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Thailand’s economic meltdown in 1997 challenged assumptions of the inexorable triumph of globalisation. The recovery package promoted by the IMF galvanized an unlikely coalition of civil society actors to vehemently condemn the Thai model of capitalist industrialization. What does civil society have to offer in its place? How realistic are the proposed remedies? An analysis from the University of Warwick adds to the limited literature on alternative local responses to issues of equity and justice raised by the impact of globalisation. The crisis in Thailand was an unexpected reversal of fortune after four decades of uninterrupted growth and urbanisation fuelled by an explosive growth in manufacturing (contributing 80 percent of exports, compared with 1 percent in 1960). The dramatic devaluation of the baht led the economy to contract and to spectacular bankruptcies, allowing foreign capital to take control of key economic sectors. Unemployment and reduced real wages seriously impacted rural areas heavily dependent on remittances from urban workers. Response to the crisis in the form of tight monetary policy, civil service reform and liberalisation of foreign investment, only served to further inflame nationalist sentiment. Alternative local, anti-globalisation responses have been proposed by NGOs and authoritarian forces associated with organised Buddhism, the monarchy and the military. This ‘localism’ blames consumerism, industrialisation, cash crops, western farming techniques and a brainwashed Americanised technocratic elite for bringing Thailand to its knees. It argues that a self-sufficient nation, its moral core sustained by Buddhist, rural and national values, does not need to be forced into international trade with duplicitous foreigners. The analysis draws heavily on Thai sources to show the romantic, chauvinist and reactionary nostrums underpinning localism. Among the key points are:
The report shows that, for all its seeming irrationality, there are elements in Thailand’s vigorous anti-globalist discourse which should give policy-makers food for thought. Among the issues for future consideration are:
Source(s): Funded by: CSGR id21 Research Highlight: 2 May 2001
Further Information: Tel:
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Centre for the Study of Globalisation and Regionalisation Tel:
+44 (0)24 7657 2533 Centre for the Study of Globalisation and Regionalisation, University of Warwick, UK Other related links:
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