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WORLD
POLICY JOURNAL
ARTICLE:
Volume XVII, No 1, SPRING 2000
The Big
Mango Bounces Back: Economic Recovery in Thailand and Southeast
Asia
Joshua Kurlantzick
On an average
day in November 1998, sixteen months into the Asian economic crisis,
Bangkok's new Emporium Mall seemed more like a mortuary than a commercial
center. Throughout the mall, built during the Asian economic boom
and home to brand-name clothing boutiques, bored staff waited on
solitary customers and rearranged merchandise. The ground floor,
where the high-end stores are located, was so empty that it looked
like a scene in a Western just before the bad guy rides into town.
No customers entered the Louis Vuitton shop for the entire day.
The mall's only cash flow came from its food court, where a relatively
cheap eatery was offering noodles for 20 baht (50 cents), a competitive
price even in a crisis-wracked economy.
By January
2000, just 29 months after the detonation of the economic crisis,
the Emporium was crowded with shoppers. The mid-priced stores teemed
with Thai families hunting for "winter" clothing. People
were waiting for tables in the ground-floor café, a posh
meeting-place serving high tea with Devonshire cream. Customers
were leaving the mall laden with bags conaining their purchases,
heading home by way of a shiny new elevated railway.
Faster than
many economists initially predicted, Thailand and the other sick
Southeast Asian "tiger cub economies"—Malaysia, Singapore,
the Philippines, and Indonesia—have begun to heal themselves. Surpassing
March projections for the year, the Thai economy grew by more than
4 percent in 1999. This recovery has been initiated and dominated
by Bangkok, known affectionately as the "Big Mango." (The
Thai capital is home to 10–15 percent of the country's population
and three-quarters of its commercial bank deposits, and produces
more than 50 percent of the country's wealth.) Other newly industrializing
Southeast Asian states boasted similar or even higher rates of growth
for 1999. Unemployment has fallen, and foreign investors have started
to return to the region. As exemplified by the upturn in the Emporium
Mall's business, consumer confidence is recovering in Thailand and
other Southeast Asian states.
This reversal
has been due in part to circumstances beyond Southeast Asia's control.
In other words, the tiger cubs have gotten lucky. The amazingly
resilient American economy has soaked up increased Southeast Asian
exports and prevented global financial contagion. Dramatic shifts
in world commodity prices have benefited Malaysia, Thailand, the
Philippines, and Indonesia.
But Thailand
and the other former tiger cubs deserve considerable credit. Southeast
Asia has begun to address the structural flaws in its economies,
societies, and polities that caused the crisis. Throughout the region,
the slump has forced countries to embrace better governance, commercial
and financial transparency, labor-management cooperation, and stronger
work ethics. Thailand and its neighbors are far from complete economic
recovery, and the glory days of the early 1990s probably will never
return. But if Southeast Asian states continue to rethink their
concepts of development, to strengthenand broaden their reforms,
and to upgrade the value of their exports, they could not only consolidate
their recovery but also ensure that their future growth benefits
more sectors of society.
The Rise
. . .
From the early 1980s until 1997, the Southeast Asian tiger cubs
removed virtually all barriers to capital flows, wooed foreign investment,
and broadened their economies by producing labor-intensive goods
like textiles and, later on, medium-tech items like electronics.
Thailand initiated broad tariff cuts and passed laws allowing new
industrial firms to be wholly foreign-owned. The Philippines convinced
Intel to locate several largenew assembly facilities in the archipelago
by offering tax breaks and other sweeteners.1
By the early
1990s, the tiger cubs were booming. Their economies were highly
integrated into the global market, their export sectors were growing,
and their cities were flush with money, packed with people enjoying
some of the fastest-rising standards of living in the world. Between
1990 and 1996, the total value of Thailand's manufactured exports
increased 13 percent a year; during the same time period, Malaysia's
GDP grew by 8.7 percent.2 Foreign brokerage houses believed
that these emerging markets were viable places to invest, and capital—particularly
short-term portfolio capital—flowed into Bangkok, Jakarta, and Kuala
Lumpur. Massive waves of people migrated to cities to work in burgeoning
industrial and commercial sectors. There was no shortage of new
buildings in which migrants could live, work, or shop. Funded by
money raised in liquid stock markets, property sectors boomed.
