ISI allowed government selected firms in government target industries to borrow foreign currency, and borrow domestic funds at rates beneficial to those firms. This was the beginning of importing advanced technologies only to improve, adapt, and reproduce them for export. EP gave firms access to low interest loans. The relations between the Korean firms and industries with the rest of the world broadened in EP. Efficiency grew, production went up and Korean saw exponential economic leaps in a few decades.
During the Vietnam War in the 1970s, U.S. troops withdrew from Vietnam. South Korea relied on the military presence of the U.S.A. As protection from North Korean. South Korean leadership decided to not rely on the U.S.A. For military presence and supplies because they could not. They decided to produce munitions domestically. This is another example of a factor contributing to Korea's rapid development and industrialization.
7. What is meant by Ha-Joon Chang's claim that the Korean financial crisis represented the revenge of the rentiers?
Ha-Joon Chang is a leading economists and his specialty is developing economics. He is South Korean, with a first hand experience of the reality of late industrialization and developing economics. His writings and body of professional experience make him a leader and expert.
Ha-Joon Chang's comment refers to the financial crisis that occurred in Asia in 1997. Some symptoms of the financial crisis included the decreased value of national currencies, decreased values in stocks, and exponential rise in the accumulation of private debts. Indonesia, South Korean, and Thailand were the Asian countries that were most heavily affected by the "Asian Financial Crisis." Large conglomerates at the mercy of the government, took on increasing amounts of capital investment leading to numerous debts, mergers, and takeovers.
Rentiers are individuals or organizations whose income comes from rents, such as rent from real estate. If we view this crisis from a historical perspective, we could say that this crisis was managed with the interests of domestic and foreign rentiers, whereas earlier financial crises were settled with the interest of management as a priority. Changes in regards to corporate governance, financial regulation, and industry policy went in favor to the rentiers. So when Ha-Joon Chang says the crisis is the revenge of the rentiers, he means that the rentiers got their revenge: loads of money and policy that favors them.
8. Using the readings and the movies provide a brief synopsis the genesis of the East Asian Financial Crisis.
The East Asian Financial Crisis is a monumental historical event in of itself as well as the consequences that resulted from it. The causes of the crisis are a point of contention in academic and in the press. There is a great spectrum of viewpoint of what began the crisis, what the solutions are, and precautions on how to prevent such a crisis from reoccurring not just in East Asia, but also in other parts of the world such as Eastern Europe and South America as well. Are the domestic economic policies of the affected countries to blame or is the crisis a natural by-product of the global financial system? There are no absolute answers.
In the first part of the crisis, countries such as Indonesia, the Philippines, Malaysia, and South Korea blamed their banks for the crisis. They blamed fixed exchange rates and increased real estate population. As the crisis persisted, the blame went to the global financial system. This crisis repeated in Latin American countries during the 1980s and to European countries in the 1990s. The value of currencies depreciated at alarming rates as well as the monumental increase in private debts. The assets tied up in short-term loans that no one could pay were also not worth very much as the value of the national currency was extremely low. These conditions caused economies to slow to almost a standstill. There came a general decrease in the value of most assets: loans, land, currency, etc. This crisis also resulted in the slowing of economic production and manufacture.
The crisis has affects felt both nationally and locally. Countries suffering from the crisis experience not only the aforementioned consequences, but also several others on a national scale. Individuals saw astronomical decreases in income. Many firms and companies were outright destroyed by the crisis. Many suffered from poverty, social dislocation, and low morale. Some contend that more transparency in the global financial system can considerably lower the probability of crises and resulting recessions such as the Asian Financial Crisis. Others contend reform in the global financial system is necessary; there should be less favoritism toward speculators and...
Further, while inequality may have increased, on average, within countries, inequality measured across all the people of the world, may actually be falling. Pritchett does not address this issue. In addition, Pritchett provides no explanation of why globalization is not rendering conditional occurrence a reality. This would have been useful for supporting the author's conclusion that divergent polices are needed to address the unique needs of specific countries. The most
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