Showing posts with label Ha-Joon Chang. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Ha-Joon Chang. Show all posts

Sunday, March 05, 2017

How Rich Countries Actually Became Rich - The Myth of Free Trade

                                                         

NOTES:
  1. Colored and/or underlined words are HTML links. Click on them to see the linked posts/articles. Forwarding this and other posts to relatives and friends, especially those in the homeland, is greatly appreciated). To share, use all social media tools: email, blog, Google+, Tumblr, Twitter, Facebook, etc. THANKS!!
  2. Read on Scribd mobile apps: iPhone, iPad and Android.
  3. Free download as PDF, TXT or read online for free from Scribd, point-click to open-->SCRIBD/TheFilipinoMind
  4. Click the following underlined title/link to checkout these Essential/Primary Readings About Us Filipino Natives:
    Primary Blog Posts/Readings for my fellow, Native (Malay/Indio) Filipinos-in-the-Philippines

    *****************************


HOW G7 COUNTRIES BECAME RICH
[Through economic nationalism/protectionism first; then demand Free Trade on Others thereafter]


An excellent read. I also found two of his other books similarly very enlightening ones.
1. "Kicking Away the Ladder" (2002)

Ha-Joon Chang (Hangul: 장하준; Hanja: 張夏准; born 7 October 1963) is a South Korean institutional economist specializing in development economics.

Currently a reader in the Political Economy of Development at the University of Cambridge, Chang is the author of several widely discussed policy books, most notably Kicking Away the Ladder: Development Strategy in Historical Perspective (2002).[3][4][5] In 2013 Prospect magazine ranked Chang as one of the top 20 World Thinkers.[6]

He has served as a consultant to the World Bank, the Asian Development Bank, the European Investment Bank, as well as to Oxfam[7] and various United Nations agencies.[8] He is also a fellow at the Center for Economic and Policy Research[9] in Washington, D.C. In addition, Chang serves on the advisory board of Academics Stand Against Poverty (ASAP).

Chang is also known for being an important academic influence on the economist Rafael Correa, currently President of Ecuador. -- WIKIPEDIA

[See also CIA attempt to overthrow Pres. Correa:]

A South Korean acquaintance told me that despite his brilliance, Ha-Joon Chang can not work in South Korea because he does not kowtow to the official line of Globalization.

************

In essence, the book "BAD SAMARITANS" highlights the historical facts that today's advanced countries got started with protectionism for several generations, for centuries. Only when they have become economically developed and thus powerful that they gradually declared and accepted "free trade."

All these presently strong nations (note they are nations, not like us, we are not even a nation as we natives are not united to put it simply) were not engaged in free trade in their countries formative years. They all, with no exceptions, engaged in PROTECTIONISM for decades, centuries. England, USA, Japan, South Korea, Taiwan, mainland China, etc.

For strong economies or advanced/developed countries that produce a lot of products, i.e. agricultural, industrial, consumer, etc.. the IMF/WB-sponsored WTO Agreements aka "Globalization" (almost absolute free trade) impose rules to all country-signatories that facilitate import/export trades by enforcing the removal of practically ALL protective trade barriers. i.e. tariffs, regulations, etc.

Capital/money/financial flows or transactions among them are simplified; where before they took days or weeks, etc. now with IT, just a touch on the keyboard, so to speak.

And it's not all about economics. People movement is also facilitated, open borders for work, visits, etc. So multiculturalism, multimedia, etc. became the fads and constant features. Anyway, those are the "good" sides/effects. IF you have a lot to offer for trading. Of course, advanced countries dominate, in particular the USA: economically, culturally, politically and militarily.

These NAFTA and TPP are just two (regional) agreements. In fact, NAFTA as a beginning regional agreement on our side in the Americas (and much earlier EEC then for Western Europe) were precedents to what became the WTO-imposed trade agreements or simply "globalization" in 1995. Now, it seems regional and/or bilateral agreements in lieu of WTO/Globalization are coming back given the growing worldwide "discontents" about the latter.

For poor countries like our homeland which was one of the early signatories to the WTO Agreements, with no established, significant/strong industrial and/or agricultural bases, it is like committing national suicide: economically, culturally, technologically, etc. The inherent weaknesses killed all our nascent industries, factory closures, mass layoffs, and our agriculture/farmlands that displaced farm workers, jobless and further driven to poverty, etc. (except corporate farming for export cash crops--domestic/foreign-owned) due to uncontrolled imports of all kinds, cheaper ones, questionable product qualities mostly from mainland China. I can go on and on.

Ergo, the further impoverishment of our native majority. Throw in the uncontrolled loss of our patrimony/natural resources, gold, silver and other minerals. etc. to foreigners alone or in joint-partnership with our few, rich Spanish/Chinese mestizo oligarchs/taipans. Our gains in labor exports! Do we all want to leave our homeland? Of course, a few native Filipinos profit from globalization via their small export businesses.

My take as a native Filipino is that we should have NOT joined WTO, as our country was economically very weak underdeveloped in 1995 when WTO was founded; when the Fidel Ramos regime was in power. But Fidel, Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo  Penoy Aquino, Duterte and much of our business leaders and us so-called educated have been schooled in the American capitalist/free-market economy; which continue to do so in our present educational system.

Under free trade, to repeat: you win if you are strong. If weak, you become weaker. Furthermore, we native Filipinos are NOT nationalistic. We do not seem to understand even the term. We have a colonial mentality that favors foreign products, primarily American as we have been conditioned to; per the 50-year US colonial rule which imposed free-trade between the Philippines and the USA and perpetuated even after "granting" of independence in 1946. via "Bell Trade Act/Parity Right." We native Filipinos and our homeland as poster boys for "neocolonialism" - colonialism without colonial administration and absence of colonial troops, but still a colony in practical reality and cheaper for the former colonizing power (USA)..