.
. . and the Fall
In the mid-1990s, the wheels began to fall off. Southeast Asian
economies started to overheat as short-term capital inflows increased
at an unheard-of pace. Much of this money poured into unregulated
investments in financial and property sectors. Inflation picked
up and current account deficits skyrocketed. Governments hoped to
absorb inflows by increasing local savings but failed to stop consumers
from spending their newlyacquired riches.3 Awash in bad
debts, the Bangkok Bank of Commerce collapsed, forcing the Bank
of Thailand to waste money on a massive rehabilitation fund. Foreign
brokerage houses started to examine irregularities in Southeast
Asian economies and to pull money out of the region; domestic investor
confidence plummeted.
In the summer
of 1997, the bubble burst. For reasons ranging from legitimate concerns
over the lack of transparency in Thailand's economy to unsubstantiated
investor panic, capital fled Thailand at a rapid pace, and foreign
speculators attacked the baht, which had been pegged to the U.S.
dollar. On July 2, 1997, Thailand floated the baht, which rapidly
depreciated against foreign currencies. Thailand's external debts
soared, and investors started to attack other currencies, destroying
balance sheets in Malaysia, Indonesia, and elsewhere, sapping liquidity
out of Asia, and triggering the economic crisis.
Almost immediately,
these macroeconomic dislocations had devastating effects. Over two
million Thais were laid off, in a country that used to import labor.
At the beginning of 1999, Indonesia's Employers' Association estimated
that the formal unemployment rate was 24 percent.4 Many
workers moved into the informal sector, becoming noodle vendors,
part-time taxi drivers, repairmen; these casual jobs offered lower
salaries and no benefits. School dropout rates rose precipitously,
and large numbers of children (and adults) turned to drugs—especially
yaaba, a potent amphetamine—to escape daily reality. Mob
violence in Indonesia and violent crime in the Philippines threatened
social order.
Up until mid-1999,
economic experts forecast doomsday scenarios on a depressingly regular
basis in regional papers like The Nation and the Jakarta
Post. Asia would spiral downward from a recession into a depression.
Standards of living in the former tiger cubs would return to pre-boom
levels. Thailand, Indonesia, and other states would be home to "lost
generations" of young adults who had dropped out of school
and knew nothing but economic despair.
An Ounce
of Good Fortune
But none of these scenarios have come to pass. As the crisis
has unfolded, the tiger cubs have benefited from several fortuitous
events. The region's undervalued currencies have made its export
and tourism sectors more attractive. Malaysian exports grew by 7.6
percent for 1999; Thai exports grew by 13.3 percent during the third
quarter of the year. In Thailand and the Philippines, the weak baht
and peso have made beaches, temples, and markets even more alluring
to foreign visitors. Both countries have actively promoted tourism,
and arrivals to Thailand grew by 11 percent during the third quarter
of 1999.
Southeast Asia
has also been fortunate that the U.S. economy has continued to grow.
Long a major consumer of Southeast Asian goods, the American economy,
increasingly driven by information technology, has been a seemingly
bottomless marketfor Malaysian disk drives, Thai semiconductors,
and Singaporean telecommunications equipment. Although many Thais
were angered by America's inaction at the beginning of the financial
crisis, they and their Southeast Asian counterparts have been only
too happy to satiate the global superpower's economic needs.
In addition,
the former tiger cubs have received considerable help from Japan,
whoseown economic problems have not curtailed its largesse. Historically
the largest investor in the region, Japan slashed its investments
in Southeast Asia during the 1990s as its own economy stagnated.
