The Economics Book

(Barry) #1

286 ASIAN TIGER ECONOMIES


The rapid rise of the Asian Tigers
was based on exports. Large facilities
to handle container ships, such as
these in Singapore, were built by the
state to promote growth.

“infant industries,” pumped up
with subsidies and trade protection,
were eventually made to grow up.
The state could enforce
performance criteria on firms
because it was able to withdraw
preferential treatment as needed.
Robert Wade argues that the
way these states chose to lead
the markets explains the creation
of comparative advantages in
industries where none previously
existed. Initially, the prices of
goods from a new industry would
normally be internationally
uncompetitive. In addition, the
production of a new product often
requires the simultaneous setting
up of other industries and
infrastructure. The coordination of
this process is difficult if left to
private firms rather than the state.
Moreover, these protected, infant
industries became competitive
when they were given classical
incentives to learn how to become
more efficient. In order to achieve
the economic education of new
firms and the coordination of initial
production, governments needed to
act in violation of narrow market
prices. This occurred in South


Korea’s steel industry. In the 1960s
the Korean government was
advised by the World Bank not to
enter the steel sector because it
had no comparative advantage
there—others could easily beat its
prices. By the 1980s Posco, a large
Korean firm, had become one of the
world’s most efficient steel producers.

Political interference
Attempts at interventionist policies
in regions outside East Asia were
unsuccessful, which tarnished the
reputation of the developmental
state. In Latin America and Africa
the preferential treatment of firms
and sectors generated poor
incentives: firms were shielded
from competition, but the state did
not enforce performance criteria.
Infant industries never grew into
successful exporters.
In Latin America especially,
preferential treatment became linked
to politics with little economic
payoff: some firms received
subsidies and tariff protection but
did not become more productive.
Over time these firms became
a drain on their governments’
budgets, absorbing rather than

generating resources. “Getting
prices wrong” did not help to
build comparative advantages
in new industries. It led instead
to inefficient production and
economic stagnation.
In East Asia successful states
seemed better able to resist
pressures from private interests.
After setting up its new steel firm
in the 1960s, the South Korean
government ensured that the firm
was meeting efficiency targets.
If political interests had emerged
that had prevented the state from
disciplining the firm, the state
would have become the servant
of narrow interests, not of the
overall economic efficiency of the
economy. The state had to remain
autonomous and resist pressures
for favoritism from particular
groups. At the same time the state
provided firms with credit and
technical assistance—to do this
and to monitor firms’ performance,
it was necessary for the tentacles of
the state to reach into the smallest
cogs of the economy. The economic

The state... has set relative
prices deliberately ‘wrong’
in order to create profitable
investment opportunities.
Alice Amsden
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