Ergo, no long-lasting industrial, capital goods manufacturing; except for a few consumer product-goods, were established and big agricultural lands 25-years leased at P1 per hectare (Del Monte, etc.) for cash agro products like banana, pineapple, etc. were granted. Talk of "Parity Rights." as a precondition to "granting" of Philippine independence in 1946. Sort of political independence, not economic independence. Without the latter, you really do not have the former.

During my graduate school at UP Diliman, I never came across the German economist Friedrich List, who championed protectionism for weak countries. Interesting, I have talked with the few business and economic students here and in Europe and NOBODY knows about List! Even business and economic books do not mention him. I have a book titled "New Ideas from Dead Economists" and he is not even mentioned. Check it out in Eco textbooks. Makes me wonder at times, but we live in a predominantly capitalist world; more aptly now, corporate capitalism (not the small capitalist of Adam Smith or up to the vanished 1970s modern corporations. Sorry, I think I am got too long..

********

”We gave the Philippines political freedom to enter the world family of nations, but did we give them internal political liberty? More important still, did we grant them economic freedom?” – Harold L. Ickes, longest tenured U.S. Secretary of the Interior (1933-1946)


"...the freedom America gave us in 1946 was freedom in a straitjacket." - Hernando J. Abaya, author of "Betrayal in the Philippines" (1946); “The Untold Philippine Story" (1967), and “Looking Back in Anger” (1992).

*************************


See also: https://www.democracynow.org/2009/3/10/economist_ha_joon_chang_on_the

Economist Ha-Joon Chang on "The Myth of Free Trade and the Secret History of Capitalism"
(video)
*************************






Monday, April 16, 2012

IS EDUCATION ENOUGH? - for Philippine Progress, more specifically for the Native (Indio/Malay) Filipino



"The recent quantum leap in the ability of transnational corporations to relocate their facilities around the world in effect makes all workers, communities, and countries competitors for these corporations' favor. The consequence is a "race to the bottom" in which wages and social conditions tend to fall to the level of the most desperate." - Jeremy Brecher, historian, and author




*****************************************

NOTES TO READERS:  

1. Colored and/or underlined words are HTML links. Click on them to see the linked posts/articles. PLEASE SHARE: Forwarding this and other posts to relatives and friends, especially those in the homeland, is greatly appreciated. To share, use all social media tools: email, blog, Google+, Tumblr, Twitter, Facebook, Instagram, WhatsApp, etc. THANKS!!
2. Click the following underlined title/link to checkout these Essential/Primary Readings About Us Filipino Natives:
3. Instantly translate to any of 71 foreign languages. Go to the sidebar on the right to choose your language. Fellow native Filipinos translation in Cebuano and Tagalog.
4. The postings are oftentimes long and a few readers have claimed being "burnt out."  My apologies...The selected topics are not for entertainment but to stimulate deep, serious thoughts per my MISSION Statement and hopefully to rock our boat of ignorance, apathy, complacency, and hopefully lead to active citizenship.
*************************



LET US NOT KEEP OUR HEADS IN THE SAND
REMINDER: March 3, 2022. The total number of postings to date =578. Use keywords in the sidebar: PAST POSTINGS, Click LABEL (sorted by the number of related posts) to access.
CACIQUE DEMOCRACY. DEJA VU.
WE NATIVE FILIPINOS LEFT BEHIND IN ASIA.
***
From the time of our Katipunan revolutionaries fought and died against the Spanish rule, and against American interference and colonization then, our society has been administered by a "cacique, " the socio-economic elite in cahoots with foreigners against their fellow native Filipino majority, kept them poor, illiterate, and thus ignorant.
A socioeconomic and political system designed to perpetuate a class-defined society, a class-conscious country, divided and never really becoming a nation.
We are schooled heavily about political democracy but do not know that economic democracy is a prerequisite to fully realizing it. We have been conditioned to believe that mere and regular election makes a democracy; an illusion in reality.
We native Filipinos keep ourselves ignorant of history, of “what’s really going on” in our homeland then and now; and thus, by default, never learn.
We continue to be lost -having failed or refused to look in the mirror- believing in fate rather than about us people causing the cliche “history keeps repeating itself” true and valid.
That is why it's Deja vu every time.
- BMD🤔
#primaryposts ****************************************


Hi All,
We native Filipinos have often heard, been told, or conditioned to believe that education will bring individual and consequently national progress. This is part of conventional wisdom. So our parents, many with so much sacrifice to themselves, struggle up to their golden years, just to see us through school.
I still believe, as many fellow native Filipinos do, in education as a possible solution to the long-term improvement and common good of the Filipino masses; but for me, that kind of  education would

