Abstrak
Pinpointing the actual forces at work in the Asian Financial Crisis,
especially politics and other non-market factors that contributed substantially
to the loss of confidence, has not been easy. The causes of the crisis
might be interpreted as either a failure of Asian capitalism, or alternatively
a failure of market capitalism. The first interpretation obviously has
a great deal of substance, and Malaysian economic institutions and public
policy are not blameless - reckless over-expansion and credit growth, a
pegged currency, political imbroglios, etc. Obviously, Malaysia needs to
restore confidence in its financial institutions and practices. But Prime
Minister Dr Mahathir Mohamad has rejected economic orthodoxy in favour
of a more radical strategy. His dramatic gambit has some intellectual legitimacy
based on a revisionist movement in economics and may well herald what will
be the "new architecture" of the international monetary system.