/ 3 May 2009

Asia urged to rethink growth policies

Asia’s governments must spend more on social safety nets and reduce their reliance on export-driven growth even as they grapple with an economic meltdown that will keep tens of millions trapped in poverty, finance officials said on Sunday.

Faced with the worst global slump since World War II, many of Asia’s economies are in free fall as demand for their exports — long the engine of the region’s growth — evaporates in big Western markets.

The Asian Development Bank, holding its annual meeting in Bali, Indonesia, has warned that 61-million people will remain trapped in extreme poverty this year because of the global slump. That figure will increase to nearly 160-million if slow growth continues next year, it says.

The bank’s president Haruhiko Kuroda said the collapse in global trade has ”gathered momentum” as export markets suffer a massive contraction.

”This grave situation needs more vigorous and concerted efforts by all concerned to bring growth in the region back,” he said.

Some governments in Asia, Japan and China’s among them, are already blasting their economies with hundreds of billions of dollars in stimulus spending. But it is too early to say whether this pump-priming is working, while many other governments in the region are too poor to fund such largesse.

”Asian countries must restructure their economies and focus more on domestic demand,” Japan’s Finance Minister Kaoru Yosano told the annual meeting.

”The Asian region needs to prop up domestic demand to avoid economic meltdown,” said Yosano, also a governor of the ADB, to which Japan is a major donor.

Boosting Asia’s spending on social protection — currently the lowest of any region — is a crucial step to take for boosting confidence and reducing the human cost of an economic downturn, he said.

The venue for the May 2 to 5 meeting, an international convention centre nestled amid plush five-star resorts, provides a stark contrast to one of its main talking point: tackling Asia’s endemic poverty.

Some hotels hosting conference delegates have nightly rates that are more than a poor family in Asia earns in one year. More than 900-million in Asia live on $1,25 or less a day.

”The accommodation is indicative of the bank’s efforts in meeting the financial crisis,” said Red Constantino, executive director of NGO Forum on ADB — an umbrella group pushing the bank to become more accountable. ”There’s a wide gap between their rhetoric and what they do in reality.”

The ADB announced on Saturday that it will boost lending to the region’s poorest nations by more than $10-billion over two years, though it is widely acknowledged this is not enough to make up for
the shortfall created by the freezing up of private investment.

The announcement came just days after the bank’s 67 member countries approved a tripling of the ADB’s capital to $165-billion, expanding its ability to finance infrastructure and other projects aimed at reducing poverty in partnership with the private sector.

”We expect the bank to rapidly and significantly step up lending in key areas,” said India’s economic affairs secretary Ashok Chawla.

But activist organisations have not welcomed the bank’s bigger firepower, saying ADB-funded projects often harm the very people they aim to help.

Activists highlighted an ADB-backed dam and hydroelectric power scheme in the West Seti region of Nepal, saying it could displace 20 000 people and lead to conflict in resettlement areas that are already heavily populated.

The ADB estimates about 12 000 people would need to be resettled. – Sapa-AP