  1. teach a vocation or profession as preparation for a decent livelihood together with
  2. developing critical thinking. to understand, decide and act to improve our society's realities.
More specifically, to acquire the critical ability to identify/differentiate the symptoms versus the roots of the daily personal misery and/or that of his milieu. I think our good schools have done a fairly good job on the first but gravely fail in the second.
Of course, such education, i.e. nationalist education in our globalized, corporate-controlled world,  will need to touch on the geopolitics of international economics: neocolonialism aka neoliberalism, the WTO, and global corporations (in terms of individual persons as investors versus corporate/transnational/institutional investors, etc.)
We still hear a lot of talk via advertisement, more aptly propaganda in the mass media about the "foreign investors," (as if we still have many individual foreign investors who can be so influential); let us realize that in a globalized economy the ordinary, individual investor is really a non-factor.
[  I find it a tired, worn-out claim that the national economy of our homeland Philippines was second only to Japan -- may be a far second at that till the 1960s. At the time, education- or literacy-wise, ours was 72% versus 54% for Taiwan (the first of the Asian"miracle" economies); our per capita income was almost double that for Taiwan at $200 vs.$122.
Despite our supposed higher educational level, since then the ”Taiwan Miracle” has accomplished one of the best economic growth performances in human history while our homeland did poorly; Taiwan's per capita grew ten times than ours ($18,000 vs. $1,800).
Apparently, there are more things than education that determine a country's economic growth performance and real progress - that which lift its common, native citizens. We can look at other so-called Asian tigers, which were behind us then and now all much ahead of our homeland/people: Singapore, Hong Kong, Malaysia, South Korea, Thailand, Indonesia, now throw in Vietnam and Cambodia soon ]
However, the prior questions that we need to address are:
  1. how do we implement that kind of education, how and who will finance it?
  2. Can we see that happening in present realities where the national leadership and our so-called technocrats have been/are corrupt and have only demonstrated selfish and subservient interests, and are so beholden to foreigners?
Can we see that occurring when our educational system was/is designed to follow the International Monetary Fund/World Bank (IMF/WB) "recommendations" as preconditions to continuing loans; and we know these supposedly neutral and benevolent international institutions are prophets of economic and cultural globalization, under different guises/terms like free trade or free market; but applied to us in particular and which we did not and still do not realize is equal to neocolonialism/neoimperialism) -- and which in turn doomed our national economy and our past, present, and foreseeable future.
I frankly do not see such an enlightened education being realized in our homeland without a strong motivation from a leadership, supported by a nationalistic populace, that would push for a nationalistic educational program.
Here again, the prior issue asks how can we have a nationalist leadership and a nationalistic majority? Not from the recent, present, and foreseeable governments and institutions. But it really has to start somewhere, somehow.
It is discouraging indeed. I feel and think that we native Filipinos seem to have significantly lost nationalism among the younger generations since the Marcos Dictatorship, but we just have to continue fighting for Filipino nationalism (that's what I try to do and rant about in my own little way).
Else, a nation of decolonized Filipinos will not come to reality. And the Filipino will perpetually be characterized by his damaged culture and continue living his life of selfish individualism, which he at best unknowingly/unconsciously inherited from his culture and reinforced by the historical neglect from his government; with no sense of national community (Filipino nationalism) beyond his circle of family and friends. A country not really his own since it is and will not be under his control.
A pretty bleak present and bleaker future for a country of mostly good native people that only a thinking native Filipino can appreciate and sadly long for, especially when he looks at his homeland from afar --in foreign soil.
While many, if not most, of us so-called educated native Filipinos, go along our merry ways; since we and our family are OK, to hell with the rest.
- Bert
**********************************

I recommended the following videos and book.






NOAM CHOMSKY

Ha-Joon Chang, Faculty of Economics, Cambridge University





****************************************END OF POST**********************************



PLEASE DONATE CORE/FUNDAMENTAL SUBJECT BOOKS TO OUR HOMELAND (i.e. your hometown public schools, Alma Mater, etc.). Those books that you and/or your children do not need or want; or buy books from your local library during its cheap Book Sales. Also, cargo/door-to-door shipment is best.  It is a small sacrifice.  [clean up your closets or garage - donate books.THANKS!]






"Those who profess to favor freedom
and yet deprecate agitation
are men who want crops without
plowing up the ground;
they want rain without thunder and
lightning.
They want the ocean without
the awful roar of its waters.
This struggle may be a moral one
or it may be a physical one
or it may be both moral and physical
but it must be a struggle.
Power concedes nothing without a
demand
It never did, and never will."

– Frederick Douglass
, American Abolitionist, Lecturer, Author and Slave, 1817-1895



Friday, July 01, 2011

What Native Filipinos Learn and Do Not Learn About Economics in schools/universities





“There is no literate population in the world that is poor; there is no illiterate population that is anything but poor.” – John Kenneth Galbraith (1908-2006)
“One of the major errors in the whole discussion of economic development has been the tendency to look at the United States or Canada and say that this has worked here, and therefore it must work in the poor countries.” – John Kenneth Galbraith (1908-2006)
*******************************************
Hi All,
Any seriously thinking and concerned Filipino will note that the dominant orthodoxy is globalization aka neoliberalism supposedly for us to economically catch-up , to attain economic/material progress --for an underdeveloped country like ours. Any young Filipino who takes a course in political economy/economic development essentially obtains exposure solely in the gospels of Adam Smith and David Ricardo, i.e. the "market system" with its"invisible hand," and "comparative advantage," respectively.
Throw in the anti-communist manifesto of Walt W. Rostow with his ideas to reach "economic take-off" as described in his very simplistic accounting of economic history "Stages of Economic Growth" -- They comprise the capitalist economic dogma that is constantly preached as THE only way to progress for less-developed countries (LDC) or underdeveloped countries like our homeland to escape poverty, to making economic miracles, to better standard of living.  
We native Filipinos as students or practitioners of economics vaguely knew or never heard of Friedrich List , the German nationalist/economist who welcomed the Industrial Revolution and its socio-political and economic consequences but rejected the dominant economic free trade theory that had developed in the West to explain and legitimize the new order.
List saw the benefits accruing from free trade, but also was aware of the gains derived from protection; the protection practiced for decades to reach world dominance by then Great Britain. France and Holland.
Karl Marx, who saw nationalism as a bourgeois ideology, later mercilessly criticized List's theory as reactionary. Apparently, Marx never appreciated that a national bourgeoisie, which fought for capitalism in a backward country still dominated by feudalism might be progressive  Marx dismissed as reactionary to develop an economic theory that reflected the national needs of less developed countries (Germany at the time of List and him) in their transition to capitalism and in their opposition to advanced capitalist countries.
[ We native Filipinos are still dominated for the most part by feudalism, i.e. landed aristocracy/oligarchy, provincial warlords, political clans, bossism, gangster-politicians, etc. and reflected in our socioeconomic and political realities of poverty, coercion and/or insecurity.]


