Senin, 01 April 2013

ASEAN’s Gini : Out of the bottle


ASEAN’s Gini : Out of the bottle
Curtis S Chin US Ambassador to the Asian Development Bank (2007-2010);  He is Senior Fellow and Executive-in-Residence at the Asian Institute of Technology;
A Managing Director with River Peak Group
JAKARTA POST, 21 Maret 2013
  

As the 10 ASEAN member states continue their push toward a more cohesive ASEAN community, much of the focus has been on what more needs to be done by each nation in the countdown to an ASEAN Economic Community (AEC) prior to 2015.

Adopted and signed by ASEAN leaders in November 2007 in Singapore, during their annual summit meeting, the “Blueprint” for economic integration under the AEC envisioned “a single market and production base” and a Southeast Asian region that would be “highly competitive,” characterized by “equitable economic development” and “fully integrated into the global economy”.

But perhaps lost in all the debate over what the AEC might mean in terms of freer — if not free — trade in goods and services, skilled labor, investment and capital flows are the implications for Southeast Asia if the gap between the rich and the poor grew and grew, and no one noticed.

Equitable development under the AEC does not and should not, after all, necessarily mean equitable results.  It should mean equitable opportunity.

Under Presidents Barack Obama and George W. Bush, I served as US ambassador to the Asian Development Bank, an institution focused on reducing poverty in the Asia and Pacific region’s least developed nations in part through finance a range of infrastructure projects and programs, as well as efforts to foster greater regional economic integration. Critically, Southeast Asia’s leaders must also focus on inequality of opportunity if development is to be sustainable. More equal access to public services, such as education, water, electricity and sanitation, should be critical concerns.  

Now based in Thailand at a regional institute focused in part on educating a next generation of future government, civil society and business leaders, including hundreds of students from the ASEAN region, I am often struck by the contrasts between the images governments might seek to project and the realities on the ground. Also striking are people’s own images of the countries in which they live.

While delivering a guest lecture at Chulalangkorn University’s Sasin Graduate Institute of business administration, I asked, “Which nation in Asia is the most ‘unequal’ when it comes to the Gini coefficient, or index — a measure of income inequality?” 

Pakistan, India and Vietnam were among the responses. Imagine the surprise, when I informed them of the CIA World Factbook’s rankings: While the African nations of Namibia, South Africa and Lesotho top the charts as the most unequal in the world, Thailand is ranked as the most unequal in Asia.  Coming in as the 12th most unequal worldwide, Thailand is followed in Asia by No. 13 Hong Kong and No. 19 Papua New Guinea.  Sweden has the most equal distribution of average family income of more than 130 ranked nations and territories.

For the Southeast Asia nations for which data is available, the rankings in order of most unequal to least unequal distribution of family income are:  Thailand (12th most unequal); Singapore (29th), Malaysia (33rd), Philippines (36th), Cambodia (45th), Vietnam (73rd), Indonesia (78th) and Laos (70th).

Some of these figures are startling. Indeed, the rankings also underscore one of the fundamental challenges of policy. That is, the accuracy of data. Rankings are only as good as the source data.  GIGO, as they say: Garbage in, garbage out.

The inconvenient truth is that even as a changing Asia helps drive the global economy, the region remains home to two-thirds of the world’s poor, and an estimated 1.7 billion people still struggle on less than US$2 a day, according to the ADB. Approximately 700 million live on less than $1 a day.

Ethnic minorities and indigenous peoples are often marginalized and excluded from the benefits of the region’s growth. Some 43 percent of the Asia-Pacific population do not have access to improved sanitation facilities, and growing numbers moving to Asia’s teeming cities face deteriorating sanitation and environmental conditions and inadequate housing and infrastructure, according to the ADB. 

So, does the “official” Gini index really matter to ASEAN? 

In some ways, it remains a philosophical question for Southeast Asia — about the role of government, business and civil society, and about what level of inequality a society can accept.

A nation can be made up of equally poor people and would fare much better in the Gini rankings.  Perhaps more important than official Gini coefficients are trends and attitudes as to whether or not things are getting better and for whom. 

Respected Singapore diplomat Tommy Koh once wrote that technology, globalization and domestic policy are the key drivers of inequality today. In discussing Singapore’s relatively high Gini coefficient, Koh wrote that the number did not capture some of Singapore’s strengths: a strong rule of law, a non-corrupt government and most importantly, equality of opportunities and social mobility.

There is indeed more to a nation than its Gini coefficient. 

Certainly, Southeast Asia — like much of Asia and the Pacific — has been transformed these last decades. Poverty has decreased and tens of millions live better lives. And people everywhere should welcome an Asia that is both more prosperous and more at peace with itself.

With the twin jinni’s of technological progress and globalization out of the bottle, there is no putting them back in.

As Southeast Asia moves toward greater economic integration and cooperation, how its leaders, businesses and everyday citizens answer the question, “What if the gap between the rich and the poor grew and grew, and no one noticed?” will help define what kind of community the AEC will truly be.

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