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Razeen Sally: European twilight, Asian sunrise
Even as the West is having to adopt illiberal economic policies, the Western tradition of economic freedom is gaining popularity in Asia
Razeen Sally / Aug 10, 2011, 00:50 IST

In August I left the London School of Economics and am about to move to Singapore. I left Europe for Asia. I am a British-Sri Lankan – half-European, half-Asian – who grew up in Sri Lanka, lived in Britain and elsewhere in Europe and is now returning to Asia. This life-change prompts a few general thoughts on the state of Europe, and more broadly the West, and the state of the emerging world, particularly Asia.

First, some recent political and economic trends. The last economic era, roughly from 1980 to 2008, was the most successful combination of globalisation, growth and prosperity in history. The West benefited, but, more importantly, this was when “the Rest” came on board: “underdeveloped countries” cast off post-colonial isolation and embraced the world economy. The recent global economic crisis, though, has induced sharp divergence of economic performance between the West and emerging markets. The US and most of Europe are stuck with anaemic growth. The main emerging markets, except Russia, sailed through the crisis and are booming. This short-term divergence has accelerated the long-term convergence between emerging markets – particularly in Asia – and the West.

There is similar divergence in the global policy outlook. The West’s financial crisis and “crisis interventions” have wrecked public finances. Financial bailouts, fiscal-stimulus packages and extra-loose monetary policy also provided cover for Big Government micro-interventions which distort competition and restrict economic freedom. Most emerging markets retain healthier balance sheets and have a much more promising outlook.

Asia is an awakening continent whose people are vertical, up-and-doing and grasping new-found economic freedom with both hands. Market liberalisation has unleashed the “animal spirits” of ordinary people.

But I don’t want to paint too rosy a picture of emerging markets. Market reforms have stalled in China, India and elsewhere. Domestic red tape continues to stifle emerging markets’ business climates and repress economic freedom much more than in the West. This is reflected in all major global rankings, such as the World Bank’s Doing Business Index and the Fraser Institute’s Economic Freedom of the World Index. Economic institutions and political systems remain relatively weak; they keep business costs high, repressing entrepreneurship and innovation. Emerging-market powers suffer their own rivalries, are still reactive in global economic institutions, and have regional markets beset by high barriers to trade, investment and the movement of people. In other words, there is huge unfinished business, particularly to expand economic freedom outside the West.

Now turn to ideas. Liberty, especially economic freedom – what Adam Smith called “natural liberty” – is a theme that preoccupies me, particularly its condition and prospects outside the West. The liberal tradition is a product of the West. Those who are Western-centric like to think that liberty is the West’s intellectual property. It is for the West to export liberty to benighted lands — to lead them out of their “areas of darkness” (to borrow a favourite V S Naipaul term). True, the liberal tradition comes mainly from the West. But it will not work unless a serious connection is made with local intellectual traditions and local history. Thus, there must be a serious effort to explore non-Western liberal traditions, and then make the connections with Western classical liberalism.

And now to history. A Western-centric view holds that only Western colonialism enabled economic development outside the West. But there is only a grain of truth in this script. The history of long-distance trade, for example, was mainly a non-Western story until the 15th century.

The zenith of economic freedom outside the West in pre-modern history was medieval Indian Ocean trade before European colonisation, a Golden Age of south and south-east Asian commerce. Before the Portuguese muscled in, the Indian Ocean was Mare Liberum, not controlled by any power and fully open to trade. Coastlines were dotted with “port-polities”, independent towns and cities whose lifeblood was overseas trade. Aden, Hormuz, Cambay, Goa, Calicut, Aceh, Malacca and Macassar were religiously tolerant, polyglot, cosmopolitan places, energised by trading diaspora. Freewheeling economic competition went in tandem with decentralised, flexible political institutions and advanced legal structures. Fractured geography and competing polities combined to promote economic freedom, growth and prosperity.

The last 60 years have seen a remarkable economic renaissance in east and south Asia — a recreation of the Golden Age of Indian Ocean commerce. Commercial clusters in and around coastal cities, connected with each other across seas and oceans, are its economic lifeblood. Its networks are complex manufacturing and services supply chains linking them to global markets. It is in these mostly coastal strips – from the south to the west of India, the eastern provinces of China, coastal cities in south-east Asia – that liberalisation of markets, property rights, a burgeoning middle class and other features of commercial society are blossoming the most. Hong Kong and Singapore are today’s Malacca and Macassar. They form the core of liberty outside the West today; they point the way to its future expansion. This is not quite the Utopian vision of Richard Cobden, who foresaw free trade leading to a world of cosmopolitan, peacefully co-existing municipalities that would replace warring nation-states. But Cobden would still approve enthusiastically.

One concluding thought. The global economic crisis has ushered in a phase of illiberal ideas and policies; it has set back the cause of economic freedom. I have some confidence that the intellectual tide will turn in parts of the West — indeed, it already has in the US. But, looking beyond the short term, I have greater confidence that the expansion of liberty – particularly economic freedom – outside the West, especially in Asia, will provide even more tailwind. The future of liberty is shifting East; more than ever, it lies outside the West.

The writer is director of the European Centre of International Political Economy, a global-economy think-tank in Brussels.
He was on the faculty of the London School of Economics.
He will join the Lee Kuan Yew School of Public Policy and the Institute of South Asian Studies at the National University of Singapore

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Latest Messages
Posted by: ashok
As our areas of darkness light up, there is no reason for some of the lights to go out in the West. They need to take stock of demographics, economics and figure out what would be a sustainable future for them in a less unequal world. The riots in Britain suggest that the process will be painful.
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