| Keynote Address  by 
H.E. Mr. Anand PanyarachunFormer Prime Minister of Thailand
 Socio-Economic 
Summit Nepal 1998
 "Strategy for the New Millennium"
 Kathmandu, 
Nepal, 20 February 1998
   Excellencies Distinguished 
Guests Ladies and Gentlemen It 
is a great pleasure to be in Nepal, a kingdom that has so much in common with 
my own. Not only do we share similarities in our cultural heritage; through the 
centuries, both our countries have managed to remain free of foreign rule.  But 
in our own way and in our own time, Nepal and Thailand has each had to open up 
and adapt to the currents of globalization. And judging from rush-hour traffic 
in Bangkok and Kathmandu, it seems we also face many of the same challenges on 
the road to development! Thailand, of course, 
had something of a head start. And by most conventional measures, we succeeded 
spectacularly. In some three decades, we had gone from practically nothing to 
become a role model for the developing World. Between 1985 and 1995, we achieved 
the fastest economic growth in the World, were hailed as the latest Asian economic 
tiger, and made the World Bank's top-ten list of projected biggest economies in 
the year 2020. Our crash, when it came 
in 1997, was equally spectacular, sparking an Asian crisis that has since gone 
on to engulf much of the developing World. It has also given rise to much soul-searching 
over whether our development path was the correct one. The 
question asked most frequently is: How can Thailand's development experience turn 
so quickly from blueprint for success into cautionary tale? How can something 
so right turn out so wrong? Or was it wrong to begin with, only we didn't know 
it, like someone who only realizes there is a problem with his diet and lifestyle 
when he gets a heart attack? There are 
no simple answers. National development has never been a cut-and-dried proposition. 
You base your actions on the available knowledge at the time and make corrections 
as you go along. Certainly, the crisis has severely shaken our confidence. But 
we must be careful not to throw the baby out with the bath water. Yes, we made 
mistakes along the way, but there were also some things that we did right. Today, 
with the 20/20 vision of hindsight, I hope to share with you some insights on 
how to tell them apart.  First, to give 
you some idea how far Thailand has come, let me take you back some four decades, 
before we began to even think of economic development. In 1956, Thailand was what 
economists in those politically-incorrect days called a backward economy. The 
country's population stood at a mere 23.4 million. Bangkok was a tranquil city 
of placid canals and tree-lined roads, its skyline dominated by temple spires. 
By far the most important sector of the economy was agriculture, which accounted 
for 42 percent of the country's GDP, engaged 88 percent of the country's labor 
force and made up 98 percent of total exports. Industry, which consisted of light 
manufacturing aimed mainly at the domestic market, made up only 12 percent of 
GDP and employed just 2 percent of the country's labor force. Fast 
forward to 1995, just before the first signs of trouble appeared. Thailand's population 
had more than doubled to almost 60 million. Most Bangkok canals had been paved 
over, the trees cut down to make way for more cars, the temples long since eclipsed 
by high-rises. Bangkok had come to dominate the economy as few cities in the World 
do, accounting for over 42 percent of Thailand's GDP and almost 15 percent of 
its population. In the country as a whole, the contribution of agriculture to 
GDP had fallen to just over 10.4 percent, while that of industry had risen to 
almost 40 percent.   What had happened in 
those forty years to bring about his transformation? The 
short answer is a combination of laissez-faire capitalism and fortuitous timing. 
Over the years, a series of shifts in economic policy integrated Thailand ever 
more closely into the World economy. Beginning 
in the late 1950s, upon the advice of the World Bank, Thailand's leadership decided 
to pursue economic development through private-sector-led, import-substituting 
industrialization, while reducing the role of State enterprise in the economy. Another 
significant shift in policy was the change from industrialization based on labor-intensive, 
import-substitution to capital-intensive, export-oriented production. Announced 
in the early 1970s, this policy began in earnest in the early 1980s. Finally, 
and most controversially in light of the financial crisis, a process of financial 
liberalization took place between 1991 and 1994, resulting in huge inflows of 
capital that, in hindsight, we were unprepared to deal with. The 
pace of foreign investment inflows began to quicken at about the same time that 
Thailand launched its export-oriented industrial promotion drive in the 1980s. 