I add that Germany and the United States pursued and practiced what List advocated; of course, the United States upon attaining world power status at the start of the 20th century, never mentioned List as decidedly instrumental to its economic success and present economic dominance (check out the textbooks);  Japan and now mainland "Communist" China practiced /still practice at varying degrees what List theorized.
The knowledgeable Filipino knows that our technocrats were early signatories to the secretive agreements/negotiations with the WTO and its trading rules (replacing the GATT)--the organization created in 1995 by the rich countries led by the G7 club and enforced by the IMF and WB combo ostensibly founded to help the poor countries towards development. With the signing, our national economy and patrimony were opened to foreigners, multinationals (without/without native partners and local, resident aliens), our nascent nationalist entrepreneurs/industrialists either discouraged or decimated.
With those native capitalists "left standing" forced to leave productive industries and concentrate on rent-capitalism and other risk-averse ventures; and thus overall the outcome for the next 14 years hence to the present are and foreseeable future shall be full of the same punishments:deeper, greater and wider impoverishment to our majority, of fellow native Filipinos.
It is safe to say that all of our rulers in government, educational institutions,  so-called business leaders and military have knowingly/unknowingly followed and continually perpetuate the belief in absolute, unregulated capitalist economy (not the mixed economy we had prior to the Marcos Dictatorship) which led the native majority to economic perdition and consequent socio-political and overall cultural malaise (as economics greatly influence our human behavior).
Notice that the current socioeconomic-political upheavals in the so-called advanced or developed world, though on a higher plane, are now experiencing what we natives in the poor, underdeveloped and regressing Philippine homeland went and are still going through, all thanks to economic globalization. In hindsight, what Vladimir Ilich Lenin predicted in his book "Imperialism - the Highest Stage of Capitalism" seems to be materializing; if not already have materialized/realized.
All these punishments will be endlessly worsening for the born and unborn native Filipino generations. Unless native Filipinos in the homeland become educated, raise their nationalist consciousness, understand and become united to act against our technocrats and rulers with their foreign partners/sponsors ( resident foreigners and transnational corporations (TNCs) who maintain and spread lies and who obviously have much to gain from our dumbing down and resultant massive ignorance and disunity.
Below is an eye-opening article, a recent find including its highly regarded and influential Korean author Ha-Joon Chang, Professor and Director (specializing in) of Developmental Economics at the University of Cambridge (England). I have just started reading his works and have found his factually-based analytical publications highly recommendable to those who seriously want to learn and understand the truth about economic history in the Western world and the Asian economic miracles of recent decades and compare where our homeland and our people are after religiously following and doing what our so-called westernized, essentially Americanized, minds dictated.
- Bert
*********************************

Kicking Away The LadderHow the Economic and Intellectual Histories of Capitalism Have Been Re-Written to Justify Neo-Liberal Capitalism - Ha-Joon Chang (Cambridge University, UK)

