The Emerging Northeast–Southeast Asia Divide and Policy Implications
Friedrich Wu
Published: March 2001
Since the outbreak of the Asian financial crisis in mid-1997, the gulf between the Northeast Asian economies and Southeast Asian economies has widened as measured by GDP growth rates and size, direct and portfolio investment flows,
stock market capitalisation and trading turnover, as well as foreign exchange reserves. The growing divide between the two regions can be explained by four
factors, namely: political-risk differentials; different paces in economic
restructuring and financial reforms; China’s allure in post-WTO entry; and the
technological gap between the two regions. To recapture competitiveness, the
Southeast Asian economies need to pursue the following policy responses with
some urgency: re-establish a more stable political environment; accelerate
market-oriented reforms and liberalisation; and fine tune incentives to attract
foreign investment.