Monday, August 17, 2015

The Growth Model

Our economic growth model seems an import-driven internal consumption-based pattern characterized by high credit growth and internal and external imbalances, and presumably heading towards resource based economy with assumption that manufacturing, as well as services, will no longer provide engine of growth. It is an easy-go model that requires no major effort to ensue. Basically beseech, borrow and spend (not even invest) brand that takes practically no account of  accountabilities for the financial recklessness, be it millions spent on domestic airports, education city, IT park, massive buildings and/or feeder roads of negligible benefits to the nation.

The economic growth model has to be supported by comprehensive plans. It should evolve fully responding to various challenges emerged as a result of detailed analysis of country’s  situation, strengths and weaknesses including people-sourced details. In formulating the model, it may even involve transforming the economic development pattern completely. Late Lee Kuan Yew said, "Well, we are pragmatists.  If in order to survive, we have to open up a sector, we open it up. Because the best test - the yardstick is, is this necessary for survival and progress? If it is, let's do it. We are ideology-free. What would make the place work, let's do it." 

Let us take the case of Bangladesh. With about $21 billion in exports in 2013 (80% of total exports) Bangladesh has become hot spot of ready-made garments (RMGs) producing mainly 5 items: T-shirts, sweaters, trousers, men’s and women’s shirts. There are more than 5,000 factories employing almost 4 million workers. Some experts forecast export-value growth of 7-9% annually and Bangladesh RMG market to touch $45 billion (about Nu 2.9 trillion, yes trillion) by 2020. Mind-blowing figure!

The main factors, among others, for Bangladesh RMG boom are: (i) strong and expanding backward linkage particularly for cotton items; (ii) domestic supply meeting 90% of fabric and 75% of yarn requirements; (iii) low labour and production costs (in time when increasing labour costs in China started to become an issue); (iv) easy and abundant access to skilled labour force; (v) flexible labour market laws and regulations; (vi) price competitiveness;  (vii) product diversification and upgrading; (viii) world standard and social compliances; (ix) courageous and bright entrepreneurs; (x) export friendly government policies; (xi) flexible financial market; and (xii) major push for image building and market promotion.

The Bangladeshis are working on improving transport infrastructure and energy supply, and reducing political unrest and strikes. The three main stakeholders — the government, suppliers, and buyers — work together. The government's top three priorities for investment are infrastructure, education, and trade support. It is clear, Bangladesh is on export-led development model and directs investment and entrepreneurs towards manufacturing exports. This is how they have been able to carve a $45 billion niche in the world market that involves even shifting RMG manufacturing base from China to Bangladesh. I envy them in an affirmative way!

A model is a conceptual framework devised to be used as a guide in making a diagnosis, understanding a developmental process, and forming a prognosis for continued future development direction of the country. It has normally five components: (i) the identifiable state describes the stage, level, phase, or period of the condition or process; (ii) the shift in state identifies qualities of change as progressive, sudden, abrupt, or recurrent; (iii) the form of progression describes patterns of development as linear, spiral, or oscillating, (iii) the  force that triggers the change or the step in development may be self-actualization or any form of stress, and (v) development is ultimately constrained by the fifth component, potentiality, the genetic and environmental possibility of growth.

It is not possible to have a dynamic economic growth model if the economy is mostly government-centric and does not enjoy the confidence of private  and non-profit sectors. That is what it is, and therefore step-by-step transformation of economy to the new growth model is prerogative. Plans drawn off the cuff and casual commitments with foot in the mouth by politicians do not work. The haphazard action plans/activities formulated on the back of an envelope not only distort  development resources and efforts streamlining,  but also stifles innovation, enterprise, and enquiry into cause and effect relationships. Without due attention to these it is impossible to interact with fiercely competitive world. Many with vacuum of ideology, principles, purpose and integrity may say why do we need to interact with the world? Many experts consider North Korea, Laos, Cambodia, Myanmar, and New Guinea as east Asia's failed states. Their one common characteristic: failure to trade and interact with the world.

As per Economic Development Policy (EDP), Bhutan’s economic development policy, guided by the overarching philosophy of Gross National Happiness (GNH), is based on the four pillars: (i) sustainable economic development; (ii) preservation and promotion of culture and tradition; (iii) conservation of environment; and (iv) good governance.

On sustainable economic growth alone, major challenges identified in EDP are:

(i)           Economy largely financed by external aid
(ii)          High fiscal deficit
(iii)         Weak balance of payment
(iv)         Mounting public debt
(v)          Difficult to sustain foreign exchange reserves as it is not built through exports
(vi)         Small domestic market
(vii)        Inadequate infrastructure
(viii)       High transportation cost
(ix)         Difficult access to finance
(x)          Inconsistent policies
(xi)         Lack of management skills
(xii)        Shortage of professionals
(xiii)       Low productivity of labour
(xiv)       Absence of R&D capability
(xv)        Access to land

The EDP recognizes that unless these constraints are systematically removed, the capacity of the private sector as the engine of growth cannot be enhanced. Heavy sentence!

