{"title":"Contemporary Economic and Social Policy for Inclusive Growth","authors":"Nicola Nixon, C. Lee","doi":"10.2139/ssrn.3512769","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"Asia’s dramatic economic growth and technological progress mask daunting development challenges. Left unaddressed, these challenges jeopardize Asia’s gains and undermine its future prospects. Asia is at a critical economic, political, and social juncture, and the changes taking place will determine how the region develops into the future. \n \nDavid Arnold, President, The Asia Foundation, 2016 \n \nOver the past two decades, Asian societies saw abrupt changes in their political, social, and economic spheres. Rapid and sustained economic growth lifted hundreds of millions of people out of poverty. Well over half of Asia’s residents are now middle class and Asia is the engine of economic growth across the globe. This tremendous growth and its impact, however, are by no means uniform. The extent and type of change varied within and between countries, and many populations did not reap the same benefits as others. \n \nSignificant pockets of poverty still exist throughout the region. In fact, two-thirds of the world’s poor live in Asia. Recent data suggest that more than 800,000,000 Asians exist on less than USD 1.25 a day and 1,700,000,000 live on less than USD 2 (Kuroda, 2013). Life in Asia is especially challenging for populations living in the margins of ever expanding mega-cities, isolated rural areas, areas affected by conflict, and groups that are marginalized and excluded due to biased government systems and services or social prejudices. \n \nThe fast pace of political, social, and economic change in Asia is particularly striking and often presents additional challenges. Technology facilitates or accelerates many changes, often too quickly to fully understand their impact. For example, the economic sphere saw a reduction in the role of agriculture, rapid urbanization, greater industrialization, and, in some areas, growth in the service sector. Wage labor has become the most common form of employment in many Asian countries, yet regular wages often cannot provide basic needs. Other challenges continue to emerge. Asia faces demographic crises with lower birth rates and ageing populations. \n \nInequality is a critical issue globally, and, with high concentrations of wealth and power increasingly evident in Asia, inequality also takes center stage in the region. Today, profound inequalities in wealth, income, and welfare exist across Asia. Speaking to the Organisation for Cooperation and Development (OECD) in 2013 on Asia’s challenges, towards the end of his tenure as President of the Asian Development Bank, Haruhiko Kuroda characterized the challenge this way: \n \nIn many countries, the richest 1 percent of households account for close to 10 percent of total consumption and the top 5 percent account for more than 20 percent. The Gini coefficient, a measure of inequality, has increased in much of the region: taking developing Asia as a single unit, the Gini coefficient has increased from 39 to 46. And the gap is not only in income. Inequality of opportunity is prevalent and is a crucial factor in widening income inequality. For example, school-ae children from households in the poorest income quintile are up to five times more likely to be out of primary and secondary school than their peers in the richest quintile; infant mortality rates among the poorest households were 10 times higher than those among the affluent households; in South Asia, women’s [labor] force participation is only 40 percent that of men’s; and in Central and West Asia, girls’ primary and secondary school enrolment levels are 20 percent lower than those of boys. For developing Asia as a whole, 1.7 billion people (45 percent of the population) lack access to sanitation (Kuroda, 2013). \n \nAcross Asia, rising inequality negatively impacts many people’s opportunities, income-earning capacity, health, and well-being. In Capital in the Twenty-first Century, the French economist Thomas Piketty suggests that growing inequality between rich and poor is the normal state of affairs in market-based economic systems. Tracing trends back three centuries, Piketty argues that periods in which inequality decreases are the exception rather than the rule (2014). Piketty’s argument further complicates the idea of addressing the inequality challenges in Asia.(...)","PeriodicalId":302142,"journal":{"name":"KDI: Research Papers (Topic)","volume":"19 1","pages":"0"},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2019-11-30","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"KDI: Research Papers (Topic)","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.2139/ssrn.3512769","RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":null,"ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"","JCRName":"","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 0
Abstract
Asia’s dramatic economic growth and technological progress mask daunting development challenges. Left unaddressed, these challenges jeopardize Asia’s gains and undermine its future prospects. Asia is at a critical economic, political, and social juncture, and the changes taking place will determine how the region develops into the future.
David Arnold, President, The Asia Foundation, 2016
Over the past two decades, Asian societies saw abrupt changes in their political, social, and economic spheres. Rapid and sustained economic growth lifted hundreds of millions of people out of poverty. Well over half of Asia’s residents are now middle class and Asia is the engine of economic growth across the globe. This tremendous growth and its impact, however, are by no means uniform. The extent and type of change varied within and between countries, and many populations did not reap the same benefits as others.
Significant pockets of poverty still exist throughout the region. In fact, two-thirds of the world’s poor live in Asia. Recent data suggest that more than 800,000,000 Asians exist on less than USD 1.25 a day and 1,700,000,000 live on less than USD 2 (Kuroda, 2013). Life in Asia is especially challenging for populations living in the margins of ever expanding mega-cities, isolated rural areas, areas affected by conflict, and groups that are marginalized and excluded due to biased government systems and services or social prejudices.
The fast pace of political, social, and economic change in Asia is particularly striking and often presents additional challenges. Technology facilitates or accelerates many changes, often too quickly to fully understand their impact. For example, the economic sphere saw a reduction in the role of agriculture, rapid urbanization, greater industrialization, and, in some areas, growth in the service sector. Wage labor has become the most common form of employment in many Asian countries, yet regular wages often cannot provide basic needs. Other challenges continue to emerge. Asia faces demographic crises with lower birth rates and ageing populations.
