MANILA – This is the year of the “Black
Water Dragon,” an astrological cycle that indicates change, but with a measure
of calm, sensibility, and prudence.
The people and governments of Asia certainly
hope that this proves to be the case, but uncertainties – from within and
without the region – are growing rapidly.
Developing Asia has performed relatively well
over the past two years. It led the world out of the 2008-2009 “Great
Recession,” recording 9% average economic growth in 2010 and solidifying that
recovery by laying the basis for a more moderate – and, one hopes, sustainable
–pace of economic expansion. In 2011, despite Europe’s debt struggles and an anemic
recovery in the United States, developing Asia’s economies grew at a more
restrained but still strong 7.5% average rate.
The biggest economic risk to the region is
that Europe hits a financial tripwire and plummets into a deep recession, or
that the US recovery stagnates during this election year. Volatility has come
to define market behavior, and Asian markets are no exception. Investor
sentiment seems driven by daily events rather than longer-term trends.
If the eurozone crisis leads to a sovereign
default, contagion could spread to the rest of the world. In the short term,
Asia and other emerging economies could be hit hard as finance dries up,
choking off trade and investment flows that coursed through European banks –
and hitting American banks that need to shore up capital to cover their
European exposure. Any new crisis would thus hurt global trade and Asia’s
economic growth.
Still, for the most part, developing Asia has
little external financial vulnerability. Many countries continue to run
current-account surpluses, and have low external debt and high foreign
reserves. Most of the region’s banking systems are sound, with a high capital
base and low – for now, at least – non-performing-loan ratios.
This gives Asia more room to maneuver in the
event of a crisis, and policymakers would likely respond with available
macroeconomic tools promptly and decisively, and collaborate regionally. But we
must not forget that – as 2008 showed – Asia has not decoupled from the West.
That is why European leaders must speak and
act responsibly, and work harder to resolve the crisis. Europe clearly has the
political and financial potential to resolve its own difficulties, with the
help of European and multilateral financial institutions.
But perhaps there is something that Europe can
learn from Asia. In Asia’s response to the 1997-1998 Asian financial crisis,
policymakers adopted measures designed to contract, consolidate, and
restructure affected financial systems, particularly banking. It was not easy,
but the external environment at the time was conducive to recovery. A decade
later, Asia had sufficient savings and fiscal space to stimulate a rapid, solid
recovery when the global economy sputtered. Europe, too, must embrace a costly
and painful adjustment process as an opportunity to fix its system.
Asia can also help the process of global
economic recovery. Certainly, high-saving Asian economies can participate in
external financial-bailout packages. But the best thing that Asia can do is to
sustain its own robust economic growth. By generating new growth opportunities,
Asia can play an increasingly critical role in stimulating the global economy.
That means that developing Asia must escalate
its efforts at rebalancing growth by reducing reliance on exports and
increasing domestic spending, which would help to prop up import demand. The
major challenge is to keep domestic demand growing, despite the region’s strong
links to the global economy. Doing so would benefit national economies, bolster
regional development, and support global growth.
If Asia can overcome its short-term
difficulties, and global financial markets stabilize, the region faces bright
prospects. Annual GDP growth this year will likely sustain last year’s momentum
and remain above 7%. A recent Asian Development Bank study estimates that Asia
could account for about 52% of the global economy by 2050. But that is not a
pre-ordained outcome.
In the medium term, Asia faces several
challenges, a key one being rising inequality. Years of rapid economic growth
have given rise to growing disparities. In urban China, for example, the Gini
coefficient, a 100-point index that measures income inequality, has risen from
25.6 in 1990 to 34.8 in 2005. This is unlike the region’s past experience in
the 1980’s and 1990’s, when high growth was accompanied by declining
inequality.
As a result, domestic inequities now pose
major risks to social stability and could hamper long-term growth prospects.
That is why governments should seek to ensure that growth is inclusive, with
benefits that are widely shared, including by women and the poor, and that
these benefits reach isolated areas. Asia’s rapidly aging populations also
require social protection, and strengthening access to healthcare and education
could help the rebalancing process and contribute to global recovery.
Growing inequality is not just an Asian issue.
Inequality in Asia rose after the financial crisis of 1997-1998, and Europe
will not be immune to that pattern. Europeans, too, should take steps to ensure
that recovery from the current crisis is marked by inclusive growth.
As we enter the Year of the Dragon, Asia’s
best contribution may be a calm, sensible, and prudent approach to mitigating
any potential global crisis by continuing its steady economic and development
transformation.
Haruhiko Kuroda
project-syndicate.org
Haruhiko Kuroda is President of the Asian
Development Bank.
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