Our competitive advantages identified in EDP are:

(i)          Political stability
(ii)         Peace and security
(iii)        A vibrant and living culture
(iv)        Natural and pristine environment
(v)         Geo-economic location and open access to the emerging Indian market
(vi)         Reliable and competitively priced energy
(vii)        Nation of GNH
(viii)       Wide use of English language

I suggest you to put the above pros and cons on an economic growth balance and see for yourself if these so called advantages can be classified as the country’s Unique Selling Proposition (USP), one that is expected to build on and to become Brand Bhutan. I will not go into geographical location that lacks credible reasoning to term as competitive advantage. The questions are, “Are we really up for export-led development model? Do we really want to lure credible FDIs to achieve our goal the way Bangladesh is doing?” The optimism displayed by our pseudo-idealists lack understanding how tough the mainstream FDI customers are! Credible FDIs do not do emotional investment. They look for opportunities and markets favourable to their businesses in the terms they dictate, if possible.

I am not disparaging EDP. We are in mid-2015 and the government statement of achieving minimum growth rate of 9% annually and striving to be a middle income nation by 2020 in EDP sounds hollow. It is not difficult to assess how much of efforts have gone so far into the Areas of Economic Opportunities identified in EDP to help generating wealth, employment and sustainable growth within the framework of GNH easing above 15 challenges. Surely, we cannot be taking things so casually once we put credibility of the nation in the forefront. Can we?

We are in high-voltage cloud computing age enabling to put-up apps in cloud storage, and do business or launch start-up. Those who do not realize value of internet, they can watch the world go by outside their window because you cannot eat pixels. The internet enables the use of the knowledge and power of community. Those who are not aware of this will eventually reach the point where they become a cubicle Jonestown devoid of anything resembling real-world logic.

Internet is the double-edged killer technology. The digitization not only benefit business in terms of product development and supply-chain management to sales and/or marketing, but also in providing straightforward information enabling people to interact among themselves facilitating benefits. It is possible to harness digitization benefits and the digitization process.

On the other hand it can ruin the foundational underpinning  with superficial use of information available in the net through application of shallow ideas and concept that are no longer relevant to the ground realities. We tend to be heading towards this syndrome. If you disagree with me, try talking to senior teachers how many shallow concepts and borrowed ideas have messed up the education system. Education is not alone. All most all sectors have applied policies and regulations that float because those are mostly square-pegs-in-round-holes. There are numerous ideas in the net that look good and can be downloaded free. These only help in framing superficial solutions sweeping under the carpet the real development dilemma and parroting frivolous nationalism. The problem is we suffer from doing things easy-way without analytical details to help structure development direction. Our inability or refusal to grasp in-depth knowledge of the structural problems, because we find conflicts of interest, will drive us to intellectual backlog deficit that will be of much bigger agony than any current account deficits. While the world's money is moving into the pockets of 25-year-olds with sexy ideas, our dated start-up engine does not fire because neither it has been retrofitted/modernized nor there is fuel.

In 1960, the American Economic Historian, W.W. Rostow, suggested that countries passed through five stages of economic development. According to Rostow development requires substantial investment in capital. For the economies of least developed countries to grow the right conditions for such investment have to be created. If aid is given or foreign direct investment occurs at Stage 3 the economy needs to have reached Stage 2. If Stage 2 has been reached then injections of investment may lead to rapid growth.
   
Rostow's Model - Stages of Economic Development

Stage 5: High Mass Consumption   consumer oriented, durable goods flourish, service sector becomes dominant
Stage 4: Drive to Maturity  diversification, innovation, less reliance on imports, investment
Stage 3:Take Off               industrialization, growing investment, regional growth, political change
Stage 2:Transitional Stage  specialization, surpluses, infrastructure
Stage 1: Traditional Society  subsistence, barter, agriculture

It is good to know the five stages of Rostow’s Economic Development model. I do not believe development ladder-steps are so structured and neat in reality. So we do not need to place ourselves on one of the Rostow treads. But there is no denying of the fact that one way or the other we need to climb the staircase for which a conducive environment for substantial investment in capital, both internal and external, is a prerequisite.

As of now I see two choices. Either continue status quo and head in the direction of east Asian nations mentioned above, or eliminate conflicts of interest in the areas of pursuing inclusive governance (such as, but not limited to, creating leveled playing field, exercising financial transparency, granting merit-based - rather than obeisance-rooted - reward and recognition, maintaining proper accountability, overhauling sectoral policies, regulations and procedures) and applying rule of law; and redirect the nation to proper economic growth model (even if it is resource based growth model). Unfortunately it is either/or. We need good alchemy!