When the Plaza Accord of 1985 pressured Japanese companies to move their manufacturing 
operations offshore, Thailand was a logical choice-thanks to its abundant natural 
resources, cheap labor, investor-friendly policies and a strong Japanese market 
presence. And when Western fund managers 
began looking for alternatives to the unexciting rates of return offered in the 
advanced industrial economies, open, dynamic Thailand emerged as a strong favorite. 
Between 1985 and 1990, foreign direct investment flowing into Thailand shot up 
from $178 million to $2.5 billion, with Japanese investment rising from $124 million 
in 1986 to $1.2 billion in 1990. When that flow began to slow down in the early 
1990s, foreign portfolio investment took up the slack. Net portfolio investment, 
which averaged $646 million in 1985-89, rose to $927 million in 1992 and jumped 
to $5.5 billion in 1993. Thailand was no 
longer a backward economy, but an East Asian miracle, a Newly Industrialized Country. 
Thailand did everything by the book, and had the numbers to show that neo-classical 
economics worked. But there was a darker 
side to the success story. Even as Thailand was logging record growth rates, the 
country was showing signs of strain. Rapid industrialization was creating social 
and environmental externalities that could not be addressed within the existing 
growth-oriented paradigm. The private sector was extracting resources and polluting 
the environment faster than they could be replenished or restored, creating ecological 
devastation on a grand scale. The income gap was widening between rural and urban 
areas, and between the rich and the poor, resulting in a flow of labor from rural 
communities to the city. Bangkok became overcrowded and polluted, with the slums, 
disease, drugs and prostitution that typify so many of today's mega-cities. Was 
this a reasonable price to pay for a decade of double-digit growth? The answer 
would depend on whom one asks. Those paying the price and those enjoying the fruits 
of rapid growth were not necessarily the same groups of people. Our economic growth, 
while high, was unbalanced, inequitable and unsustainable.  
 Does this represent then, as some have suggested, the failure 
of capitalism? To be sure, if we had not 
opened up to global capitalism, there would have been no crisis, or at least the 
Asian crisis would not have started in Thailand. But that is like saying one would 
never have fallen if one had not attempted to walk. Capitalism 
is not inherently good or evil. As long as man continues to be driven by self-interest, 
capitalism will remain the least "evil" way of allocating resources. Like it or 
not, it is more useful for us to learn to manage capitalism, rather than repudiate 
it. The financial crash may also be seen 
as a harsh market correction, or in the words of Joseph Schumpeter, an act of 
creative destruction, from which hopefully we will draw the right lessons. So 
if anything, I would say that the crisis is a reaffirmation of the laws of the 
market-place. I would further suggest that 
Thailand's lopsided growth and financial crash occurred not because we were abiding 
too faithfully by market principles, but because we did not take those principles 
sufficiently to heart. This may be a somewhat 
controversial Statement, so let me explain. Earlier 
I stated that Thailand undertook policies to integrate itself with the World economy. 
But if you look more closely, you will see that while we adopted the outward trappings 
of capitalism, much of our economy continued to be dominated by practices that 
were not market-friendly -- in particular traditional social relationship patterns 
involving personal connections, patronage and paternalism. Thus 
it was that instead of allowing the laws of demand and supply to determine prices 
and the most efficient allocation of resources, the State directed the process. 
