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Is Burma on the Verge of a Chinese-Style Economic Turnaround?
Glenys Sim | February 22, 2012

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Investor Jim Rogers, the chairman of Rogers Holdings who predicted a global commodities rally in 1999, said that Burma, also known as Myanmar, may be embracing reform as China did decades earlier and he’s optimistic about the nation’s prospects.

“If I could put all of my money into Myanmar, I would,” Rogers said at a conference in Singapore on Wednesday. “Myanmar is in the same place China was in early 1979, when Deng Xiaoping said we have to do something new. Myanmar is now opening up.”

Rogers’s comments highlight increased investor interest in the economy that may be Asia’s “next economic frontier,” according to the International Monetary Fund. The IMF is pushing for an overhaul of Burma’s finances as President Thein Sein releases dissidents and engages with opposition leader Aung San Suu Kyi in moves that have prompted the United States and Europe to reassess sanctions against the former military dictatorship.

“It’s right between China and India, 60 million people, massive natural resources, agriculture,” Rogers said at the gathering. “You could feed much of Asia, they have metals, they have energy, they have everything.”

China’s Deng introduced capitalist reforms in the late 1970s, lifting more than 200 million people out of poverty and transforming the nation into the world’s second-largest economy and its biggest consumer of steel, copper and coal.

“In 1962 Myanmar was the single richest country in Asia,” said Rogers, referring to the year that marked the start of military rule. “Now it’s the poorest because it’s been so badly managed in the past 50 years. But they are changing that now.”

Burma may grow 5.5 percent in 2011-12 and 6 percent in 2012-13 on commodity exports and higher investment, the IMF said last month. The country “could become the next economic frontier in Asia” if it takes advantage of its natural resources, young labor force and proximity to China and India, according to Meral Karasulu, who led an IMF mission to the country in January.

Rice exports from Burma, formerly the world’s largest shipper, may more than double to 1.5 million metric tons this year, the Burma Rice Industry Association forecast last month. Sales totaled 700,000 tons in 2011.

China and India share more than 3,600 kilometers of border with Burma, whose 64 million people earn an average of just $2.25 per day, according to IMF estimates. Both nations have sought increased access to the Burma’s reserves of natural gas.

Bloomberg