There is currently great pressure on developing countries to adopt a set of “good policies” and “good institutions” – such as liberalisation of trade and investment and strong patent law – to foster their economic development. When some developing countries show reluctance in adopting them, the proponents of this recipe often find it difficult to understand these countries’ stupidity in not accepting such a tried and tested recipe for development.
After all, they argue, these are the policies and the institutions that the developed countries had used in the past in order to become rich.Their belief in their own recommendation is so absolute that in their view it has to be imposed on the developing countries through strong bilateral and multilateral external pressures, even when these countries don’t want them.
Naturally, there have been heated debates on whether these recommended policies and institutions are appropriate for developing countries. However, curiously, even many of those who are skeptical of the applicability of these policies and institutions to the developing countries take it for granted that these were the policies and the institutions that were used by the developed countries when they themselves were developing countries.
Contrary to the conventional wisdom, the historical fact is that the rich countries did not develop on the basis of the policies and the institutions that they now recommend to, and often force upon, the developing countries. Unfortunately, this fact is little known these days because the “official historians” of capitalism have been very successful in re-writing its history.  
Almost all of today’s rich countries used tariff protection and subsidies to develop their industries. Interestingly, Britain and the USA, the two countries that are supposed to have reached the summit of the world economy through their free-market, free-trade policy, are actually the ones that had most aggressively used protection and subsidies.
Contrary to the popular myth, Britain had been an aggressive user, and in certain areas a pioneer, of activist policies intended to promote its industries. Such policies, although limited in scope, date back from the 14th century (Edward III) and the 15th century (Henry VII) in relation to woolen manufacturing, the leading industry of the time. England then was an exporter of raw wool to the Low Countries, and Henry VII for example tried to change this by taxing raw wool exports and poaching skilled workers from the Low Countries.
Particularly between the trade policy reform of its first Prime Minister Robert Walpole in 1721 and its adoption of free trade around 1860, Britain used very dirigiste trade and industrial policies, involving measures very similar to what countries like Japan and Korea later used in order to develop their industries.
During this period, it protected its industries a lot more heavily than did France, the supposed dirigiste counterpoint to its free-trade, free-market system. Given this history, argued Friedrich List, the leading German economist of the mid-19th century, Britain preaching free trade to less advanced countries like Germany and the USA was like someone trying to “kick away the ladder” with which he had climbed to the top.
List was not alone in seeing the matter in this light. Many American thinkers shared this view. Indeed, it was American thinkers like Alexander Hamilton, the first Treasury Secretary of the USA, and the (now-forgotten) economist Daniel Raymond, who first systematically developed the "infant industry" argument.
Indeed, List, who is commonly known as the father of the infant industry argument, in fact started out as a free-trader (he was an ardent supporter of German customs union – Zollverein) and learnt about this argument during his exile in the USA during the 1820s
Little known today, the intellectual interaction between the USA and Germany during the 19th century did not end there. The German Historical School – represented by people like Wilhelm Roscher, Bruno Hildebrand, Karl Knies, Gustav Schmoller, and Werner Sombart – attracted a lot of American economists in the late 19th century.
The patron saint of American Neoclassical economics, John Bates Clark, in whose name the most prestigious award for young (under 40) American economists is given today, went to Germany in 1873 and studied the German Historical School under Roscher and Knies, although he gradually drifted away from it.
Richard Ely, one of the leading American economists of the time, also studied under Knies and influenced the American Institutionalist School through his disciple, John Commons. Ely was one of the founding fathers of the American Economic Association; to this day, the biggest public lecture at the Association’s annual meeting is given in Ely’s name, although few of the present AEA members would know who he was.
Between the Civil War and the Second World War, the U.S.A. was literally the most heavily protected economy in the world. In this context, it is important to note that the American Civil War was fought on the issue of tariff as much as, if not more, on the issue of slavery. Of the two major issues that divided the North and the South, the South had actually more to fear on the tariff front than on the slavery front.
Abraham Lincoln was a well-known protectionist who cut his political teeth under the charismatic politician Henry Clay in the Whig Party, which advocated the “American System”  based on infrastructural development and protectionism (thus named on recognition that free trade is for the British interest).
One of Lincoln’s top economic advisors was the famous protectionist economist, Henry Carey, who once was described as “the only American economist of importance” by Marx and Engels in the early 1850s but has now been almost completely airbrushed out of the history of American economic thought.
On the other hand, Lincoln thought that African Americans were racially inferior and that slave emancipation was an idealistic proposal with no prospect of immediate implementation – he is said to have emancipated the slaves in 1862 as a strategic move to win the War rather than out of some moral conviction.
In protecting their industries, the Americans were going against the advice of such prominent economists as Adam Smith and Jean Baptiste Say, who saw the country’s future in agriculture. However, the Americans knew exactly what the game was. They knew that Britain reached the top through protection and subsidies and therefore that they needed to do the same if they were going to get anywhere.
Criticising the British preaching of free trade to his country,Ulysses Grant, the Civil War hero and the US President between 1868-1876, retorted that “within 200 years, when America has gotten out of protection all that it can offer, it too will adopt free trade”.
When his country later reached the top after the Second World War, it too started “kicking away the ladder” by preaching and forcing free trade to the less developed countries.
The UK and the USA may be the more dramatic examples, but almost all the rest of the developed world today used tariffs, subsidies and other means to promote their industries in the earlier stages of their development. Cases like Germany, Japan, and Korea are well known in this respect.
But even Sweden, which later came to represent the “small open economy” to many economists had also strategically used tariffs, subsidies, cartels, and state support for R&D to develop key industries, especially textile, steel, and engineering.
There were some exceptions like the Netherlands and Switzerland that have maintained free trade since the late 18th century. However,these were countries that were already on the frontier of technological development by the 18th centuries and therefore did not need much protection. Also, it should be noted that the Netherlands deployed an impressive range of interventionist measures up till the 17th century in order to build up its maritime and commercial supremacy.
Moreover, Switzerland did not have a patent law until 1907, flying directly against the emphasis that today’s orthodoxy puts on the protection of intellectual property rights (see below). More interestingly, the Netherlands abolished its 1817 patent law in 1869 on the ground that patents are politically-created monopolies inconsistent with its free-market principles – a position that seems to elude most of today’s free-market economists – and did not introduce another patent law until 1912.
The story is similar in relation to institutional development. In the earlier stages of their development, today’s developed countries did not even have such “basic” institutions as professional civil service, central bank, and patent law. It was only after the Pendleton Act in 1883 that the US federal government started recruiting its employees through a competitive process.
The central bank, an institution dear to the heart of today’s free-market economists, did not exist in most of today’s rich countries until the early 20th century – not least because the free-market economists of the day condemned it as a mechanism for unjustly bailing out imprudent borrowers. The US central bank (the Federal Reserve Board) was set up only in 1913 and the Italian central bank did not even have a note issue monopoly until 1926.
Many countries allowed patenting of foreign invention until the late 19th century. As I mentioned above, Switzerland and the Netherlands refused to introduce a patent law despite international pressure until 1907 and 1912 respectively, thus freely “stole” technologies from abroad. The examples can go on.
One important conclusion that emerges from the history of institutional development is that it took the developed countries a long time to develop institutions in their earlier days of development. Institutions typically took decades, and sometimes generations, to develop. Just to give one example, the need for central banking was perceived at least in some circles from at least the 17th century, but the first “real” central bank, the Bank of England, was instituted only in 1844, some two centuries later.
Another important point emerges is that the levels of institutional development in today’s developed countries in the earlier period were much lower than those in today’s developing countries. For example, measured by the (admittedly highly imperfect) income level, in 1820, the UK was at a somewhat higher level of development than that of India today, but it did not even have many of the most “basic” institutions that India has today.
It did not have universal suffrage (it did not even have universal male suffrage), a central bank, income tax, generalised limited liability, a generalised bankruptcy law, a professional bureaucracy, meaningful securities regulations, and even minimal labour regulations (except for a couple of minimal and hardly-enforced regulations on child labour).
If the policies and institutions that the rich countries are recommending to the poor countries are not the ones that they themselves used when they were developing, what is going on?
We can only conclude that the rich countries are trying to kick away the ladder that allowed them to climb where they are. It is no coincidence that economic development has become more difficult during the last two decades when the developed countries started turning on the pressure on the developing countries to adopt the so-called “global standard” policies and institutions.
During this period, the average annual per capita income growth rate for the developing countries has been halved from 3% in the previous two decades (1960-80) to 1.5%. In particular, Latin America virtually stopped growing, while Sub-Saharan Africa and most ex-Communist countries have experienced a fall in absolute income.
Economic instability has increased markedly, as manifested in the dozens of financial crises we have witnessed over the last decade alone. Income inequality has been growing in many developing countries and poverty has increased, rather than decreased, in a significant number of them.


