WASHINGTON
- As multilateral lending agencies
prepare to seriously re-engage with Myanmar for the first time in decades,
observers at the spring meetings of the World Bank and International Monetary
Fund (IMF) are warning that a poor understanding of ground conditions in the
country could jeopardize many of the early opportunities created by
government-initiated reforms.
While
international economic sanctions, particularly those put in place by the United
States and European Union, have significantly limited the ability of
multilateral agencies to operate in Myanmar, recent weeks have seen several
governments move to ease these measures. This week the US announced a second
round of loosening, while officials in both Australia and the EU are engaged in
similar discussions.
The
decisions follow a year of controversial reforms in Myanmar, where a new
quasi-civilian parliament in early 2011. Since then, led by President Thein
Sein, the government has allowed an unprecedented series of openings, including
the release of hundreds of political prisoners, a relaxation of media
censorship, and a strengthening of opposition political parties.
This
culminated in highly anticipated parliamentary by-elections on April 1, in
which the long-jailed opposition leader Aung San Suu Kyi won a seat.
Although
Myanmar has been an IMF member since 1955, until last year the fund engaged in
nothing more than routine annual meetings with the government. The last major
World Bank project ended two decades ago.
Both
the bank and fund, as well as the Asian Development Bank, are laying the
foundation for re-engagement. The IMF has been ramping up preliminary technical
assistance since February, when the US began to relax its sanctions regime.
Since then, the IMF has been invited by the Myanmar government to advise on
changes in laws regarding the country's monetary and foreign exchange
transactions.
While
the details of any new multilateral engagement with this resource-rich country
remain to be decided upon, observers are clear on what should not take place.
According to Sean Turnell, a long-time Myanmar observer, financial assistance
itself should not be considered at this time.
Myanmar,
or Burma as it is also called, and its government "do not lack
money," Turnell told a forum on the sidelines of the World Bank-IMF spring
meetings on Wednesday. "It's currently pulling in about US$3 billion from
its gas reserves, which has allowed foreign reserves to be close to $8 billion.
That's going to increase dramatically next year, once a new gas pipeline comes
onboard."
Myanmar
does not need technical solutions, Turnell, an economics professor, said.
"What it does need is an attack on the fundamental problems that are
really holding the country back - not a lack of financial resources but a lack
of will."
The
issue of will goes to the heart of the highly debated reforms process. For the
moment, Turnell and many others have noted, those reforms have not only been
relatively meagre but, more importantly, have been confined mostly to the realm
of economics.
"The
current reforms have not addressed security and justice issues, and I think
that's going to cause a major challenge for all of the international
community," notes Khin Ohmar, the coordinator of Burma Partnership, an
umbrella of civil society organizations, based along the Thai-Myanmar border.
"We
are very concerned with the prospect of foreign direct investment,
(international financial institution) re-engagement, peace-building, etc.,
going forward without a real understanding of the deep-rooted problems of our
country," she said.
While
Ohmar concedes that local-level consultations have begun as the IMF and others
have re-entered Myanmar, she warns that a "pattern of selectiveness"
has appeared, in which foreign missions are relying only on
government-registered non-governmental organizations for views on ground
realities.
Particularly
notable has been an absence of representation from within Myanmar's conflict
areas, where most of the country's ethnic minorities live.
In
Karen state and other such areas, "People are still living in fear,"
says Paul Sein Twa, executive director of the Karen Environmental and Social
Action Network. "Withdrawing troops from these areas would immediately
help people to go back and farm - without waiting for any money from the
international community or the government."
Instead,
Sein Twa contends, the government's focus in dealing with armed ethnic groups
has been simply to "secure" the areas for large- scale economic
projects, including the creation of special economic zones, several of which
are currently in the works.
"The
government gives allowances to companies to own large areas of land, which
leads to conflict between the local people and the government," he says.
Similar
outbreaks of violence have erupted when foreign companies, acting with the
government's permission, have moved construction materials into or through
areas claimed by armed ethnic groups.
Assuming
that Myanmar's economy and broader society continue to open for the first time
in more than a half-century, the worry for many is that a rushed focus on
macroeconomics over - or instead of - issues of more relevance to local
communities could lead to a continuation or even exacerbation of conflicts that
have lasted for decades.
For any
new multilateral programmes, however, the critical process of prioritization
will depend on the Myanmar government's own priorities - and few claim to know
where exactly those lay.
Carey L
Biron
Asia
Times
Business & Investment Opportunities
YourVietnamExpert is a division of Saigon Business Corporation Pte Ltd, Incorporated in Singapore since 1994. As Your Business Companion, we propose a range of services in Strategy, Investment and Management, focusing Healthcare and Life Science with expertise in ASEAN. We also propose Higher Education, as a bridge between educational structures and industries, by supporting international programmes. Many thanks for visiting www.yourvietnamexpert.com and/or contacting us at contact@yourvietnamexpert.com
Dear
Reader,
May I
invite you to visit our new blog: IIMS-Asean http://iims-asean.blogspot.com/
News
and activities of the International Institute of Medicine and Science Asean
Chapter of IIMS, Inc. California, USA - Health care, Life Science, Education,
Research, Philanthropy. Asean is the economic organisation of ten countries
located in South East Asia: Brunei Darussalam, Cambodia, Indonesia, Lao PDR,
Malaysia, Myanmar, Philippines, Singapore, Thailand, and Vietnam. IIMS is a
non-profit organization.
No comments:
Post a Comment