 600 500 400 300 200 Mong VN Camb Indo E Timor 100 PNG Lao N Kor Mya 0 100 1000 10000 100000 Mal Thai Phil China Sin S Kor Hkg Jpn Twn Bru Per capita income ($PPP2004, log scale) High correlation (0.90) but causality cannot be argued from this diagram Only circled economies participate in regional dynamism Sources: Compiled from World Bank, Worldwide Governance Indicators, Sep. 2006; and World Bank, World Development Indicators, 2006.

East Asia s Uniqueness The region is like a big factory where member economies compete Growth starts by participating in this regional dynamism The sandwich effect pressure from above and below to work harder FDI as relocater of industries Clear but shifting order and structure (flying geese)

1975 1976 1977 1978 1979 1980 1981 1982 1983 1984 1985 1986 1987 1988 1989 1990 1991 1992 1993 1994 1995 1996 1997 1998 1999 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 Manufactured Exports Manufactured exports / total exports 100% 90% 80% 70% 60% 50% Japan Taiwan Korea Singapore Malaysia Thailand 40% 30% 20% 10% Philippines Indonesia China Vietnam Myanmar 0% Sources: Asian Development Bank, Key Indicators of Developing Asian and Pacific Countries, 1993 & 2006; Statistical Bureau, Ministry of Internal Affairs and Communications, Japan Statistical Yearbook 2007.

Development and Aid Strategy There is a clear gap in developmental thinking between Eastern practitioners and Western aid community. Goal East Asia s Way Economic prosperity and national pride Policies Industry, investment, trade, technology Key actors Central government and businesses Western Donors Poverty reduction (MDGs) Health, education, governance Local communities and people

East Asia s Policy Mix

Growth policies vision, strategy, technology, HRD, infrastructure, SMEs, FDI, trade, finance, logistics, etc. Supplementary policies inequality, pollution, urbanization, congestion, labor migration, corruption, drugs, HIV/AIDS, etc. --Rapid growth always creates new problems, which destabilize society. --Unless both policies are implemented, development will fail (Murakami). --Success depends on these policies, rather than diligence or Confucianism

Authoritarian Developmentalism E. Asia chose authoritarian developmentalism (AD) for economic take-off. Key ingredients of AD Powerful and economically literate top leader Development as a supreme national goal Technocrat group to support leader and execute policies Political legitimacy derived from growth The leader, as primary force of change, can create the other three conditions.

Authoritarian Developmentalism in East Asia 1945 50 55 60 65 70 75 80 85 90 95 2000 Korea Taiwan Philippines Indonesia Singapore Malaysia 60 61 79 87 88 92 97 Noh Taewoo Rhee Syngman Park Chung-hee Chun Doo-hwan Kim Dae-jung 49 75 78 88 Kim Young-sam Nationalist Party Chiang Kai-shek Chiang Ching-kuo Lee Teng-hui 46 48 53 57 61 65 86 92 98 Quirino Garcia Marcos Aquino Magsaysay Macapagal 99 55 59 65 90 Habibie 57 70 76 81 Ramos Chen Shuibian Estrada Skarno Suharto Wahid Labor Party People's Action Party Lee Kuan-yew UMNO / Rahman Razak Hussein Mahathir Goh Chok-tong Thailand 46 48 57 58 63 73 75 77 80 88 91 97 Phibun Sarit Thanom Prem Chuan Vietnam Indochina Communist Party 51 76 Kriangsak Chatichai Labor Party Vietnamese Communist Party Myanmar 48 62 88 U Nu Burma Socialist Programme Party / Ne Win SLORC Source: Akira Suehiro, Catch-up Type Industrialization, Nagoya University Press, 2000, p115.

