#[1]Business & Money » Will Burma Become Asiaâs Next Economic Tiger? Comments Feed [2]alternate [3]alternate [4]Business & Money [5]WordPress.com [6]Skip to Content [7]TIME [8]Business & Money Sections → * [9]NewsFeed * [10]U.S. * [11]Politics * [12]World * [13]Business * [14]Tech * [15]Health * [16]Science * [17]Entertainment * [18]Style * [19]Sports * [20]Opinion * [21]Photos * [22]Magazine * [23]Video * [24]LIFE.com * [25]Lists * [26]TIME Home * [27]Economy * [28]Wall Street * [29]Tech * [30]Small Business * [31]Personal Finance * [32]Real Estate * [33]Business of Creativity * [34]Management * [35]Careers * [36]New Energy * [37]Davos * [38]Magazine * [39]Video * [40]LIFE * [41]Person of the Year [42]Search Search TIME ____________________ Go * [43]Follow + [44]Facebook + [45]Twitter + [46]Google+ + [47]Tumblr + [48]RSS * [49]Apps [50]Asia Will Burma Become Asiaâs Next Economic Tiger? By [51]Michael SchumanAug. 22, 2012[52]0 * [53]Share + + + + + Burma Economy STR / AFP / Getty Images People walk through a small bazaar at the Golden Rock temple in Burma's northeastern city of Kyaiktiyo, some 160 km from Rangoon, on Feb. 20, 2012 * [54]Email * [55]Print * [56]Share + [57]Facebook + [58]Twitter + [59]Tumblr + [60]LinkedIn + [61]StumbleUpon + [62]Reddit + [63]Digg + [64]Mixx + [65]Delicious + [66]Google+ * [67]Comment Follow [68]@TIMEBusiness On paper at least, [69]Burma has all the elements required to create another Asian economic miracle. With a population of 48 million, the country has a large pool of low-cost workers custom-made to attract the labor-intensive manufacturing that jump-started income growth from [70]South Korea to Malaysia. Natural resources, such as timber and minerals, could woo billions in foreign investment. And its strategic position nestled between China and India could turn Burma into a prime location for tapping into the megagrowth of those two Asian giants. Translating that promise into real dollars isnât going to be easy, however. Lots of nations possess the potential for economic greatness. The problem is that few are ever able to realize it. Burma has been a case study in that failure. For 50 years now, Burma has been one of Asiaâs great disappointments. After [71]World War II, it was one of the regionâs richest nations; today, it has sunk to among its poorest. Behind the woes is crushingly awful economic management by a military dictatorship that brutalized and isolated the country. While its neighbors Thailand, Malaysia, Singapore and Indonesia joined the ranks of Asiaâs tiger economies, Burma wallowed in poverty, penalized by sanctions and impoverished by an unwillingness to reform politically or economically. (PHOTOS: [72]Burmaâs Aung San Suu Kyi Makes Her Parliamentary Debut) In recent months, though, a nascent democratic awakening has raised hopes among Asiaâs business community that Burma could finally become the attractive place to invest it has always promised to be. The long-suffering pro-democracy opposition was permitted to contest parliamentary by-elections in April. Nobel Peace Prize laureate Aung San Suu Kyi, who was released from house arrest in November 2010, was allowed to campaign for a seat in the legislature, which she won. That liberalization has convinced the U.S. and the E.U. to start lifting economic sanctions that had been imposed on the country. The political reform has opened the door to achieving a real economic revival. Now that Burma has come in from the cold, it can start in earnest to woo the foreign investment it so badly needs. There is a window of opportunity here. China has been the 400-kg gorilla of Asia for years, sucking up vast sums of investment, especially in the low-end manufacturing that could create much needed jobs in Burma. But as costs rise rapidly in the Middle Kingdom, businesses are looking for new, cheaper destinations for their factories. Burma could very well fill the void. (MORE: [73]Treatment of Muslim Rohingya Minority Shows Burma Has a Long Way to Go) Still, Burma might find that the cash it desires wonât come so easily. Burma, officially known as Myanmar, finds itself way, way, way behind its neighbors in development. As my colleague Hannah Beech put it in a recent [74]magazine story on Burma: âIn economic terms, the country is aspiring just to become a Bangladesh.â Burma lacks the infrastructure, sound regulatory environment and trained workforce to attract foreign investment in large sums. Burma âhas very strong potential, but before realizing that potential, it has to tackle challenges to its development,â says Asian Development Bank (ADB) economist Cyn-Young Park. A [75]report she wrote for the ADB, released on Monday, didnât mince words when outlining these hurdles: Myanmar also faces multiple constraints and risks that may limit its progress. Key constraints include a weak macroeconomic-management framework devoid of market mechanisms, insufficient fiscal resources and inefficient domestic-fund mobilization, limited access to finance, deficient infrastructure, inadequate social services that hamper human-capital development and limited industrial diversification. If that sounds daunting, it is. There has already been some progress, however. In April, the government reformed its currency system, allowing for a single, market-determined exchange rate, which will help stabilize the climate for investment. But thatâs just a start. The government has to marshal funds for investment in new roads and other infrastructure so manufacturers could get their products to markets around the world. More money is needed to beef up the nationâs schools to upgrade the quality of the workforce. Burma âhas to invest in its future,â says Park. Achieving that will entail reform of the government itself, so that it can raise revenues and spend them more efficiently. (MORE: [76]As Rangoon Races Forward, a Push to Preserve Its Architectural Past) Even more, Burma needs to create the legal framework for a functioning market economy. After being cut off in its own alternate economic universe for decades, the country simply lacks the clear rules and regulations foreign companies require to safely and confidently invest. My colleague [77]Emily Rauhala found that out in April, when she [78]attended a seminar for investors held in Hong Kong by the Burmese government. The room was packed with businesspeople, who peppered the government representatives with questions. Can foreigners own property? Will state companies play fair? The answers that came back were less than satisfying. Often, the officials had no clear response. Burma has to put in place âthe basics for the market to function,â says Park. âIt is going to take a while for the government to be fully adjusted to the market system.â That may be the biggest question facing the future of Burma. Achieving all these reforms and implementing the necessary policies requires a certain degree of expertise on the part of the government â in Burmaâs case, an expertise that could well be lacking. Stephen Groff, a vice president at ADB, says that âthe will to move forward is very strongâ but âthe challenge is: How do you build the competency quickly?â Groff says there is a core group of economic experts surrounding the senior leaders, but âafter that, it gets really thin really quickly.â The inexperience of Burmaâs bureaucracy in running a modern economy could easily derail the implementation of new national policies. âIn order for the reform effort to be sustained, it has to grow roots,â Groff says. Still, there is reason for continued hope. If Burma manages to overcome these hurdles, its potential is undeniable. ADB estimates that growth could reach 7% or 8% annually, and per capita income could triple by 2030. After so many decades in the wilderness, such a performance would finally make Burma roar. MORE: [79]Titanic 3-D First Hollywood Film Released in Burma in a Generation 11 comments [80] Livefyre * [81]Get Livefyre * [82]FAQ [83]Sign in + Follow Post comment Link Sort: Newest | Oldest RobertSF RobertSF 5pts There's no reason why Myanmar (why does the article use the former name?) should become an economic tiger. Sure, it has millions of low-cost workers, but so what? There's no shortage of low-cost workers in China. China is actually slowing down because Western nations can't continue consuming like they have. Is Myanmar going to get into a labor price war with China? It's welcome to it, but that's not going to bring prosperity. tosty tosty 5pts Burma government first needs to stop killing innocent people of Islamic religion doing terrible crimes that can be called genocide While some leader have the Nobel Peace Prize and called Democrats tosty tosty 5pts Burma government first needs to stop killing innocent people of Islamic religion doing terrible crimes that can be called genocide While some leader have  the Nobel Peace Prize and called Democrats tosty tosty 5pts Burma government first needs to stop killing innocent people of Islamic religion doing terrible crimes that can be called genocide While some leader have the Nobel Peace Prize and called Democrats Pone Z Pyo Pone Z Pyo 5pts come on... drop the lies already. Everyone knows no fact about Rohingya that came out from Pakistan is real. tma_sierrahills tma_sierrahills 5pts One of the central problems of Burma/Myanmar is that no one can agree on what to call it. adam_onge adam_onge 5pts  So just like Finland/Suomi, Germany/Deutschland, Greek/Hellas, Hungary/Magyarorszag, Austria/Ãstereich, China/Zhuongguoa, Japan/Nippon, Spain/Espagne, Ceylon/SriLanka, Rhodesia/Zimbabwe, Switzerland/Schweiz, Sweden/Sverige, ... tma_sierrahills tma_sierrahills 5pts Then it is journalists you will need to talk to, because for several years I have been reading many news accounts that have been including the phrase after Myanmar, "formerly known as Burma." Now they are back to a straightforward use of Burma (which I kind of like). To say that a nation is known by two names, one in its home language and one internationally, or by people in Western nations, versus saying that a nation's official name has been changed by the people in charge are two completely different things. Spain and Espagne/Espana are the same nation. But, as far as I know, Rhodesia no longer exists, and I have to wonder if Zimbabwe does not translate into "Black-on-White-Farmer-Slaughterhouse." Finally, when it is a matter of language, like Spain or Sweden, each nation has far more than two names, since there are about 6,000 languages in the world. rory2012 rory2012 5pts Burma is on the spotlight because the West wants you be there for the time being due to the Chinese factor. Once come to the returns of their investment consideration,you are long way off their target so your poverty will continue.You name will be drawn to attention again whenever the Chinese card played by the West again. omegafrontier omegafrontier 5pts Oh yes, how could Burma not see that Western nations are using them as a satellite state! It fits all together perfectly now. It explains why Burma leadership suddenly and voluntarily open up asking for Western nations partnership. That's why the presence of China in Burma is more than any country in the world. It's a TRAP by Western nations to turn on those poor, misunderstood Chinese communists. Man, can you believe these so ever calculating Western leaders who couldn't fix their debt crises but is able to manipulate a foreign nation against its interests. Ben_300cg Ben_300cg 5pts A very informative article. I hope it touches the heart of potential reformists in Burma and the world. 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