Instead of developing our comparative advantage to the fullest, we inadvertently 
weakened it. Instead of fostering a competitive domestic environment, we encouraged 
monopolies and oligopolies as a means of capital accumulation. One 
of the clearest examples of this unwitting distortion of the marketplace can be 
seen in our agricultural policy. Thailand has long had a tremendous natural comparative 
advantage in agriculture. Every Thai child knows by heart the ancient inscription 
describing 13th century Siam: "in the water there is fish, in the fields 
there is rice" - an apt description of Thailand even in the 20th century. It 
is therefore rather ironic that farmers have always been the poorest members of 
society. Ever since Thailand began exporting rice in the mid-19th century, 
the rice surplus was taxed, enriching the land-owning upper classes while keeping 
farmers mired in poverty. When we decided 
to industrialize the economy, it was again achieved at the expense of agriculture. 
Industrial enterprise was subsidized through tax breaks and other preferential 
privileges. Rice exports, meanwhile, were 
subject to a tax - the so-called rice premium-, which was, ended only in 1985, 
in response to US subsidies of its rice exports. What the rice premium did was 
raise revenue for the State and keep rice prices artificially low for the benefit 
of urban consumers. Unfortunately, it also reinforced the chronic impoverishment 
of rural farmers. Allowing the market to determine prices instead would have raised 
the income of farmers and energized agriculture, but it was feared that the resulting 
higher cost of living would spark urban unrest. Agricultural 
small-holders therefore remained dependent, orphan-like, on the "patronage" of 
the State. It was the State that farmers relied on to provide infrastructure, 
to grant loans and subsidies, even to tell farmers what crops o grow, how to grow 
them and what animals to raise (advice which often turned out to be misguided). 
The effect of this culture of dependence and the anti-agriculture bias in government 
policy was to weaken the agricultural sector by discouraging initiative, innovation 
and improvements in efficiency on the part of farmers. I 
raise the issue of agriculture not only because it illustrates how political considerations 
have pervaded the process of resource allocation, but also because it is crucial 
in understanding many other phenomena in Thailand. Many of our social problems 
can be traced to rapid industrialization and the imbalances it creates or aggravates 
between agriculture and urban interests. Chronic rural poverty and indebtedness 
have transformed farmers- the "backbone of the Thai economy" - into unskilled 
labor feeding the country's industrial expansion. Rural communities are sapped 
of their vitality, as Bangkok becomes ever more crowded, its infrastructure and 
services stretched to the limits. Another 
reason farmers have been so exploited and dependent on the State is lack of education. 
Thailand's development policy has always rested on the assumption that our biggest 
strengths lay in natural resources and cheap labor. Successive governments have 
therefore paid scant attention to upgrading the quality of the workforce, preferring 
instead to promote our advantage in cheap unskilled labor. But 
the entry of new players into the global market after the Cold War has shown that 
cheap labor is an advantage all developing countries have. Thus it was only relatively 
recently that human resource development became a new mantra in policy circles, 
with an emphasis on the upgrading of technical and management skills. Here 
I should also add that HRD should not be confined to only the industrial sector. 
We must make sure that farmers are not excluded, but encouraged to learn how markets 
work and to develop the skills that will allow them to make independent, informed 
choices. Education is a public good, like roads and public utilities, without 
which development is impossible. This may seem obvious, but the short shrift education 
tends to receive in our development policy suggests that the link between education 
and development may not be as widely appreciated as it should be. So 
far I have argued that the State should let market forces do their work without 
imposing distorting incentives favoring or punishing a particular sector. I have 
also pointed out that it is the obligation of the State to provide public goods 
such as education to allow the economy to achieve its full potential. That 
said, I must also note that markets as a rule do not function perfectly. Left 
to themselves, markets give rise to monopolies, speculative bubbles, insider trading 
and other assorted distortions. Hence, 
the State cannot totally disengage itself from the economy and rely on the invisible 
hand alone to maintain proper functioning. The State has an obligation to foster 
competition, prevent market failures, and ensure that private gains are not made 
at public expense. A minimalist State, or a State that is co-opted by the private 
sector, will have difficulty performing such duties.  A 
peculiarity of the Thai State is that it was too hands-on with regard to agriculture, 
but too hands-off with regard to industry and finance. Even in 1991, a World Bank 
report noted that Thailand was "a private enterprise system where few controls 
are imposed, [and] increased material standards and private gains have been secured 
at an observable communal expense." This 
insight is helpful in explaining how unintended consequences came about. When 
capital and currency controls were lifted in the early 1990s, it was with the 
intention of taking Thai industry to a higher plane of development. The policy 
of financial liberalization, combined with fixed exchange rates and high interest 
rates, did indeed attract a torrent of foreign capital. The missing part of the 
equation was the mechanisms and institutions to ensure that this glut of capital 
was channeled into productive activities, such as agriculture or manufacturing. 
