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Economics
on Trial -- THE FREEMAN - APRIL 1998
How
Real Is the Asian Economic Miracle? A Reprise
By Mark Skousen
"In retrospect, all fools become wise."
--LUDWIG VON MISES
In the November/December 1994 issue of Foreign Affairs, Stanford
economist Paul Krugman wrote a controversial article titled
"The Myth of Asia's Miracle." He argued that, like
Stalinist Russia and other centrally planned economies of
Eastern Europe, the Southeast Asian nations were authoritarian
and engaged in "growth achieved purely through mobilization
of resources" rather than real productivity. He predicted
that growth would continue, but at a slower pace. In sum,
these Asian tigers were subject to the law of diminishing
returns.
In my July 1996 Freeman column, I disputed Krugman's thesis,
countering that they had adopted sound principles of economics,
such as budget surpluses, low taxes on investment, no welfare
schemes, and high levels of saving and investment.
Krugman proved to be more accurate, although the reasons for
the Asian crisis are more complex than either one of us realized.
As I see it, there were two factors at work that led to the
collapse in the Asian markets and recession. First, overinvestment,
and second the strength of the U.S. dollar. Let's review each
of these factors and the lessons we can learn from each.
Malinvestment and the Boom-Bust Cycle
First, it is clear that most of the Southeast Asian economies,
including Singapore, Thailand, Malaysia, the Philippines and
South Korea, suffered from overinvestment, or what Ludwig
von Mises called "malinvestment." The authoritarian
regimes engaged in a "forced savings" program, demanding
its citizens and businesses to overinvest. When voluntary
savings were deemed insufficient to build up the nation's
infrastructure and capital formation, the state promoted industrial
planning. Moreover, it created cheap credit policies and encouraged
foreign investment at low interest rates. In sum, Southeast
Asia created a classic inflationary boom.
The Austrian school has warned time and time again that an
inflationary boom in capital investment not only causes prices
to rise, but also makes unsustainable projects look attractive.
Eventually, interest rates must rise and the economy is hit
by a recession.1
The Dollar as a Quasi-Gold Standard
What brought about the crash in Asia? Strangely enough,
it was the strength of the U.S. dollar. While not predicting
the Asian crisis, I did forecast a strong dollar in the second
half of the 1990s.2
I just failed to think through all the ramifications of a
strong dollar around the world.
Most of the Southeast Asian currencies were tied to the dollar,
and that was their demise. In some ways, it reminds me of
the specie-flow mechanism under the gold standard. Under a
classic gold standard when a nation inflates, gold flows out
of the inflationary country, forcing the economy to contract.
That's more or less what happened in Southeast Asia, except
that instead of gold, the standard was the U.S. dollar.
When the dollar rose 30 percent against the other major currencies,
Southeast Asian economies that were export-oriented and linked
to the dollar were placed at a disadvantage. Their exports
suddenly became 30 percent more expensive, and demand for
their goods declined. Exports dropped, profits fell, and debts
couldn't be repaid at current exchange rates. Consequently,
their governments were forced to delink from the dollar and
their currencies collapsed. The boom turned into a bust.
Silver Lining: Free-Market Reforms Coming
There is a silver lining in the Asian crisis. It is forcing
Southeast Asian countries and their governments to adopt market
capitalism. No longer can these authoritarian regimes afford
to subsidize favored corporations or play political favorites.
Inefficient or corrupt businesses must be allowed to go bankrupt.
Easy credit is not the solution to a shortage of capital.
In all this, Business Week has sounded the alarm and warned
Asia not to fall back to angry nationalism or anti-capitalism.
This is all the more amazing because Business Week has long
had the reputation for being anti-free market. But it has
changed for the better. To quote a recent editorial: "There
is a strong chance that the Asian crisis can act as a solvent,
dissolving authoritarian governments and economic practices
while spreading democratic market capitalism" (January
26, 1998). Amen.
Notes:
1.The best summary of the Austrian position can be found
in The Austrian Theory of the Trade Cycle and Other Essays,
Richard Ibeling, ed. (Auburn, Ala.: The Ludwig von Mises Institute,
1996 [1983])
2. See my January 1995 issue. "The New Dollar Boom."
Forecasts & Strategies (Potomac, Md.: Phillips
Publishing).
THE FREEMAN - APRIL 1998
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