But when the crisis hit, Japan offered the former cubs over $35
billion in aid. Some area specialists believe that Tokyo has been
so magnanimous in order to counter Beijing's increasing economic
and political assertiveness in Southeast Asia.5
A steep rise
in oil prices and some of the best weather in recent memory have
also helped bail out the crisis-hit economies. The decision by the
Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries in March 1999 to cut
production caused crude prices to rise by more than 100 percent,
a windfall for Malaysia and Indonesia, both of which export petroleum.
A return to excellent weather after droughts caused by El Niño
has allowed Thai rice producers and Indonesian coffee growers to
boost output for export.
A Ton of
Reform
Although some economists claim that this good fortune has allowed
Southeast Asia to avoid retrenchment, the truth is that Thailand
and its neighbors have gagged down bitter structural reforms.6
In the financial sector, the former tiger cubs have closed or recapitalized
insolvent banks and removed the most corrupt bank officials and
finance ministry bureaucrats. Several Southeast Asian states have
passed bankruptcy and foreclosure laws, giving creditors some ammunition
and facilitating corporate debt restructuring.
In the commercial
and industrial sectors, enterprises that previously saw downsizing
as anathema have slashed bloated management and employee rosters.
In one notable example, the elderly chairwoman of Thailand's Dusit
Thani Hotel & Resorts revamped her roster of executives, pushing
her own son into a less prestigious position. Yet rather than just
laying off workers indiscriminately, some enterprise managers have
worked with employee representatives to balance productivity and
workers' security. In some cases, workers have accepted temporary
layoffs, redeployment, and short-term salary freezes in exchange
for promises of continued employment.
Perhaps more
important, Southeast Asia's citizens have committed themselves to
working as hard as necessary to regroup from the crisis. Foreign
managers of multinationals with branches in the region still complain
about the docility and sloth of their workforces, but the crisis
has helped shatter the idea that Southeast Asia cannot match Northeast
Asia's work ethic. Anecdotal evidence collected by the Bangkok
Post suggests that many Thais now work upward of ten hours a
day, six to seven days a week. And despite educational systems that
promote rote learning, people in parts of Southeast Asia—most notably
in Bangkok—have demonstrated significant creativity in adapting
to the changing economic climate. A former financier in Bangkok
has opened profitable sandwich stalls. Former graphic designers
at Thai newspapers have enrolled in Webpublishing courses and gone
to work for internet startups. Impressed by this adaptability, some
observers have suggested that chaotic cities like the Thai capital
will be at the forefront of a twenty-first-century world economy
that demands innovation and flexibility.7
Regaining
Confidence
Financial, commercial, and industrial reforms, hard work, and
a boost in exports had started to pay dividends by early 1999, as
Southeast Asian economies began to report growth. Seizing on this
news, leaders across the region worked to convince their constituents
that their economies were off life-support, that job instability
was receding, and that they could start shopping once again. Restoring
domestic consumer spending and investment has been essential. Although
foreign money flowed into Southeast Asia during the 1980s and 1990s,
the boom in domestic investment dwarfed the shift of foreign money
to the region.8 Government leaders encouraged citizens
to buy local products and passed fiscal stimulus plans.In March
1999, the Thai government reduced the country's value-added tax
to 7 percent and announced a stimulus package that included $3.5
billion in tax cuts and infrastructure spending.
Today, Southeast
Asian investors and consumers are regaining confidence. Swayed by
reports of growth and by programs designed to promote spending,
domestic retail consumption and commercial/industrial investment
grew in 1999 in all Southeast Asian states except Indonesia. Chastened
by the collapse of finance houses, wealthy Southeast Asians have
shifted their money from portfolio holdings—options, derivatives,
and other gambles with little basis in real economies—into projects
like factories and internet start-ups that will help long-term recovery.
And although Southeast Asians demonstrate a newfound frugality—the
head of Thailand's financial restructuring committee boasts of bringing
a bag lunch to work—the region's markets, malls, and car dealerships
are again filled with consumers. The shoppers may no longer be convinced
that they will become as wealthy as the Japanese but at least believe
that they will have a decent job for years to come.
