Kommentatorer: Asien en gåde – store økonomier stormer frem, alligevel er 600 millioner ludfattige

Redaktionen

In a commentary published in The Straits Times of Singapore World Bank Regional Chief Economist for South Asia, Shantayanan Devarajan, and Regional Chief Economist for East Asia and the Pacific, Homi Kharas, write that Asia is a puzzle (gåde).

China, India and several other countries are enjoying rapid economic growth. Yet some 600 million Asians – more than the entire population of Latin America – live on less than a dollar (6,20 DKR) a day. 

But this puzzle is also an opportunity: If China and India can sustain their 8 to 10 percent annual GDP growth, and bring the rest of Asia with them, the continent with the largest concentration of poor people in the world has a very good chance of eliminating poverty by 2015. This issue among others was the subject of a conference last week on the region’s future. 

What will it take?

he same factors that enabled Asia to achieve rapid growth in the past – domestic reforms and external assistance – but with some important changes. All Asian countries, especially China and India, grew rapidly by maintaining macroeconomic stability, opening up their economies to trade, and harnessing private-sector dynamism. The fiscal, trade, regulatory and financial sector reforms that made these possible should be continued and deepened. 

SECOND, the growth needs to be more widely shared.

Since 80 percent of Asias poor live in rural areas, agricultural growth will be key. Rural infrastructure, land rights, rural credit and better prices for agricultural products – something that will be helped by a successful conclusion to the Doha Round of trade talks – will contribute to higher incomes for Asias farmers, the authors write.

THIRD, because of their recent rapid growth, all Asian countries are now facing infrastructure bottlenecks.

From Bangladesh to China, businesses rank infrastructure as a major constraint to investment. Estimates of the amount of new infrastructure needed are around 250 billion US dollar annually. But at least as important as building new infrastructure is managing existing infrastructure assets.

Despite ample supply, no city in South Asia has water 24 hours a day. Water tariffs are politically manipulated, utilities are inefficient and a drain on the treasury, and crucial maintenance is neglected. Better management of infrastructure and more conducive policies can also attract private-sector funds for new infrastructure as the public sector will not be able to finance all of the additional 250 billion US dollar. 

FOURTH, unless Asia has a healthy, skilled and productive work force, it will not be able to sustain its growth.

Countries such as Pakistan and Cambodia are seeing slow progress in health and education. Regions such as northern India and western China have very high and stubborn rates of child mortality.

And countries which have achieved basic human development, like Sri Lanka, Bangladesh and Indonesia, are facing second-generation problems of education quality, secondary and tertiary education, and non-communicable diseases like cancer, diabetes and heart disease. Here too the problem is not just a lack of resources, but ineffective use of it. 

In India, the absentee rate of doctors in public, primary health clinics is 40 percent. Tackling this problem will require strengthening the delivery of services in primary education, universities, clinics and hospitals, to name a few, by holding politicians and providers more accountable to citizens, especially poor citizens. 

FINALLY, the Asian continent has been hit by a series of man-made and external shocks, from the East Asian financial crisis of the 1990s to the tsunami in the Indian Ocean in 2004.

While they have generally weathered these shocks and there have been very few episodes of sustained negative growth in the continent, Asian countries will have to protect the factors that helped them adjust to these shocks, including a diversified economy, low external debt, and a focus among policymakers on preventing crises.

The international community has also played an important role in fostering growth and poverty reduction in Asia. But the fact that aid has been successful in Asia means that the partnership will have to change in the future.

As Asian incomes grow, financial assistance for “gap-filling” becomes less important, except in the poorest countries. What becomes more important is knowledge assistance. But this knowledge assistance too is changing, from traditional technical assistance to joint problem-solving with governments, civil society and the private sector; from prescriptions to empirically based policymaking.

To scale up poverty reduction, Asian governments need to know what works, and what does not. Impact evaluations of innovative projects, often financed by the World Bank or the United Kingdom’s Department for International Development, can answer this question, the authors write. 

Kilde: www.worldbank.org