Inequality is a critical issue globally, and, with high concentrations of wealth and power increasingly evident in Asia, inequality also takes center stage in the region. Today, profound inequalities in wealth, income, and welfare exist across Asia. Speaking to the Organisation for Cooperation and Development (OECD) in 2013 on Asia’s challenges, towards the end of his tenure as President of the Asian Development Bank, Haruhiko Kuroda characterized the challenge this way:
In many countries, the richest 1 percent of households account for close to 10 percent of total consumption and the top 5 percent account for more than 20 percent. The Gini coefficient, a measure of inequality, has increased in much of the region: taking developing Asia as a single unit, the Gini coefficient has increased from 39 to 46. And the gap is not only in income. Inequality of opportunity is prevalent and is a crucial factor in widening income inequality. For example, school-ae children from households in the poorest income quintile are up to five times more likely to be out of primary and secondary school than their peers in the richest quintile; infant mortality rates among the poorest households were 10 times higher than those among the affluent households; in South Asia, women’s [labor] force participation is only 40 percent that of men’s; and in Central and West Asia, girls’ primary and secondary school enrolment levels are 20 percent lower than those of boys. For developing Asia as a whole, 1.7 billion people (45 percent of the population) lack access to sanitation (Kuroda, 2013).
Across Asia, rising inequality negatively impacts many people’s opportunities, income-earning capacity, health, and well-being. In Capital in the Twenty-first Century, the French economist Thomas Piketty suggests that growing inequality between rich and poor is the normal state of affairs in market-based economic systems. Tracing trends back three centuries, Piketty argues that periods in which inequality decreases are the exception rather than the rule (2014). Piketty’s argument further complicates the idea of addressing the inequality challenges in Asia.(...)
亚洲迅猛的经济增长和技术进步掩盖了严峻的发展挑战。如果不加以解决,这些挑战将危及亚洲的发展,破坏亚洲的未来前景。亚洲正处于经济、政治和社会发展的关键时期,这些变化将决定亚洲未来的发展方向。过去二十年来,亚洲社会在政治、社会和经济领域发生了翻天覆地的变化。快速和持续的经济增长使数亿人摆脱了贫困。现在,超过一半的亚洲居民是中产阶级,亚洲是全球经济增长的引擎。然而,这种巨大的增长及其影响绝不是一致的。国家内部和国家之间变化的程度和类型各不相同,许多人口没有获得与其他人相同的利益。整个地区仍然存在大量的贫困地区。事实上,世界上三分之二的穷人生活在亚洲。最近的数据表明,超过8亿亚洲人每天的生活费不足1.25美元,17亿人每天的生活费不足2美元(Kuroda, 2013)。生活在不断扩大的大城市边缘地区、偏远的农村地区、受冲突影响的地区,以及由于有偏见的政府制度和服务或社会偏见而被边缘化和排斥的群体,亚洲的生活尤其具有挑战性。亚洲政治、社会和经济的快速变化尤其引人注目,而且常常带来额外的挑战。技术促进或加速了许多变化,往往太快而无法完全理解其影响。例如,在经济领域,农业的作用下降,城市化迅速发展,工业化程度提高,在某些地区,服务部门有所增长。在许多亚洲国家,雇佣劳动已成为最常见的就业形式,但常规工资往往无法满足基本需求。其他挑战还在继续出现。亚洲面临着低出生率和人口老龄化的人口危机。不平等是一个全球性的关键问题,随着财富和权力的高度集中在亚洲日益明显,不平等也成为该地区的中心问题。今天,亚洲各地在财富、收入和福利方面存在着严重的不平等。2013年,在亚洲开发银行(Asian Development Bank)行长任期即将结束之际,黑田东彦(Haruhiko Kuroda)向合作与发展组织(OECD)谈到亚洲面临的挑战时,他这样描述了这一挑战:在许多国家,最富有的1%家庭占总消费的近10%,最富有的5%家庭占总消费的20%以上。衡量不平等程度的基尼系数(Gini coefficient)在亚洲大部分地区都有所上升:将发展中亚洲作为一个整体,基尼系数已从39上升至46。这种差距不仅体现在收入上。机会不平等普遍存在,是收入不平等扩大的关键因素。例如,来自最贫穷五分之一家庭的学龄儿童的小学和中学失学率是来自最富裕五分之一家庭的同龄人的五倍;最贫穷家庭的婴儿死亡率比富裕家庭高10倍;在南亚,女性的劳动参与率仅为男性的40%;在中亚和西亚,女孩的小学和中学入学率比男孩低20%。对于整个亚洲发展中国家来说,17亿人(占人口的45%)缺乏卫生设施(Kuroda, 2013)。在整个亚洲,不平等加剧对许多人的机会、创收能力、健康和福祉产生了负面影响。法国经济学家托马斯•皮凯蒂(Thomas Piketty)在《21世纪资本论》(Capital In the Twenty-first Century)中指出,贫富差距日益扩大是市场经济体系中的常态。皮凯蒂追溯了三个世纪以来的趋势,认为不平等程度下降的时期是例外,而不是规律(2014年)。皮凯蒂的观点使解决亚洲不平等挑战的想法进一步复杂化。