What can be done to change this?
First, the historical facts about the historical experiences of the developed countries should be more widely publicized. This is not just a matter of“getting history right”, but also of allowing the developing countries to make more informed choices.
Second, the conditions attached to bilateral and multilateral financial assistance to developing countries should be radically changed. It should be accepted that the orthodox recipe is not working, and also that there can be no “best practice” policies that everyone should use.
Third, the WTO rules should be re-written so that the developing countries can more actively use tariffs and subsidies for industrial development. They should also be allowed to have less stringent patent laws and other intellectual property rights laws.
Fourth, improvements in institutions should be encouraged, but this should not be equated with imposing a fixed set of (in practice, today’s – not even yesterday’s – Anglo-American) institutions on all countries.
Special care has to be taken in order not to demand excessively rapid upgrading of institutions by the developing countries, especially given that they already have quite developed institutions when compared to today’s developed countries at comparable stages of development, and given that establishing and running new institutions is costly.
By being allowed to adopt policies and institutions that are more suitable to their conditions, the developing countries will be able to develop faster. This will also benefit the developed countries in the long run, as it will increase their trade and investment opportunities. That the developed countries cannot see this is the tragedy of our time.
Ha-Joon Chang (hjc1001@econ.cam.ac.uk) teaches in the Faculty of Economics, University of Cambridge. This article is based on his new book, Kicking Away the Ladder – Development Strategy in Historical Perspective, which was published by Anthem Press, London, on 10 June 2002.
SUGGESTED CITATION:

Ha-Joon Chang, “Kicking Away the Ladder”,
post-autistic economics review, issue no. 15, September 4, 2002, article 3.




4 comments:



Anonymous said...
Bert, thank you for the info. It is a confirmation of my own observations and studies on the local scene, and limited [I have to be honest] international scene. I say again, globalization is a racket of the rich and developed countries that have apparently been running out of markets since Japan started its "high quality" war in the late seventies and early eighties against its competitors. Japan master-fully turned its competitors' free trade policies against them. The bombardment was followed by neighboring Asian countries that have learned the tricks. In the current decade China has become the free trade practitioners' nemesis. What I suspect, if only a learned researcher would do his thing well, the past global financial difficulties were all "free trade" and "decreasing market" related. I have this sneaky suspicion that the capitalists are running out of market space and making up excuses and desperate measures to correct themselves, but unfortunately to no avail. I have been seeing signs of it, but since my world market, manufacturing and economics histories are very much wanting, I could not really put my finger on it. Call it coming from the sixth sense, I feel it in the very marrows of my bones. In the advent of super quick info gathering and advanced individual researches, knowledge to make new things and "doing or making the better way" have destroyed the Western monopoly on competitive manufacturing and even creative marketing. Indeed knowledge is power. When everyone gets to know how to make things and able to market them, competition which is the operative mechanism of the market. will decrease or eventually stop, and as a consequence so will the market. No competition, no business activity, no market, no more capitalism. Monopolies may be an exception but they don't work in the truly free market these days where everyone can claim to have the knowledge to compete and be a competitor. :But capitalism must survive by all means" agree all the G-7 countries and the 20 most advanced economies who recently met to decide on how best to "protect themselves" under the present financial crisis. Vatican can't help but side with the capitalists because it has a long time ago endorsed capitalism as the best way to advance toward the better life [not necessarily the good life]. Tiny Philippines must chart its own course. But how to do it when it cannot think independently; when all it does is "slave-follow" the dictates of its capitalist masters? To do it is to be truly "knowledgeable;" know as much [more is desirable] than the capitalist masters. That is the only way. We cannot get away from the dictum "knowledge is power." Knowledge will lead to true independence, justice, peace and development that our slaved-country desperately needs. Bert, I need to confer upon you, a medal of recognition :), for taking the pains to give us info that will make us truly knowledgeable so that one day soon we may be empowered, proudly independent, and able to chart our future exactly in the direction where destiny and God want us to go. Thanks again, Bert. Respectfully yours, Ogie
hvrds said...
Imperialism continues simply by the political capture of weak states strategic institutions that regulate finance, trade and so called national currencies. The Filipino is still a very superficial and artificial cultural construct who does not have a soul for country.
Bert M. Drona said...
HVRDS, Thank you for your comment. I agree with you that by capturing the Filipino minds that work, operate and control the various institutions in our homeland. Neoimperialism [aka neoclassical liberalism aka globalism]has profited extremely well for the foreign transnationals (TNCs -who in turn essentially now control/use their governments) and their native, partners. Protectionism is a government/official policy designed to protect native, infant industries, native businesses until they flourish and face the world so to speak. It can be used whether one is following communist, socialist, capitalist or mixed economy. The bottom raison d'etre is to develop a strong national agriculture and industry before anything else. And the strongest motivation and action for such would be a strong Filipino nationalism.
Bert M. Drona said...
Ogie, Our homeland has enough bright and entrepreneurial minds but our government has historically been/is inhabited and controlled by collaborators who serve foreign interests, including economic interests. We have lost so much time and opportunities that it is extremely difficult to "catch up." But it is attainable if we could make changes in our mindset towards nationalism; to have a resurgence of nationalism among our native majority which would pressure our rulers to work and have the balls to implement necessary radical changes for the common good. In economic matters, it means nationalist industrialization and agriculture to serve the domestic demand, it means to strongly and firmly renegotiate our foreign debt, including those that are essentially odious debts. It means to be ready to fight and sacrifice for the sake of the future generations of Filipinos. With mass nationalism, foreign intervention will not prevail. Bert



****************************************END OF POST**********************************



The below link will show a short list of my past posts (out of 540 posts so far) which I consider as basic topics about us native (indio)/ Malay Filipinos. This link/listing, which may later expand, will always be presented at the bottom of each future post.  Just point-and-click at each listed item to open and read.

