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Riding out the Great Asia Depression - by www.InvestAsiaPacific.com,
division of
AsiaBIZ
Strategy
2009
is the Year of the Ox, according to the Chinese zodiac. The Ox is
the sign of prosperity through fortitude and hard work. Many Asians
expect 2009 to be the Year of the Skinny Ox. Asia’s political
leaders, civil service, businesses and citizens are preparing for
the worst year since the 1997 Asian crisis. Macro economic and
strategic planning forecasts have already been heavily revised
downwards. Governments are rolling out short term economic crisis
stimulus packages. Businesses are preparing to announce more
retrenchments after the Chinese Lunar New Year (26 Jan to 9 Feb).
Consumers have become frugal and fearing the job axe, resulting in
quiet shopping malls and worried retailers. Already, the fear of axe
and lack have people accepting that 2009 will be another 1929.
During the 1929 Great Depression, there was widespread poverty,
hunger, unemployment, stock market crashes, reduced industrial
production and corporate bankruptcies. How then will Asia manage
2009?
One 1929 government economic reform then was to
raise needed finance by sale of their national assets to foreign
investors. A consequence of such privatisation and capitalisation
was political unrest from unhappy voters, unions and workers. These
days, these foreign investors tend to include more government
sovereign funds which invest with a longer term objective. We can
expect some Asian governments to implement partial privatizations of
their state assets with lesser political cost if the investors are
sovereign funds than corporate investors.
Another possible Asian government economic policy
is to promote greater intra-Asia trade and investment. China and
India offer two mega markets. Developing countries like Vietnam and
Laos provide low cost production. Hence, South East Asia is expected
to play a middleman role, producing in cheaper locations and
re-export to mega markets. We expect to see more trade missions,
‘Meet The Buyer’ B2B events, Asia FDI attraction training seminars
and ‘Woo the Asia Investor’ missions. Opportunistic investment
promotion agencies (IPAs) outside Asia can consider wooing Asian FDI
to consider non-Asia locations with a more aggressive investment
incentive package including cash. Who says only retailers use
‘cashback’ promotions? Likewise, Asian IPAs should find suitable
non-Asian investors to diversify their investor base.
While foreign FDI flows into Asia is expected to
decrease, opportunistic Asian businesses can capitalize on these
cheap asset times by updating their Asia market research to capture
changing market opportunities and to conduct selective Asian M&A due
diligence with some discounting and decide according to risk
preferences and time horizon. Cost cutting, reduced shift hours and
worker retraining will continue to be common practices. Expatriate
management and employees are also expected to be laid off in favour
of cheaper domestic employees.
Asian workers and consumers are expected to
tighten their belts, reduce spending on non-essentials and take on
multiple jobs. Older retrenched PMEBs are also expected to become
SME entrepreneurs or retrained to take on lower paying jobs.
Asia, having survived its long history of
turbulences, will simply revert to its pre1997 crisis days by being
risk averse, high-saving, and low-consuming until the 2009 storm
blows over. As the Chinese proverb goes (qi lu zhao ma), practical
Asians, expecting an Ox, will continue riding a mule while looking
for a horse, settling for what they have while looking for something
better. This too, shall pass some day.
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