Time to Ruffle a Lot of Feathers to Lead Asia into New Global Role
William Pesek | September 02, 2009
Related articles
New Economic Task Forces Will Shield Nation from Global Slump: Boediono 9:43pm Jan 11, 2012
Academic May Lead Swiss Central Bank As Franc’s Defender 9:46pm Jan 10, 2012
In Countries Across Southeast Asia, the Banyan Trees of Old Are Giving Way 9:05am Dec 8, 2011
Only 2 Credit Cards For Low-income Malaysians 10:46am Nov 17, 2011
Asia Opens Its Doors to Foreign Workers, But No Permanent Residents, Please 9:43am Nov 15, 2011
Post a comment
Please login to post comment
Comments
Be the first to write your opinion!
The old adage “you can’t judge a book by its cover” doesn’t apply to Stephen Roach’s “The Next Asia.”
It bears a photo of the interior of the Grand Hyatt Shanghai. For anyone who’s been there, it screams of vertigo. You walk out of your hotel room on say, the 85th floor, and you’re confronted with a circular 33-story atrium that seems as much optical illusion as architectural masterpiece.
It’s an apt metaphor for the dizzying experience that lies ahead for Asia — one fleshed out with great nuance by Roach, Morgan Stanley’s Hong Kong-based Asia chairman.
This column isn’t a book review. Yet Roach is sure to do something we need more of in Asia: Ruffle the feathers of a few billion people.
The conventional wisdom that the 21st Century belongs to the fastest-growing region isn’t wrong. Just have no illusions that it’s a given. Asia will need to work hard at it.
For Asia’s billions, inertia is not an option as the fallout from the global crisis spreads. The United States, Japan and Europe are limping along. The developing world didn’t really plan for such a scenario. Its powerful snapback from the 1997 Asian crisis was largely thanks to a US consumer flush from rapid growth and roaring asset values. Asia exported its way to returning growth and never looked back.
No such locomotive exists today. Hence the roughly $2.2 trillion of stimulus governments have poured into the global financial system. It will only go so far, though. The canard that Asia had decoupled from the United States is dying a hard death as governments brace for an extended period of American thrift.
By Roach’s calculations, Americans account for about 4.5 percent of the world’s population and its consumers spent about $10 trillion in 2008. China and India, which account for roughly 40 percent of the world’s population, consumed about $2.5 trillion. Good luck living without the US
Rebalancing Asia’s economies would be a daunting task amid strong global growth. It’s even more difficult in this recessionary environment. One challenge is culture. Asians are savers and good luck getting them to consume more when they fear they may be jobless in a year.
Much of Asia lacks political will, but there are important exceptions. In Indonesia, President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono is reducing corruption and raising living standards. Indian Prime Minister Manmohan Singh’s recent re-election could be a boon for investors hoping for major upgrades to Asia’s other nascent economic superpower.
The more common story is one of leaders taking the path of least resistance and avoiding bold changes. The status quo won’t morph Asia into a consumer-led, more egalitarian or environmentally stable region. It won’t increase cooperation in an economic area that enjoys painfully little. Nor will it give Asia the bigger voice it deserves in debates about the direction of the global economy.
Bold changes are needed. Last week, for example, China said it was studying curbs on overcapacity in industries like steel and cement to rein in investment growth fueled by a record credit expansion. It’s a reminder of the extraordinary amount of fine-tuning China is doing these days.
The real story here, though, is how difficult it is to foster an open-market economy within a centrally controlled system. It’s creating some big challenges, and a more balanced economy is the best way out for China. That goes for Asia, too.
Great things can and should be expected from Asia in the decades ahead as it takes on a more dominant role in the global economy. There are no guarantees, though, and complacency isn’t an option for the region’s leaders.
- Malaysian Girl Speaks Indonesian After Freak Accident: Report
- Indonesians Buying Up Most Expensive Homes in Singapore
- Indonesia Woman Kills Teenage Brother Over Sock Insult
- Funeral on Friday for Student Killed in Rafting Accident
- Will Lady Gaga Finally Set Foot in Jakarta?
- Concerned for Orangutans in Indonesia, US Girl Scouts Lobby for Sustainable Palm Oil
- Opening Eyes to Tolerance Via Film
- 5 More Prisoners Found After Jakarta Jail Break
- Ariel Could Be Released From Jail in July
- Indonesian Operators Ban Access to LGBT Advocacy Web Site
-
11:03pm | Notorious Gang Boss Could Be B...
But Indonesia Today is a very lucky country...I know poverty and deprivation is still a problem But if you look at USA, Eropa, Australia for exampl -
10:44pm | Concerned for Orangutans in In...
When people have decent job they will be able to think about their environment. Unfortunately, being greedy often drive us not to care about preser -
10:34pm | Breaking News: Dozens Feared D...
Probably the accident investigation will uncover: 1) bus driver was speeding, 2) bus driver was tired, and 3) bus was not maintained properly. -
9:55pm | Breaking News: Dozens Feared D...
Agreed SBD...and many other routes. I am always scared going with a rental car with "the family", cruising along the mountain stretches, -
8:48pm | Breaking News: Dozens Feared D...
It's amazing there are not a lot more accidents of this severity, given the crazed manner in which many bus drivers 'pilot' their vehicles on th -
7:40pm | Shocking Images Show Animal Cr...
I can definitely tell you that in Islam we do not discriminate animals based on their habit or size. All animals should be loved and not unnecessar -
7:18pm | Malaysian Police Detain Saudi ...
Is that something that interpol do ? Do they have to follow certain guideline on what can be classified as a crime ? -
7:13pm | Shocking Images Show Animal Cr...
Sorry Bawel, my brother... What do you do with Eid Al Adha? Slice (or watch the slicing of) the throat of the goat and let i