Thank you for reading and sharing with others, especially those in our homeland.


- Bert


PLEASE POINT & CLICK THIS LINK:  

http://www.thefilipinomind.com/2013/08/primary-postsreadings-for-my-fellow.html



***********************************************************
PLEASE DONATE CORE/FUNDAMENTAL SUBJECT BOOKS TO OUR HOMELAND (i.e. your hometown public schools, Alma Mater, etc.). Those books that you and/or your children do not need or want; or buy books from your local library during its cheap Book Sales. Also, cargo/door-to-door shipment is best.  It is a small sacrifice.  [clean up your closets or garage - donate books.THANKS!]

***********************************************************


THE FILIPINO MIND blog contains 542 published postings you can view, as of April 18, 2012. Go to the sidebar to search Past & Related Postings, click LABEL [number in parenthesis = total of related postings]; or use the GOOGLE SEARCH at the sidebar using key words [labels, or tags] for topics of interest to you. OR click a bottom label or tag to open related topics.



The postings are oftentimes long and a few readers have claimed being "burnt out."  My apologies. As the selected topics are not for entertainment but to stimulate deep thought (see MISSION Statement) and hopefully to rock the boat of complacency (re MISSION).



(1) Bold/Underlined words are HTML links. Click to see linked posts or articles.



(2) Scroll down to end of post to read or enter Comments. Any comment sent to my personal email will be posted here.
ANONYMOUS COMMENTS WILL BE IGNORED.



(3).Visit my other website SCRIBD/TheFilipinoMind; or type it on GOOGLE Search. View/Free Download pdf versions of: postings, eBooks, articles (120 and growing). Or another way to access, go to the sidebar of the THE FILIPINO MIND website and click on SCRIBD. PLEASE Share!
Statistics for my associated website:SCRIBD/theFilipinoMind :
119 FREE AND DOWNLOADABLE documents
148,510 reads
2,750 downloads



(4). Some postings and other relevant events are now featured in Google+, BMD_Facebook, BMD_Twitter and BMD_Google Buzz.



(5) Translate to your own language. Go to the sidebar and Click on GOOGLE TRANSLATOR (56 languages - copy and paste sentences, paragraphs and whole articles, Google translates a whole posting in seconds, including to Filipino!!).
(6).  From suggestions by readers, I have added some contemporary music to provide a break. Check out bottom of posting to play Sarah Brightman, Andrea Bocelli, Sting, Chris Botti, Josh Groban, etc.


(7) Songs on Filipino nationalism: please reflect on the lyrics (messages) as well as the beautiful renditions. Other Filipino Music links at blog sidebar.  Click each to play.:
(8) Forwarding the postings to relatives and friends, ESPECIALLY in the homeland, is greatly appreciated. Use emails, Twitter, Google+, Facebook, etc. below. THANKS!!




"Those who profess to favor freedom
and yet deprecate agitation
are men who want crops without
plowing up the ground;
they want rain without thunder and
lightning.
They want the ocean without the
awful roar of its waters.
This struggle may be a moral one
or it may be a physical one
or it may be both moral and physical
but it must be a struggle.
Power concedes nothing without a
demand
It never did, and never will."

– Frederick Douglass
, American Abolitionist, Lecturer, Author and Slave, 1817-1895



Share/Bookmark


4 comments:


