Guest Commentary: Globalisation and Emerging Nations – Conceptualisation
of the Asian Crisis. CHRISTOPHER T. SELVARAJAH. Jurnal Pengurusan 18 (1999)
Abstrak
This article discusses the impact of ‘the Asian Crisis’ as explained within
a globalising environment. Within this context, consequently, the Asian Crisis
itself has been identified as part of the on-going globalisation process.
This article begins by tracing the emergence of many East Asian nations in
terms of their rapid economic growth and development, contrasts East Asian
versus Western models of economic development, describes the evolution of
Asian versus colonial economic institutions, and traces the of the Asian
Tigers, Japan, ASEAN-4 and the People’s Republic of China. It culminates
with the events that ensued during the Asian Crisis of mid-1997 to 1998.
Five “wild cards” or key factors, advocated to contribute to a resolution
of this regional crisis are then discussed. The author concludes with
a call to the international community to tackle the free flow of speculative
investments, to determine the type and amount of acceptable foreign direct
investment, and to determine the form of selective intervention that best
suits an individual country’s development, to avoid economic instability
and impoverishment.