Emergence of AD AD emerges through a coup as well as election. AD is more likely to rise when the nation s existence is threatened by: External enemy Internal ethnic/social instability Incompetent and corrupt leader The rise and fall of AD is conditional mainly on the development stage of each country, but international environment also influences them. Eg. Cold War reduced global criticism of AD

Why Power Concentration is Needed? Growth requires a critical mass of mutually consistent policies. A strong state is needed to mobilize resources quickly and flexibly. If broad participation is allowed, policies are too slow and can t achieve critical mass due to: --Power struggle, party politics, interest groups --Processes requiring patience and compromise, including parliamentary debate and consensus building --Some groups may refuse to cooperate with state purposes

Adrian Leftwich (2005) The institutional characteristics and requirements for development and for democracy pull in opposite directions. Democracies have great difficulty in taking rapid and far-reaching steps to reduce structural inequalities in wealth. Development Change Speed & flexibility Accumulation Democracy Compromise Accommodation Procedure

Critiques of AD Democracy and development are separate issues: I do not subscribe to the idea that you need to delay democratization just so that you can actually have growth or that you can have democracy only when you can afford it. (Dani Rodrik, 2006) Democracy is required for development Expansion of freedom is viewed both as the primary end and as the principal means of development. (Amartya Sen, 1999)

Korean Experience N.T.T.Huyen Is There a Developmental Threshold for Democracy?: Endogenous factors in the Democratization of South Korea (2004) Democracy as an advanced form of politics is not independent from socio-economic development. Developmental threshold for democracy [is] a point in the development process beyond which democracy can be effectively installed and sustained.

10000 9000 8000 7000 6000 5000 4000 3000 2000 1000 0 80% farmers Korea: Per Capita GDP in 1990 USD 90% middle class End of AD 1960 62 64 66 68 70 72 74 76 78 80 82 84 86 88 90 92 94

Exit of AD Low income trap Catching-up period (AD useful) High income society Democracy Pluralism AD is a temporary regime of convenience, needed only to push up the country to a higher level. Once a certain level is reached, AD becomes an obstacle to further development. Watanabe (1998) argues that successful AD melts away automatically through social change and democratic aspiration. if development under authoritarian regime proceeds successfully, it will sow the seeds of its own dissolution [improved living standards and diversified social strata]

Exit of AD: A Less Optimistic View However, barriers do exit: stubborn leader, bureaucratic resistance, interest groups. Therefore, leadership and strategy are also needed for an exit. Strong leaders often refuse to step down because they will be revenged, jailed and even executed after transition, with most or all of their policies denied and reversed.

The Exit Problem for One-party Rule (China and Vietnam) Rapid growth and social transformation driven by private dynamism (local & FDI) Success so far in managing liberalization, but not industrial activism Policy challenge is in social areas, not accelerating growth Future options: (1) Greatly enhancing party s policy capability (2) Multi-party system under social democracy (3) Other

Democratic institution (Form) Full democracy Constitution Laws Parliament Election Court Party Setback Pure dictatorship Reform vs conservatism, big vs small government, foreign policy, etc (Content) Political competition

Democratic institution (Form) Constitution Laws Parliament Election Court Party US rule 1945-51 Democratization New constitution Defeat The Case of Japan 2007 Showa2 LDP dominance Lack of policy debate War 1937 Showa1 Military rises 1931 1960 Male suffrage Democracy movement, Party cabinet Taisho 1925 Full democracy Fascism 1937-45 Constitution Parliament 1889 Pure dictatorship Edo Political fights Meiji Reform vs conservatism, big vs small government, foreign policy, etc (Content) Political competition

Democratic Developmentalism? (Mild Form of AD) Research on DD --Robinson and White eds (1998) --Centre for Policy Studies study on The Democratic Developmental State in Africa --Ethiopian Prime Minister Meles Zenawi Can we separate resource mobilization from freedom and human rights? Countries that already have free election, functioning parliament, human rights can they adopt developmental policies without throwing out their political achievements? Need to decompose democracy into parts and analyze its structure

Components of Democracy Purposes Freedom, human rights, equality, social and economic benefits for all, security, peaceful coexistence Procedures Legitimacy (election), rule of law, participation, multi-party system, balance of power (L-E-J), local autonomy Properties Tolerance, compromise, fairness, transparency, accountability Random & excessive oppression should never be allowed. Can some of these restricted for resource mobilization?

Designing DD: Tentative Suggestions Democratic criteria should go beyond free election. Generally speaking, policy purposes should be upheld but procedures and properties may be partly adjusted. The executive branch should have sufficient power, but with a mechanism to overthrow it if it performs badly. Excessive decentralization at an early stage is not desirable.

Final Remarks When income is very low, a bottom-up regime based on rural population or social democracy (poor farmers or poor workers) may not work. More realistic: use the East Asian AD model (top-down quick decisions with supporting elites) with added democratic elements.