*Globalization with weak Institutions: Cambodia*

Hal Hill, Jayant Menon, Chan Sophal

The charming riverside capital of Phnom Penh, home to about 1.5 million
inhabitants, has seen a lot in its turbulent history. But nothing arguably
is on the scale of its first sky-scraper, the 42-floor ‘Golden Tower’ now
nearing completion, not to mention the university and bank complexes
mushrooming throughout this ancient city.

This changing physical landscape reflects broader developments in the
country, which has been experiencing rapid economic growth – the sixth
fastest in the world in the decade to 2007 – for the first time in its
history. More than 2 million tourists now visit this country of 14 million,
a 20-fold increase over the figure in the early 1990s. The Cambodian people
have better nutrition and access to education and health services than ever
before. Since the cessation of hostilities almost two decades ago, life
expectancy has risen by almost a decade and infant mortality has fallen
significantly.

The macro-economy is stable, with inflation under control, underpinned by
very high levels of dollarization, currently about 90%. Debt service is
almost negligible, and public debt has fallen sharply, to about one-quarter
of GDP.

The economy is highly open, with exports plus imports equivalent to more
than 120% of GDP. The investment climate is welcoming, with generous tax
incentives and low tariffs. Aid flows are very large, currently almost $1.1
billion in a $10 billion economy. The country’s openness meant that growth
dried up in 2009 as the global financial crisis hit. But the economy is now
rebounding.

So much for the good news. Cambodia also faces many daunting problems. The
country ranks 166th and 135th respectively out of 181 countries surveyed in
the Transparency International corruption perception index and the World
Bank’s Doing Business indicators. Deforestation and what is referred to
locally as ‘land grabbing’ have been rampant. The local dailies abound with
reports of land being awarded to the politically powerful for nominal
amounts, and a startling but detailed account is presented in the 2008 study
by Global Witness entitled ‘Country for Sale’. In an ironic twist, the land
price boom has often made some of the most vulnerable worse off, as they
have been evicted or forced off their land. The periodic household
expenditure surveys report a significant increase in inequality. The country
will also miss some of its Millennium Development Goal targets.

These problems are illustrative of the challenges faced by poor transitional
economies in the process of opening up, without the institutions to manage
the complex process of globalization. In this environment, the recent
discovery of oil and gas could complicate things, as articulated in the well
known ‘natural resource curse’ thesis. Hence the lessons to be learned from
Cambodia are of general interest.

The central challenge is to achieve growth that is durable, equitable, and
environmentally sustainable. This in turn requires the development of
institutions which, while they may be rudimentary, are effective, trusted
and clean. Where to start? Consider for example the following:


   - Cambodia has no shortage of laws, especially after its accession to the
   World Trade Organization in 2004. But businesses view the courts as the
   most expensive ‘last resort’ when all else fails. Legal judgements are
   routinely for sale.



   - Civil service salaries are meagre. A mid- level senior employee with a
   foreign masters degree receives $70 per month, compared to a private sector
   alternative of about 20 times this amount. Ministers receive about $500 per
   month, but some seem to live quite lavishly.



   - The country’s tax effort (its tax revenue as a percentage of GDP) is a
   paltry 11%, despite the introduction of a broad based VAT. Thus the
   country’s infrastructure remains inadequate, in spite of the very large aid
   flows, and notwithstanding recent improvements.



   - The number of banks has been increasing rapidly due to unfettered
   entry. The lax prudential supervision carries with it the possibility of a
   future meltdown.

   - Shipping a container from factory to port costs about double the
   regional average owing to widespread ‘facilitation’ costs, a feature
   apparently of most transactions with the government.




Five general lessons for ‘late reformers’ stand out from the Cambodian
experience. First, liberal and open economies cannot function without due
respect for property rights, as exemplified by the widespread land grabs.
Second, these liberal regimes need adequate regulatory capacity to manage a
modernizing market economy, as illustrated by the banking example above.
Third, large inflows of foreign aid and natural resource revenues ought to
be viewed as transitory, and invested wisely for broad-based development.
Fourth, donors need to better coordinate their work, and avoid imposing
excessively on a weak bureaucracy. Fifth, civil service reform has to be
undertaken early, with clear incentives and disciplines.

*Unless these conditions are met, the danger is that in Cambodia, and many
other similar states, the achievements over the past decade in particular
could be undone by economic crises, or rising civil unrest driven by outrage
at the political and bureaucratic excesses.*


The authors are respectively Professor of Economics, Australian National
University, Principal Economist, Asian Development Bank, and President,
Cambodia Economic Association.
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