What a difference a year makes.
A functioning ATM at Yangon International Airport; a reporter from
Myanmar International Television on prime time; a brand new KIA showroom
sparkling with chrome and glass; Italian gelato counters serving
raspberry and lime sorbet alongside a sumptuous buffet of Burmese
cuisine.
On Yangon’s streets, hundreds of new Toyota Land Cruisers and
Mitsubishi Pajeros have emerged as clear favorites – even an occasional
Porsche sweeps past.
These material symbols of Myanmar’s recent transformation indicate
rapid progress, but also pose reasons for concern. Growth this year is
projected at 6 percent, keeping pace with some of Myanmar’s Southeast Asian neighbors, and possibly overtaking others.
While these are welcome changes, runaway economic development
produces its own dilemmas: destruction of the environment, displacement
of communities, erosion of cultural bonds as creeping consumerism
replaces fellowship and camaraderie. Call it Myanmar’s Catch 22.
Eleven months ago when I arrived in Yangon, it was a week before the
elections and the city was abuzz with campaigning. Daw Aung San Suu Kyi
was hot on the campaign trail. Journalists arrived from every corner of
the globe to cover Myanmar’s long-overdue political resurrection. Eager
citizens awaited the day of reckoning, hoping that this time, the
disappointment of past elections would not come back to haunt them.
A year later, the process of political and economic liberalization
shows no signs of abating. If anything, the pace and quality of reforms
that would hastily reverse Myanmar’s long isolation has surprised the
international community.
Jin-Yong Cai, executive vice-president and CEO of the International Finance Corporation, the World Bank’s private sector arm, recently told the Wall Street Journal, “The political risk (in Myanmar) will go away. There is such goodwill from the political community.”
After languishing in a state of underdevelopment for fifty years, the
Burmese have reclaimed their country. But now the real work begins.
Last November, President Thein Sein passed a new Investment Law,
opening the door to foreign direct investment in what The Economist
described as “the last frontier”
for Western investors. The law allows foreign companies to lease land
on a long-term basis without the involvement of a local partner. Tax
incentives, infrastructure development and the creation of special
economic zones are also covered in the law.
The Ministry of Agriculture and Irrigation has also proposed an
aggressive agriculture development program. Its five-pronged strategy
calls for the opening of new agricultural land, providing sufficient
irrigation water, supporting agricultural mechanization, applying modern
agro-technologies, and developing high-yielding crop varieties.
Meanwhile, by developing its oil and gas industries, alongside
supporting infrastructure, Myanmar will be able to engage with many of
its neighbors. Specifically, it stands to benefit from the enormous
energy demands of China, India, and Thailand.
Reuters reported last year that Myanmar’s reforms will lead to an energy boom. Already, RH Petrogas of Singapore has signed a Seismic Option Agreement
with Rimbunan Petrogas Limited in Myanmar. If all the planned pipelines
materialize, Myanmar could eventually supply 20 percent of China’s oil
and gas needs.
In response to environmentalists’ fears that massive investments in
Myanmar’s extractive sector will wreak havoc on the country’s precious
natural resources, parliament passed the Environmental Conservation Law
last March. Its declarations are bold, its stipulations formidable and
sweeping. No company can do business in Myanmar without, at the very
least, an Environmental Impact Assessment. Companies must obtain
clearance from the Ministry of Environmental Conservation and Forestry,
widely known as MOECAF.
But the devil is in the details. The law requires specific procedures
that have not yet been translated into a set of globally compliant
standards. Technical requirements such as establishing criteria to
screen investment proposals and ensuring a timely approval process need
to be addressed.
There is also the thorny issue of whether to allow projects to move
forward in areas where they could potentially dislocate local ethnic
communities. This also creates the need for dispute mechanisms that give
voice to the communities affected by such projects. These practices
were conspicuously absent during five decades of decision-making by
military fiat.
In many ways, Myanmar is Asia’s darling today. But this privileged
position brings with it the burden of having to live up to standards,
uphold ideals, and make good on promises. The onset of economic and
political reform has left many in a state of exuberance, yet the rush to
modernity has a steep learning curve.
Myanmar stands on the brink of an exciting new era. Let’s hope the country never looks back.
source: The Diplomat
http://thediplomat.com/asean-beat/2013/02/19/myanmars-developmental-catch-22/
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