|
Asia: The Economics of Violence
May 1, 2008 - (The Morung Express) Here’s
the good news. The economy of Asia is surging ahead. Sustained economic
growth seems to have contributed to the reduction of poverty. The
World Bank says that poverty rates in Asia as a whole (based on
consumption levels of less than $1 per day) have been almost halved
in the last decade, falling from 34.3% in 1990 to 19.3% in 2003.
Most countries are making steady progress towards achievement of
the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs) by 2015. China, Indonesia,
Malaysia, Thailand and Vietnam have all witnessed more than a 50%
poverty reduction since 1990 and these countries are supposed to
be on track to meet the MDG targets of a further 50% reduction in
income poverty by 2015. Literacy rates are going up, infant and
maternal mortality is falling, and people are living longer. Asian
cities are booming, with signs of prosperity everywhere. More and
more billionaires are laughing their way to the banks year after
year. The pundits say that the time of Asia has come -- it is an
Asian Century, with China as the global factory, India as the global
office, and the stock exchanges rocking. The story looks good!
The story looks good till you notice the underbelly of economic
growth: unprecedented levels of inequality, violence, epidemics,
congested roads, teeming slums, polluted rivers and failing democracies.
The story looks good till you begin to hear the stories of dalits,
tribals, ethnic minorities, women from the hinterlands of rural
deprivation. Stories that you may never read in the newspaper, unheard
stories of invisible people, people displaced from land and livelihoods,
people who prefer to commit suicide rather than sell their dignity,
children who go to bed hungry every single day. Two-thirds of the
world’s poor live in Asia. There will still be more than a
billion people living on less than $ 2 a day in 2015. So is Asia
shining? Is economic growth good for billionaires or billons of
people?
What is the balance sheet of Asia’s economic growth? Whose
growth is it anyway? Who grows and who loses? Can economic growth
alone eliminate poverty in Asia? What are the key challenges for
development, democracy and human rights in Asia? We need to situate
the story of economic growth in the well-being, human security and
human rights of the most marginalised and excluded people in Asia.
In spite of all the growth, if there are still more than one billion
people living on less than $2 a day in 2015, the story can turn
sour! But it seems the ruling elite and media barons cannot stomach
the bad news.
Economic growth with inequality creates an economics of deprivation
and violence. The present model of economic growth displaces millions
of rural and urban poor from their land and livelihoods. As a result
of unprecedented displacement due to mining, infrastructure projects
and corporate farming, a new generation of social-economic refugees
and new poor are emerging across Asia. They are growing in urban
slums, rural areas and in highly concentrated pockets of extreme
poverty. A new discontent is brewing and it can adversely affect
development, democracy and human rights in Asia.
While economic growth helps to create more opportunities for the
more educated section of the middle class and a ‘trickle-down’
effect on a section of the poor, it is creating unprecedented levels
of inequality within countries and between countries.
Though China and India, two of the most populous countries in the
world, are witnessing high rates of economic growth, there are regions
lagging behind in both countries that have poor infrastructure or
public service provisions. The urban and rural poor also face discrimination
based on ethnicity, race, religion, caste, gender and place of origin.
Women are more marginalised and vulnerable to a system that perpetuates
inequality, discrimination and consequent poverty.
Economic growth is concentrated in a few urban centres and specially
created economically dynamic zones in the costal areas of many countries.
But two-thirds of the population in most populous countries -- like
China, India, Indonesia, Bangladesh and Pakistan -- still live in
rural areas depending on agriculture for their livelihood. Historically
marginalised sections like the dalits in India, ethnic minorities
in China and South-East Asia and religious minorities in many countries
are alienated from economic growth and the mainstream political
process.
This urban-centric, uneven and jobless economic growth perpetuates
a sort of systemic inequality based on identity, gender and location
all over Asia. Most communities at the receiving end of exclusion
are historically marginalised in terms of economic or political
opportunities. When inequality has a direct co-relation with identity,
it gives rise to new discontents. Such a sense of discontent and
shared sense of alienation can often give rise to a new politics
of violence -- reacting to the prosperity of the dominant communities.
Surrounding these islands of prosperity is a growing sea of poverty,
discontent and consequent reactionary politics. This can perpetuate
a cycle of violence, erasing the benefits of growth as well as poverty
reduction. So the paradoxical trend of growth with inequality may
not be able to sustain growth on a long-term basis. Political stability
is a prerequisite for economic growth. Inequality can create more
political instability, adversely affecting sustainable economic
growth. This can eventually perpetuate a new cycle of poverty, violence
and violation of human rights in Asia.
The present economic growth is vulnerable as it is largely dependent
on the service sector and the export-oriented manufacturing sector,
often at the cost of the agricultural sector that provides livelihoods
to the poor and marginalised sections in Asia. This urban-centric
growth, with very little investment in rural infrastructure, economy
or agricultural, also leads to an unprecedented migration from rural
areas to urban areas. This explosion of populations in urban centres
without adequate infrastructure and gainful employment opportunities
can create a new generation of urban poor. Urban poverty and inequality
-- with direct links to identity -- can create more violence against
women and escalating crime rates in many countries.
Thus the present mode of neo-liberal economic growth is not sustainable
in the long run as the billions at the receiving end of marginalisation
and poverty can spoil the party, giving rise to a new cycle of poverty
in Asia.
From:http://www.morungexpress.com/index.php?news=7615
|