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Political Economy Approaches to Comparative Public Management (GOVT 518) Week 7 (April 29 2015) 1 Topics • How to Grow Economies? • The (East) Asian Miracle • Thoughts on Developing Countries 2 Political Economy Political economy commonly refers the study and practices of how the political environment and the economic system influence each other. Here, the focus mostly on how (national) governments influence economic actors for the purpose of increasing economic growth, in domestic and international context: national governments economic growth. We do not look at other, also important very matters of political economy, such as economic models of governments (e.g., politicians as rational actors?), policies to promote income redistribution, political influences on corporate governance. We do look a bit at business influences on government decision-making, etc.. How to Promote Economic Growth? 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. Macroeconomic Factors Political and Social Factors Institutional Factors Sector Strategies Public Policy 1. (Macro)economic Tools Stability (no shocks) with favorable conditions for firms and citizens: 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. Currency stability (esp. with main trading partners) Low inflation (2-3%) Trade policy (WTO restrictions) “Reasonable” levels of public debt Supply of capital Supply of skilled and unskilled labor Supply of technology (patents, universities) Proper incentives for the private sector (competition) Other 2. Political, Social, Institutional Factors Stability: 1. Political stability (same regime, or continuity through elections – PRC, USA) 2. Lack of social strife (ethnic instability), e.g., Malaysia) 3. Population growth (though Japan is a new model of growth with population decline) 4. Work ethic (East Asia, Protestantism) Effectiveness: 1. Governance (capacity for policy making and delivery) 2. Lack of corruption 3. Sector/Local Focused Policies Effectiveness: 1. Infrastructure development (roads, handling capacity, markets) 2. Ensure technology development and acquisition (e.g., bio risks) 3. Foster cluster development (integration and competition) 4. Ensure access to foreign markets 5. Specific products and services for local markets 6. Ensure capital (loan guarantees) 7. Ensure qualified labor (universities, immigration) Note: implies vision for economic development Huang: Asian Economic Miracle • The developmental state (vs. regulatory state, welfare state, predatory state, pariah state, etc) • Economic activism: In Asia-Pacific, the widespread practice of the state being actively involved in the management, guidance and promotion of national economic activities. Huang: Asian Economic Miracle Some notes: • Most countries have a unified political executive with mandate for growth and economic development • Bureaucracies vary how much economic management, guidance and promotion of national economic activities they provide • Peripheral organizations that link state and sectors/industries include those in planning, research, teaching, promotion... • Policy instruments are many: stimulation of productive investment, pro-competition, favoring future industries, stimulation horizontal and vertical collaboration/integration, licensing, regulation. • Again, also ability to carry forth regardless of election results, and capacity to ability to fend off rent seeking/extraction activities. Some background/institutional points: Bigger Issues: Huang: Asian Economic Miracle Huang: Asian Economic Miracle General activities of government planning in market economy: • Planning (targeting infrastructure, lacking conditions, broad categories of economic activity) • Co-ordination (across agencies, with sector) • Promotion (e.g., access to markets, quality, technology, etc. see also p.111) • Intervention (e.g., crisis management) Huang: Industrial Policy Deals with individual industries and sectors, apart from public goods (infrastructure, etc) Picking winners? Or supporting competitive, private activity (cluster of economic activity) Context: conditions of many industries during 1970s faced international markets with cost, quality factors and need for “rationalization” of domestic activity (l-t export over s-t domestic profits) Rationalization supported chaebols (Korea) and keiretsus (Japan), and gov-business alliances for policy-making Huang: Industrial Policy Classic examples of 1970s: Electronics industry in Korea and Taiwan; Car manufacturing in Japan (and later Korea); Shipbuilding in Korea and Japan; Commercial activity in Singapore (also, shipping, chemicals); Growth alliances: (i) Japan (Iron Triangle of LDP, state bureaucrats and business elites), (ii) Ethnic alliances (Malaysia – grand political bargain UMNO over bureaucracy, army, law) Singapore, (iii) Military-backed coalition (Indonesia, South Korea, Taiwan, Thailand) Example: IT in Taiwan Why? Industrial upgrading (from low wage to high wage) IT both horizontal and vertical integration Government role important in developing technology and export promotion Taiwan many small and medium size companies – “guerrilla capitalists,” well suited for some entrepreneurial games Goals: 1. Increase popularization of technology 2. Make Taiwan a major supplier by improved quality 3. Increase technology autonomy more R&D spending (less OEM) 4. Increase IT manpower Examples: 1. Hsinchu science park 2. Taiwan Semiconductor Corp 3. Foxcomm 4. Software applications Today: ”China Communications Media Group, a Taiwanese apps and games store operator, was the fastest-growing technology firm in terms of revenue growth in Asia-Pacific in 2013. ” http://blogs.wsj.com/digits/2013/12/10/taiwantech-firm-tops-fastest-growing-companies-list/ Also: Why Taiwan's Top Execs Stay In The Shadows. http://www.forbes.com/sites/ralphjennings/2013/08/07/why-taiwans-top-execsstick-to-the-shadows/ WTO Prohibited Practices WTO aims to promote trade and competition. Prohibited practices include: • Direct subsidies of government to firms based on export performance (loans, etc) • Government purchasing that favor domestic firms, or domestic content laws and subsidies for domestic content • Currency schemes that involve a bonus on exports • Import licensing that is overly complex and restricts competition • Companies: Selling below cost in foreign markets (dumping) • R&D subsides to firms over 75% (environmental compliance also allowed). • Some exceptions for developing countries, emergencies (e.g., public health). Huang: Asian Economic Miracle Other issues: • Rule of law and economic development • Rent seeking and Rent deployment • Anti-corruption practices A bigger picture: • Society committed to growth (social/political movement) • Asian Financial Crisis….. Asian Financial Crisis • While strong interest rates attracted petrodollars to Asia, AFC showed various weaknesses: large public debts, high current account deficits, leading to currency withdrawals and devaluations, high inflation, reduced demand. IMF loans stabilized currencies and reduced public debts, and caused some improvements (e.g., intra-regional currency swap mechanisms). • Does AFC show flaw in Asian model? Well, problems in financial institutions and safeguards (later in US, Greece, etc. for different reasons) • Need new growth models for our times Small Developing Countries • Promoting economic growth vs. economic exploitation • Attracting FDI to promote a public vision • Ensuring plan stability amidst domestic and international change (sustainability) • Minimizing economic rents and ensuring good incentives ADB, 2011 http://www.asia-studies.com/asia/ADB/2011/political-economy-economic-reform-pac.pdf Pacific Islands Some Factors Underpinning Successful Reforms: (e.g., land reform, telecommunication (PNG), macro economic reforms (Cook Islands) – Creating markets for domestic groups – Involving many stakeholders – Champions in political, bureaucratic and academic arenas Some Factors of Unsuccessful Reforms – Not understanding the context – Big Man politics (clientelist politics, rivalry) – Insufficient commitment/corruption END