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, by Joe Studwell
Download , by Joe Studwell
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Product details
File Size: 3345 KB
Print Length: 402 pages
Publisher: Grove Press (July 2, 2013)
Publication Date: September 1, 2018
Sold by: Amazon Digital Services LLC
Language: English
ASIN: B00B3M47VC
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I lived in the Philippines for 8 years and now live in Thailand. I have visited Japan and ski in South Korea every year. I was looking for a book that would explain why northeastern Asian countries [Japan, Taiwan and South Korea] have succeeded and why southeastern countries like Malaysia, Indonesia, Thailand and the Philippines are less successful. Hong Kong and Singapore were not considered because they are city/states and don't have a rural population.This book absolutely nailed it when it came to telling me what I wanted to know. This book answered my questions directly and explained how the economics and politics worked in northeastern Asia and what didn't work elsewhere.
This is one of the best economic history/development books out there. I stumbled on this via Gatesnotes. It was a page turner. As someone who is very familiar with Asia-I lived in Japan and frequently travel to the region for work, I must say that Studwell displayed amazing knowledge of history and culture, and wove that nicely with economics. What is also amazing is the the parallels with the current economics of the west...hulling out of the middle class through outsourcing of core manufacturing activities with an eye to pure short term results. A must read for policy makers in Latin America and Africa who are being hoodwinked by the laissez faire prescriptions of World Bank and IMF bureaucrats--folks that pretend to know how the world works through mathematical theories. Yes, governments should let entrepreneurs take risk and make money, but by golly, get so long as get something in return by forcing them to contribute to long term economic development!
It is a quite nice book on the Asian economic development experience. The main conjecture of the author is that active state policies have been key factor for the economic performance of North Asia (Japan, South Korea, Taiwan). This policies can be summed up as agrarian reform, export disciplined industrialization and repressed financial markets. Studwell is an acid critic of market oriented policies and, in this sense, his analysis is close to List or Ha-Joon Chang.Although his historical exploration of the Asian experiences is appealing and informative, I am not sure if the suggested policy implications are right. For instance, it is not clear when or why a country must switch from its developmentalist strategy to a more market-friendly regime. In addition, it appears to me the author has understated political stage (South Korean development was based on a dictatorship).All in all, any person interested on Asia or in topics of economic development must read this book.
I would imagine that this could teach leaders of developing countries how to get the most out of the world economy to build their own nation. I picked up this book to understand how the relatively isolated Chinese economy became the powerhouse it is today. The three part strategy is clear from this book, but the repetition became quite dull. The anecdotes helped provide some idea of how the landscape changed due to the economy in the countries the author visited. Although these anecdotes didn't have a style that particularly grabbed my attention, the author does an excellent job of providing supporting arguments for the strategy. This work cites quite a number of sources and the facts themselves are interesting to know by themselves. The book goes through the stories of the major economic players in Asia today, ending with China. India is conspicuously absent.
'How Asia Works' passes the sniff test in that it actually helps to explain current events in Asia - for example the current fun and games with the Thai government's guaranteed rice purchases, which post-date the publication of the book.The most important premise in the book is the need for land reform to fund industrialisation.By 'land reform' he means distributing land equally among farming families, by taking it off the big landowners.Land reform does not come easily:In Japan the first (and initially successful) reform was after the Meiji Restoration, and the second immediately after the Second World War.In Taiwan it followed the defeat of the Kuomintang (KMT) by the Communists in China. Initially Communist land reform in China was popular with the people, and the KMT were forced to copy it in Taiwan to achieve some popularity with the locals.In South Korea Syngman Rhee's government resisted land reform until it was nearly swept into the sea by Kim Il Sung's invasion. When the South Koreans retook Korea, they found Communist land reform was very popular with the farmers, and were forced to accept it.The ensuing agricultural boom gave these governments the cash to fund industrialisation. Studwell shows how they largely got it right, by copying the 19th Century Prussian model.(In China and North Korea the agricultural boom ended when the Communists collectivised the farms.)In South East Asia land reform never took place, probably because events were not dramatic enough to force it to happen. Consequently large landowners live very well, while ordinary farmers are very poor, and agricultural productivity is low.In describing industrialisation, Studwell compares the successful Japan/South Korea/Taiwan model of competition between state supported companies (with the creative destruction of the failure of some) and the discipline of serving export markets versus the failure to introduce competition and export discipline in South East Asia. The outcome is exemplified by Toyota/Honda/Hyundai versus Proton.The failings in South East Asia described in this book are pretty much as described in Studwell's earlier "Asian Godfathers".'How Asia Works' attracted a fair amount of criticism here in Hong Kong for appearing to advocate financial repression (paying derisory interest rates on household savings, enforced by exchange controls) and state planning - we have a very good vantage point of this process in China, and worry about the effects - for example an uncontrolled shadow banking system and misallocation of easy credit by State Owned Enterprises.Studwell does not advocate this as a universal panacea - he points out the problems that South Korea had, and that they were lucky to get away with it - and that the system gets a country to a certain level of development, after which it is necessary to modernise - which may not always work - as in Japan.His conclusion is that South East Asia will probably never fulfil its potential, and that China might.This book offers a helpful political-economic model for those attempting to understand Asia generally, and, most importantly, China.
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