Seeing that
some reforms are under way and that many Southeast Asians have boughtinto
the recovery, foreign investors have cautiously returned. Brokerage
houses have recommended bottomed-out stocks, and the Jakarta, Kuala
Lumpur, Singapore, Manila, and Bangkok stock markets all made significant
gains in 1999; foreigners accounted for approximately 33 percent
of the turnover of Thai securities in 1999, an improvement over
1998. Singapore's stock market, the region's best performer, rose
from a low of 805.04 in October 1998 to 2,222.45 in July 1999.9
Convinced that Southeast Asia has started to address the fundamental
weaknesses that made its currencies overvalued, speculators have
refused to attack most of the region's issues. Combined with relaxed
monetary policies, this exchange-rate stability has contributed
to investor and consumer confidence.
With the return
of some domestic and foreign investment and the completion of an
initial wave of corporate downsizing, leaner Southeast Asian enterprises
are reflating and refocusing on making money. As a result, the number
and range of job openings in the region is improving. In Singapore,
unemployment stood at 4 percent during the fourth quarter of 1999,
and job-hunters havehope that the island's restructured petrochemical
and disk-drive producers will soon begin hiring again.
Preventing
Another Bust
Although all of the former tiger cubs boasted GDP growth in
1999, recovery is far from assured. Many of the political, economic,
and social reforms that are essential to consolidating the recovery
have yet to be realized, and analysts worry that last year's growth
will lull Southeast Asia into believing it can restore its health
without enduring more hardship. To put the crisis behind them, and
to prevent another bust, Thailand, Malaysia, Indonesia, Singapore,
and the Philippines must address four major challenges:
Deepening
financial-sector reforms. Southeast Asian banks have been purged
of corrupt officials and recapitalized, but many are still in desperate
need of further reform. The banks should use new bankruptcy and
foreclosure laws to move quickly against indebted companies; without
stronger action, nonperforming loans will remain on the balance
sheets indefinitely, reducing the pool of money available to viable
businesses. Because of remaining bad debts (economists estimate
that 45–50 percent of loans in Thailand are nonperforming), banks
are not lending to the private sector; wiping out nonperforming
loans will ratchetup lending.
Moreover, Southeast
Asian governments should hire independent bank supervisors. In all
the former tiger cubs except Singapore relations between banks and
finance ministries are still unacceptably cozy. In late 1999, opposition
politicians accused Thai finance minister Tarrin Nimmanahaeminda
of signing off on an investigation that underreported nonperforming
loans at Krung ThaiBank, which was run for eight years by Tarrin's
younger brother.
Maximizing
productivity by improving primary and adult education. Rising
global economic interdependence both fostered Southeast Asia's boom
and accelerated its bust. With the exception of Malaysia, which
introduced capital controls in September 1998, the former tiger
cubs have not shied away from the global economy in the wake of
the crisis. To compete in an international economy in which poorer
countries can makelabor-intensive goods in a more cost effective
manner, Southeast Asia must not only produce cheap manufactured
exports but also offer financial services, and make high-tech items.
In order to do so, Southeast Asian states will need more educated
workforces. Governments in the region must devote considerable resources
to providing schools with computers, internet servers, andother
technology, as well as create school curricula that emphasize problem
solving over rote learning.
Southeast Asian
governments and employers also should fund retraining programs designed
to provide laid-off workers with the skills needed to find employment
in high-tech fields. Ideally, this worker retraining would benefit
everyone. Retrained laborers would be more productive, improving
their marketability and bolstering employers' bottom lines. As employers
became more profitable, they could offer better pay and more benefits.
Maintaining
stability by distributing growth and devolving political autonomy.