Anonymous said...
Bert, thank you for the info. It is a confirmation of my own observations and studies on the local scene, and limited [I have to be honest] international scene. I say again, globalization is a racket of the rich and developed countries that have apparently been running out of markets since Japan started its "high quality" war in the late seventies and early eighties against its competitors. Japan master-fully turned its competitors' free trade policies against them. The bombardment was followed by neighboring Asian countries that have learned the tricks. In the current decade China has become the free trade practitioners' nemesis. What I suspect, if only a learned researcher would do his thing well, the past global financial difficulties were all "free trade" and "decreasing market" related. I have this sneaky suspicion that the capitalists are running out of market space and making up excuses and desperate measures to correct themselves, but unfortunately to no avail. I have been seeing signs of it, but since my world market, manufacturing and economics histories are very much wanting, I could not really put my finger on it. Call it coming from the sixth sense, I feel it in the very marrows of my bones. In the advent of super quick info gathering and advanced individual researches, knowledge to make new things and "doing or making the better way" have destroyed the Western monopoly on competitive manufacturing and even creative marketing. Indeed knowledge is power. When everyone gets to know how to make things and able to market them, competition which is the operative mechanism of the market. will decrease or eventually stop, and as a consequence so will the market. No competition, no business activity, no market, no more capitalism. Monopolies may be an exception but they don't work in the truly free market these days where everyone can claim to have the knowledge to compete and be a competitor. :But capitalism must survive by all means" agree all the G-7 countries and the 20 most advanced economies who recently met to decide on how best to "protect themselves" under the present financial crisis. Vatican can't help but side with the capitalists because it has a long time ago endorsed capitalism as the best way to advance toward the better life [not necessarily the good life]. Tiny Philippines must chart its own course. But how to do it when it cannot think independently; when all it does is "slave-follow" the dictates of its capitalist masters? To do it is to be truly "knowledgeable;" know as much [more is desirable] than the capitalist masters. That is the only way. We cannot get away from the dictum "knowledge is power." Knowledge will lead to true independence, justice, peace and development that our slaved-country desperately needs. Bert, I need to confer upon you, a medal of recognition :), for taking the pains to give us info that will make us truly knowledgeable so that one day soon we may be empowered, proudly independent, and able to chart our future exactly in the direction where destiny and God want us to go. Thanks again, Bert. Respectfully yours, Ogie
hvrds said...
Imperialism continues simply by the political capture of weak states strategic institutions that regulate finance, trade and so called national currencies. The Filipino is still a very superficial and artificial cultural construct who does not have a soul for country.
Bert M. Drona said...
HVRDS, Thank you for your comment. I agree with you that by capturing the Filipino minds that work, operate and control the various institutions in our homeland. Neoimperialism [aka neoclassical liberalism aka globalism]has profited extremely well for the foreign transnationals (TNCs -who in turn essentially now control/use their governments) and their native, partners. Protectionism is a government/official policy designed to protect native, infant industries, native businesses until they flourish and face the world so to speak. It can be used whether one is following communist, socialist, capitalist or mixed economy. The bottom raison d'etre is to develop a strong national agriculture and industry before anything else. And the strongest motivation and action for such would be a strong Filipino nationalism.
Bert M. Drona said...
Ogie, Our homeland has enough bright and entrepreneurial minds but our government has historically been/is inhabited and controlled by collaborators who serve foreign interests, including economic interests. We have lost so much time and opportunities that it is extremely difficult to "catch up." But it is attainable if we could make changes in our mindset towards nationalism; to have a resurgence of nationalism among our native majority which would pressure our rulers to work and have the balls to implement necessary radical changes for the common good. In economic matters, it means nationalist industrialization and agriculture to serve the domestic demand, it means to strongly and firmly renegotiate our foreign debt, including those that are essentially odious debts. It means to be ready to fight and sacrifice for the sake of the future generations of Filipinos. With mass nationalism, foreign intervention will not prevail. Bert




***********************************************************
PLEASE DONATE CORE/FUNDAMENTAL SUBJECT BOOKS TO OUR HOMELAND (i.e. your hometown public schools, Alma Mater, etc.). Those books that you and/or your children do not need or want; or buy books from your local library during its cheap Book Sales. Also, cargo/door-to-door shipment is best.  It is a small sacrifice.  [clean up your closets or garage - donate books.THANKS!]
***********************************************************

I consider these earleir posts and the RECTO READER as essential in knowing and understanding our homeland and ourselves, native, Malay Filipinos; and are therefore always presented in each new post. Click each to open/read.
  1. WHAT WE FILIPINOS SHOULD KNOW:
  2. WHAT IS NATIONALISM [Filipino Nationalism]?
  3. Our Colonial Mentality and Its Roots 
  4. The Miseducation of the Filipino (Formation of our Americanized Mind)
  5. Jose Rizal - Reformist or Revolutionary?
  6. The Purpose of Our Past, Why Study (Our) History?
  7. Studying and Rethinking Our Philippine History
  8. Globalization (Neoliberalism) – The Road to Perdition in Our Homeland
  9. Resisting Globalization (WTO Agreements)
  10. Virtues of De-Globalization
  11. Our Filipino Kind of Religion
  12. Our Filipino Christianity and Our God-concept
  13. When Our Religion Becomes Evil
THE RECTO READER is presented in several postings. Click each to open/read:

NOTE: Recto's cited cases, examples or issues were of his time, of course; but realities in our homeland in the present and the foreseeable future are/expectedly much, much worse. Though I am tempted to update them with current issues, it's best to leave them as they are since Recto's paradigms about our much deepened national predicament still ring relevant, valid and true. In short, Recto saw the forest and never got lost in the trees.- Bert

  1. THE FILIPINO MIND blog contains 532 published postings you can view, as of December 12, 2012. 
  2. The postings are oftentimes long and a few readers have claimed being "burnt out."  My apologies. The selected topics are not for entertainment but to stimulate deep, serious thoughts per my MISSION Statement and hopefully to rock our boat of  ignorance, apathy, complacency and hopefully lead to active citizenship.
  3. All comments are welcomed for posting at the bottom window. Comments sent by email will also be posted verbatim. However, ANONYMOUS COMMENTS WILL BE IGNORED.
  4. Visit my other website, click --> SCRIBD/TheFilipinoMind, or the SCRIB FEED at the sidebar, or type it on GOOGLE Search to read or download ebooks and PDFs of essays I have uploaded.  Statistics for my associated website:SCRIBD/theFilipinoMind : ALL FREE AND DOWNLOADABLE: 123 documents, 207,458 reads
  5. Some postings and other relevant events are now featured in Google+BMD_FacebookBMD_Twitter and BMD_Google Buzz and Google+.
  6. Translate to your own language. Go to the sidebar and Click on GOOGLE TRANSLATOR (56 languages - copy and paste sentences, paragraphs and whole articles, Google translates a whole posting in seconds, including to Filipino!!).
  7. Forwarding the posts to relatives and friends, ESPECIALLY in the homeland, is greatly appreciated. Use emails, Twitter, Google+, Facebook, etc. THANK YOU !!!
  8. Songs on Filipino nationalism: please reflect on the lyrics (messages) as well as the beautiful renditions. Other Filipino Music links at blog sidebar.  Click each to play.: