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Do authoritarian rulers deliver better economic results? Jayato Ghosh says Asia’s autocrats, from India to the Philippines, are presiding over increasingly fragile states and even more vulnerable economies

Do authoritarian rulers deliver better economic results? Jayato Ghosh says Asia’s autocrats, from India to the Philippines, are presiding over increasingly fragile states and even more vulnerable economies

By Jayati Ghosh*

US President Donald Trump grabs the most headlines, but the cult of the strongman leader is most developed in Asia. The continent abounds with rulers – including Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi, Philippine President Rodrigo Duterte, Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan, and the strongest of them all, Chinese President Xi Jinping – who make a virtue of centralising power.

Obviously, leadership styles vary. But all of Asia’s strongmen share a key characteristic: they secure public support by preying on economic ignorance. In particular, they trade on the popular belief that leaders who concentrate political power are freer to guide economic growth. For the most part, people accept this claim, expecting that financial gain and “development” will be their reward.

Curiously, markets have also accepted this flawed reasoning. Global investors tend to overlook human rights, and to prefer stability and autocratic resolve to the unpredictability of democracy. Equity and currency markets regularly punish countries for even a hint of political upheaval, whereas rulers with more power and fewer checks and balances are assumed to be more capable of ensuring meaningful “reforms.”

And yet, with the possible exception of Xi, the perception that strong autocratic rulers deliver better economic results is wrong. The truth is that Asia’s strongmen are presiding over increasingly vulnerable states and even more fragile economies.

Until recently, these vulnerabilities went unnoticed. The world’s emerging markets recovered quickly from the 2008 financial crisis, and Asian economies were among the most dynamic. Only a few observers dared to point out that this rapid reversal was the result of credit bubbles fueled by carry-trade operations hatched in overly liquid centers of global capitalism. Put another way, Asia’s post-crisis party (which was, to be honest, never that raucous) had to end sometime.

Since the start of 2018, the same emerging markets have been under intense pressure from a combination of factors, beginning with the US Federal Reserve’s tightening of monetary policy, which pulled capital back to the United States. These stresses have been exacerbated by the ongoing trade war between the US and China. The resulting slowdown has exposed cracks in Asian economies that were once well hidden.

Most of the Asian leaders long feted by financial markets, it turns out, are really bad economic managers, and investors are beginning to recoil from them. But what is most striking is that it took markets so long to reach this conclusion. After all, the writing has been on the wall for years.

For example, in India, Modi’s disastrous banknote demonetisation in November 2016 should have been enough to alert observers. The move was politically successful for the ruling party but economically devastating, causing massive disruptions to the Indian economy and upending the informal sector, which employs some 81% of the country’s workforce.

As if that were not enough, the poorly planned and hastily implemented Goods and Services Tax should have impugned Modi’s economic stewardship. There have been other serious problems, too, like over-reliance on speculative short-term capital inflows to finance a growing current-account deficit, and inadequate attention to boosting productive employment and promoting wage-led growth possibilities. Even today, most of these shortcomings are barely being discussed.

What explains weak economic performances by Asia’s strongmen? Maybe untrammeled political power enables large-scale economic mistakes. Furthermore, while most autocrats show strength to their own public, they become meek in the face of global capital. Even when rulers rant against policies that will hurt their populist agendas – like high interest rates – they typically succumb to pressure from financial markets.

This is because the policies they have pursued have integrated their economies so completely into global trade and finance, on unequal terms. Despite their nationalist rhetoric, when the economic winds blow against them, it can be hard to change direction. The exception is China, where heterodox policies and significant state intervention have made the economy far less vulnerable to external shocks. But while Xi has thus far managed to deal with an increasingly complex and hostile external economic environment, many serious internal concerns could easily erupt into bigger problems.

Whatever the reason for Asia’s profusion of strongmen, people and markets have gotten it wrong for too long. Strongman rulers are bad for democracy, and they are really bad for the economy.


Jayati Ghosh is Professor of Economics at Jawaharlal Nehru University in New Delhi and Member of the Independent Commission for the Reform of International Corporate Taxation. Copyright: Project Syndicate, 2018, and published here with permission.

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10 Comments

Rings true, look at what Piggy Muldoon did to NZ.

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The Author is paranoid of Modi's Economics, needs to grow up & write meaningful opinions which makes sense to general public, alternatively can also write Harry Potter kinda books.

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Modi's look east policy grew into the act east policy. It makes geopolitical sense from an Indian perspective, with regard to energy security but that's the only good move of his that I know about, besides infrastructure is going to get built under any government.

India's credit crunch resulted in liberal economic reform, largely directed by the IMF. Modi cannot take credit for that; the recent economic reform appears to be obligation in exchange for IMF loans.

Good points are made here about ignorance being preyed upon by populist leaders, we have domestic examples of that with John Key being perceived as a 'good' leader, although history may judge him differently given the corpus of evidence showing how much more difficult life became for kiwi's under his tenure.

You should try attacking the message and not the messenger, your comment is ad hominem.

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An Indian perspective. Nice. Always found them more realistic than the East Asians. I know they're not everyone's cup of tea, but I believe they have more to offer western culture than the Chinese. They play cricket for a start.

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"But all of Asia’s strongmen share a key characteristic: they secure public support by preying on economic ignorance." - After our last lolly scramble election might as well add us to the list (minus the strongman part).

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The author of this article is unsurprisingly lashing out against right-wing leaders. As I scan through her professional background, I notice a socialist undertone in all her work and research pieces. So elected leaders of NZ, Argentina etc. don't feature on this list of failed economic managers evidently due to her political bias.

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Credit where credit is due, and to hazard a guess, would your own biases (we all have them) prevent you from lauding the good economic position socialist policies put New Zealand in prior to National taking over?

It's not just economics, even violent crime was lower, we can show a commutative relationship between expenditure on welfare and crime per capita. Even after taking into account National's attempt at statistical aberration by changing reporting requirements.

If you make a claim without evidence, it can be dismissed without evidence. The most notable failed economic managers in New Zealand's political history were Key's National party, and Muldoon.

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Global investors tend to overlook human rights, and to prefer stability and autocratic resolve to the unpredictability of democracy.

I find this a little hard to believe. Democracies are far more stable and predictable. Here is a list of countries ranked by safety for investing:

https://www.investmentfrontier.com/what-countries-are-safe-to-invest-in/

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Global investors do overlook human rights, unless populist reaction risks threatening said investment. This makes human rights ancillary; not paramount, and we are spoilt for examples of investment into arms companies, and those products finding their way into the hands of belligerents on BOTH sides of a conflict, to corroborate that point.

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tres interresant

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