The situation thus unleashed unprecedented opportunities for the nimble to make 
quick profits- in stocks, real estate and other speculative areas. The 
mood in those years became one that Alan Greenspan aptly describes as irrational 
exuberance. Flush with cheap money in search of borrowers, banks and finance companies 
became undisciplined, grossly inflating asset values and over-extending credit. 
Short-term loans, unhedged thanks to the perceived safety of the baht's peg to 
the US dollar, were taken to finance long-term activities such as construction 
projects. Businesses began ploughing their earnings from manufacturing into property 
speculation. Over-capacity began to build up in sectors such as housing, industrial 
estates, petrochemicals and steel, many sectors of which had been promoted by 
the State itself. By 1996, signs appeared 
to suggest the party was over. As the US dollar strengthened, so did the pegged 
baht. Export growth dropped from 24 percent the previous year to zero percent, 
while the current account deficit stood at a worrying 8 percent. Foreign investment 
began moving out. Despite reassurances by the government that all was well, it 
was apparent that the baht was overvalued, a point not lost on speculators. After 
a series of bruising currency attacks, the government was forced to float the 
baht on July 2, 1997. This episode in our 
economic history demonstrates that if we wish to prosper in the modern market, 
we cannot afford not to play by its rules. Here 
again we have a clash between the traditional and the new. A banking system based 
on mutual trust and support between lender and borrower, such as that which exists 
in many Asian countries, is fine for the domestic capital market, but hopelessly 
out of step in a globalize capital market. Not 
only financial institutions but the State as well have to adjust their way of 
doing things. In an open capital market system, the State, because it usually 
guarantees bank deposits (with taxpayers' money, no less), must supervise the 
banks to ensure that the risks taken by the banks are based on project evaluations 
and kept within certain bounds. This means that a clean, transparent and effective 
corporate governance system must be in place. Shareholders in a company that misuses 
other people's money must be punished and not bailed out by the taxpayers. To 
enforce this, effective supervision by the central bank is required, which in 
turn presumes that a clean, transparent and effective government is in place. 
The problem for most developing countries is how to get such a government -- one 
free of corruption. Another area where 
the State has an important supervisory role to play is in promoting sustainable 
development. Developing countries, Thailand included, tend to take their natural 
bounty for granted. Forests are chopped down for timber or farmland, minerals 
are extracted with little regard for environmental damage, pollution clogs rivers 
and lungs, all in the name of progress.   Thailand 
is beginning to realize, hopefully not too late, the importance of sustainable 
development, which the Brundtland Commission's 1987 report defined as development 
which meets the needs of the present without sacrificing the ability of the future 
to meet its needs. From the beginning, 
the Thai development model has focused single-mindedly on rapid growth. In recent 
year, as our economy grew while our environment deteriorated, more and more people 
are wondering if growth is really the panacea it is often made out to be. Given 
time, nature replenishes its resources, such as trees, and breaks down most waste 
products. But rapid industrialization and rampant commercialism tends to create 
social and environmental externalities that outstrip the carrying capacity of 
nature: prawn farms that destroy mangrove forests, logging that destroys human 
and wildlife habitats, vehicle engines that emit noxious exhaust fumes, factories 
that release toxic substances into the underground water table and waterways. 