A complete recovery will require a prolonged period of economic
and political stability, which will be impossible if Southeast Asia
does not ensure that its next boom benefits more people than the
last and that its economic opening is combined with greater political
freedom. The previous boom did not lift all boats: in the early
1980s the average income of the top 10 percent of Thailand's households
was 17 times that of the bottom 10 percent; by the late 1990s, the
top tenth's income was 37 times greater than the bottom tenth's.10
Widening income
disparity creates the potential for crime, mob violence, and bitter
labor-management and urban-rural cleavages. Economic growth can
be distributed more evenly if states enforce minimum wages and progressive
taxes—tax evasion is a pervasive problem in many Southeast Asian
states—and devote more money to public education, worker retraining,
and state social security nets.
In addition,
governments in the region should allow broader sectors of the population
to influence policymaking. In Indonesia, the most fragile country
in Southeast Asia, Jakarta must give greater autonomy to restive
outlying regions like Aceh while ensuring that these provinces remain
part of the country. Malaysia and Singapore, less extreme cases,
should allow opposition parties greater civil liberties. Clashes
between opposition members and police such as those that took place
in Kuala Lumpur in the fall of 1998 can paralyze economies and scare
off investors. In Thailand and the Philippines, the most democratic
states in Southeast Asia, governments should enforce legislation
intended to reduce the influence of money on politics and enfranchise
more voters.
Increasing
capital inflows by reducing unpredictable policymaking. Foreign
and domestic investors look to put their money into countries that
are not only free from violence stemming from ethnic, class, and
political divisions but where there are also astute, reliable leaders.
Malaysia's capital controls have helped heal its economy, but they
have added to Prime Minister Mahathir's image as a wily but extremely
unpredictable politician. Likewise, Indonesian president Abdurrahman
Wahid's indecisiveness on issues ranging from recognition of Israel
to autonomy in Aceh has worried Indonesia-watchers.
Confidence—investor
confidence, constituent confidence, pundit confidence—is an intangible,
tenuous quality, but it is an essential component of a healthy economy.
To bolster confidence that Southeast Asia is recovering from the
crisis, the region's leaders should address issues firmly and consistently,
without backsliding. Moreover, debate and decisionmaking in the
former tiger cubs should be conducted as transparently as possible,
so that policy initiatives do not take foreign and domestic investors
by surprise.
Making
Progress
The countries of Southeast Asia must still overcome major hurdles
in order to consolidate and broaden their economic revival. But
they have begun to make progress, and in all of the former tiger
cubs except Indonesia, which is threatened by murderous ethnic cleavages,
sustained growth looks likely for the next four or five years. Although
it would have been laughable a year ago, today it does not seem
far-fetched to predict that 25 years from now the Southeast Asian
economic crisis will appear as no more than a bump in the road of
steady socioeconomic development. After all, construction recently
began on an extension to the Emporium Mall.
Notes
1. Far Eastern
Economic Review, Asia 1999 (Hong Kong: Review Publishing,
1999), p. 187.
2. Asia
1999, pp 14–15.
3. Chris Baker
and Pasuk Phongpaichit, Thailand's Boom and Bust (Chiang
Mai, Thailand: Silkworm Books, 1998), pp. 116–22.
4. Indonesia
Employers' Association, paper presented at the ILO/Japan Asian Regional
Tripartite Seminar on Industrial Relations and Globalization, 1999.
5. See Amitav
Acharya, "Realism, Institutionalism, and the Asian Economic
Crisis," Contemporary Southeast Asia, April 1, 1999.
6. Vatchara
Charoonsantikul and Thanong Khanthong, "Recovery Won't Last
Without Real Reforms," The Nation (Thailand), January
12, 2000.
7. See Ian
Buruma, "What Happened to the Asian Century?" New York
Times, December 29, 1999.
8. Baker and
Phongpaichit, Thailand's Boom and Bust, p. 312.
9. Far Eastern
Economic Review, Asia 2000 (Hong Kong: Review Publishing,
2000), pp. 34–35.
10. Baker
and Phongpaichit, Thailand's Boom and Bust, pp. 284–85.
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