Oct 16, 2012
By Johanna Son
TOKYO - Foreign donors are rushing into
Myanmar (also known as Burma), whose government
has been pushing the right political buttons as
part of its democratic reform process. But
development planners and local activists caution
that the best approach should still be "easy does
it".
"Please … don't rush in," Khin Ohmar,
coordinator of the Thailand-based Burma
Partnership, said at a discussion organized by
civil society groups led by the Washington-based
Bank Information Center at the International
Monetary Fund (IMF)-World Bank (WB) annual
meetings in Tokyo on Friday.
Myanmar has
been torn by civil war for more than 60 years and
is yet to resolve many of its internal ethnic
tensions, she said. "So it's worth it to step
back and ensure that we start with the right
stuff."
"A lot of people still feel
skeptical [of the civilian-led government's
promise of a people-centered government]," said
Thein Swe, a Myanmarese professor who works at
Thailand's Chiang Mai University and who has also
worked with the Myanmar government.
"Yes,
a lot of changes are coming in." The government
has started "using all the right terminology and
development jargon, but on the ground the mindset
remains the same," he said. "Policymakers use the
right words, but this has not trickled down to the
bureaucracy."
Ohmar and Swe spoke after
officials from the WB and Asian Development Bank
(ADB) said they were treading carefully for now,
studying programs to pursue or fund through their
recently opened offices on the ground.
Japan is Myanmar's largest creditor so far
and has said it will give priority to aid to
Myanmar, where elections led to political and
economic reforms after the emergence of the
civilian-led government of President Thein Sein in
March 2011.
On October 11, Japanese
Finance Minister Koriki Jojima said Japan would
resume yen loans to Myanmar early next year, after
clearing that Southeast Asian country's loans of
500 billion yen (US$6.3 billion) to help it get
back on its feet.
In April, Japan agreed
to cancel some 60% of Myanmar's loans.
Tokyo will also give bridge loans to help
Myanmar refinance its loans to the World Bank and
the ADB that have been in arrears for a decade.
Annette Dixon, World Bank director for
South-east Asia, explained that these bridge loans
would give Myanmar a longer time to pay the
outstanding amounts. "But Myanmar is unlikely to
be eligible for debt relief," she said.
Overall, she said, Myanmar has had a
"massive donor influx but very weak receptive
capacity" and thus needed good donor coordination.
The government has set up a foreign aid
coordination committee.
The World Bank's
engagement is "very preliminary", she said,
although the World Bank has opened an office that
it shares with the ADB and the International
Finance Corporation and is recruiting staff.
"We had no country operations in the past,
so we have decided we will take a step-by-step
approach to ensure that our assistance in the
future will be effective in addressing huge
challenges ahead," said Kunio Senga, head of the
Southeast Asia department at the Manila-based ADB.
It is quite "premature to specify and commit to
specific country programmes" at this point, he
said.
Instead, the ADB has been doing
economic and sector analyses and consulting
stakeholders as it prepares an "interim country
partnership strategy" for the next 18 to 24
months, Senga said.
Dixon said that the
Myanmar government has undertaken radical reforms
in the economic, financial and political spheres.
The government is drawing up a development
plan and made public the IMF's assessment of the
economy. Also, for the first time, the government
has discussed the budget, passed it in parliament,
and aired the whole process on national
television.
The changes underway in
Myanmar are "an enormous challenge for the
government, which has to get an idea of the
sensible sequence of how to do things", such as
combining the "need to show results quickly to its
population, which has high expectations, while
simultaneously embarking on a process that we know
takes decades," Dixon said.
But the
picture from outside can be somewhat different
from realities inside the country, according to
Swe. He expressed worries about experts entering
the country in droves along with aid programs,
stressing, "We don't want external-driven aid.
Consultation with the grassroots community is
crucial."
In terms of foreign investments,
he conceded that banks consider Myanmar the "last
frontier" as it opens up. "A lot of investors are
rushing in - there is big potential but we must be
very cautious about what kind of investments we
would like to embark on."
Swe also said
that while the government has made improvements in
transparency, the fact remains that the lower
house of Parliament in August rejected a motion
that would have required all government officials
to publicly reveal their assets. "It is shameful,"
he argued.
Both Ohmar and Swe agreed that
the human rights environment in Myanmar could not
be separated from development plans for the
country.
"The development agenda cannot be
a substitute for a political settlement," Ohmar
said.
Both raised questions about the
military's continued role in the country and said
citizens need to get used to more political space
and start speaking up.
"We have to make
sure that the role of the military will remain a
positive one," said Swe. Under Myanmar's
constitution, the military get one quarter of
seats in each chamber of Parliament.
Ohmar
added that many citizens have yet to learn to
speak their minds, which is a result of decades of
military dictatorship.
She questioned the
effectiveness of gestures like airing
parliamentary discussions on television when large
parts of the country have no access to
electricity.
(Inter Press
Service)
http://www.atimes.com/atimes/Southeast_Asia/NJ16Ae02.html
Monday, October 15, 2012
Donors urged to tread carefully in Myanmar
5:36 PM
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