The Trouble With Tigers: The Rise and Fall of South-East Asia. Victor Mallet
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THE
TROUBLE WITH TIGERS
The Rise and Fall of South-East Asia
VICTOR MALLET
For Michele
Contents
Introduction: A miracle that turned sour
ONE: The rise and fall of ‘Asian values’
THREE: Sex, drugs and religion: Social upheaval in the 1990s
FOUR: The day of the robber barons
FIVE: Nature in retreat: South-east Asia’s environmental disaster
SIX: Enemies outside and in: The ‘Balkans of the Orient’ and the great powers
SEVEN: Ten troubled tigers: The nations of south-east Asia
THAILAND: The smile that faded
LAOS: No escape from modernity
CAMBODIA: The slow recovery from ‘Year Zero’
MALAYSIA: Vision 2020 and the Malay dilemma
INDONESIA: Fin de régime – and end of empire?
THE PHILIPPINES: Chaotic democracy
EIGHT: After the crash: The unfinished revolution
Asia can be disconcertingly modern for a westerner. One day a couple of years ago I was reverently approaching the centre of the ancient temple of Angkor Wat in Cambodia – apparently alone as I admired this 900-year-old work of art – when I heard a strange, high-pitched burbling noise. I soon found the cause. A Cambodian woman was sitting in the centre of the temple playing furiously with her hand-held electronic Game Boy. Perhaps I should not have been surprised. Europeans and Americans, not to mention Asian tourist boards, are still guilty of ‘Orientalism’, the practice of portraying eastern lands as exotic, sensual and mystical, rather than as part of the modern world. Asians themselves, meanwhile, have been taking part in the fastest industrial revolution in history, completing in a few decades a modernization that took 150 years or more for the first such revolution in England in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries. And they have been doing so at a time when technology has advanced far beyond steam engines to computers and electronics, allowing them to leapfrog whole stages of the industrial revolutions experienced by others. It is not uncommon for Asian men and women to move straight from working in the family’s paddy fields to a factory producing microchips.
The world was rightly fascinated by this post-war transformation of agrarian Asian societies into fast-growing, industrial exporters, a process which came to be called the ‘Asian miracle’. Much has been written about the economics behind Asia’s success in the last four decades. But there is less literature on the risks presented by the extraordinary social and political upheavals accompanying this ‘miracle’ – risks that were vividly illustrated by the financial crash of the late 1990s. That is a gap I hope to fill. Likewise, there have been many books of general interest published about Japan and China, but not enough about the countries of south-east Asia. Indonesia – the fourth most populous nation and the largest Moslem one – has been correctly described as the most under-reported country on the globe.
I hope this book, by addressing these issues, will help to explain the financial crisis which erupted in Thailand in mid-1997, spread to the rest of Asia and eventually disrupted economies as far away as South Africa and Latin America. I trust it also shows that the continuing confrontation between