It is by no means certain if our runaway growth has not already compromised future 
generations' ability to enjoy a reasonably good quality of life. Here 
then is clearly a case where unfettered market forces cannot be counted on to 
work for the greater good, particularly in the context of a global economy, which 
by its very nature encourages large-scale resource extraction. The pervasiveness 
of patronage and graft in Thailand aggravates the situation even further. Export-oriented 
exploitation of resources is therefore simply not sustainable without some degree 
of government regulation. What the State 
should do is to inject greater rationality into the balance between economic and 
environmental priorities. It can pass and strictly enforce environmental legislation. 
It can require that prices reflect the internalization of such externalities, 
rather than allow the socialization of environmental costs. But too often, the 
State's agents are beholden to well-connected private interests and not particularly 
keen to protect public resources. So overall, 
Thailand's growth has been a mixed blessing. We have tried to compress centuries 
of industrialization into a few decades, and in the process have discovered how 
detrimental some of our most entrenched traditions and social institutions are 
to our country as it tries to fit into the global market. If 
those old ways were to disappear, I for one would not be nostalgic. In many cases, 
they hark back to an unjust social hierarchy that perpetuated poverty for the 
masses and enriched a wealthy few. I am not saying that we should dispense with 
our cultural identity and blindly embrace the monoculture of the global market. 
What I am saying is that, as in any culture, there is much that should be retained 
and much that needs to be changed. If we are wise enough, we will know the difference. Indeed, 
some wisdom seems to be emerging from the ashes of the financial crisis. Thai 
society has become more introspective, asking itself where its strengths and weaknesses 
really lie, and what are the things that really matter in life.  A 
reform process has begun towards an open society and more effective rule of law. 
In the aftermath of the crisis, this movement has gathered momentum and is enjoying 
wide public support. The shortcomings of the State are being redressed through 
political reform as well as good public and corporate governance. The State is 
trying to reduce its role in directing the economy, while strengthening its supervisory 
and regulatory capacities. Transparency, full and timely disclosure of information, 
and accountability have become watchwords in both the corporate and government 
sectors. At the same time, the State and 
the market are also being monitored by a society that is more aware than ever 
of the potential for excess and inefficiency. Civil society -- and NGOs in particular 
-- is playing a more active role in strengthening communities and empowering ordinary 
citizens. The media have also been a powerful force for change, especially by 
exposing wrongdoing in high places. Citizens now have the right to access official 
information, a right that is being vigorously exercised and receiving the backing 
of our independent judiciary. The financial 
collapse therefore marked the beginning of a new chapter in Thailand's development. 
We are under no illusions as to when we can achieve our goal of development that 
is just, equitable and sustainable. We recognize that our efforts towards an open 
society must proceed in tandem, at roughly the same pace, in both political and 
economic areas. What we have learned is 
that when you take steps towards greater economic openness, and especially financial 
openness, there are a few rules of thumb to bear in mind: Do let the market do 
its work of determining prices; do provide public goods such as education and 
infrastructure; do intervene to correct market failures; and do intervene to prevent 
private self-interest from damaging the common interest. There are also a few 
don't 's: Don't second-guess the market; don’t favor certain sectors or groups 
over others; and don't use public funds to bail out private mistakes. Even 
when we know the rules, it is not always easy to live by them. South East Asia 
has the advantage of being able to learn from the successes and mistakes of others. 
You also have much experience in the way of appropriate technology, which is usually 
more environment-and community-friendly. We should use the various regional fora-- 
such as the Bangladesh-India-Myanmar-Sri Lanka-Thailand Economic Cooperation forum, 
or BIMSTEC--not only to promote trade and economic cooperation, but also to exchange 
ideas on development strategies.  Globalization, 
like capitalism, is a powerful force that should be harnessed for the greater 
good of mankind. We need to change and grow and become wiser if we are to survive 
it with our identity intact, so that future generations may look back at us with 
approval for bequeathing them a World that is not chaotic and bursting at the 
seams, but a World that is just, equitable and sustainable.  Thank 
you. |