Dear all,
a while ago Marleen and I got the idea to 'respond' to one another's blog posts by writing a corresponding story. Like many nice ideas, it remained just a nice idea, until I found myself writing a lengthy response to one of Marleen's Facebook posts this morning. Hopefully this is the beginning of a string of stories in which we compare our experiences and visions of living and working in the world's youngest democracy. Please find below the link to Marleen's blog post and my subsequent response. Feel free to contribute to the discussion by leaving a comment in the designated space below the article. Happy reading!
https://rsr.akvo.org/en/project/3717/update/17355/
Well let’s first establish that I don’t disagree with the
spirit of your article (I mean how could you disagree with a better world for
everyone) but rather with the reasoning behind it. Let’s first start with the
rural-urban migration that you point out for its negative impact on food
security because of the scarcity of labour it implies in the countryside. In my
view and experience, the exact opposite holds. Smallholder farmer might seem
romantic or idyllic from an outsider’s perspective, but those people eking out
a living farming three acres of paddy land are dirt poor, and continuing to do
so won’t make them any better off in the near nor the distant future. Myanmar
was once the rice basket of SEA, and for them to reclaim this position we need
better farming practices, the consolidation of small farm plots, and
mechanisation. W.r.t. the latter, in our observations of the tractor market, we
have seen evidence of farmers investing in machinery because the price of
casual labour has gone up – precisely because of the reasons you point out. In
my view this is a good thing. Any market force that stimulates a farmer to
ditch the wooden plough and substitute it with a much more powerful tractor
ought to be celebrated. Of course, when I am travelling through rural Myanmar,
I find the sight of two big draft animals pulling a plough in a paddy field
much more attractive that a noisy, smelly tractor. But isn’t that very selfish?
Those farmers who have invested in machinery increase their labour productivity
manifold, i.e. they produce more food in less time. They are much better off
than when they were still trailing their oxen. Let me be even bolder in my
statements; in addition to casual labour migrating to the cities, we need the
smaller farmers to be bought out by the larger, more efficient ones. This will
allow those farmers to grow larger, invest more in their farms, and increase
their labour productivity and thus food production. A country cannot prosper as
long as the majority of its labour force is locked up in smallholder farming.
In the Netherlands only a small fraction of our GDP is derived from
agriculture, yet we have plenty to eat. Myanmar is in parts an extremely
fertile country, and it has the potential not only to feed itself but also
supply its two giant neighbours, neither of which produce enough food to feed
their own population. Myanmar’s current account deficit was a yawning 8.9% of
its GDP in 2015, and increased agricultural productivity (and the garment
industry, but I’ll get to that) can help to bridge that gap.
Now that we have established that rural-urban migration is
stimulating productivity in the countryside rather than harming it, we get to
your second point about the garment industry. While I fully agree with your
critique of the consumerism in parts of the rich world, I think that this is a
problem that lies with consumer attitudes and regulation in the West, not with
producer countries in Myanmar or Bangladesh. Buying clothes for next to nothing
only to dispose of them after wearing them once or twice is ghastly, and
showcases much of what is wrong with today’s consumer mentality in the rich
world. Yet prohibiting Myanmar people to work in the garment industry is not
the solution to this problem. In my view, as long as the garment industry (or
any industry for that matter), provides people who used to live in the
countryside with a better income than what they had before, we shouldn’t
discourage the invisible hand of the free market. As Myanmar develops, invests
in schooling and infrastructure, and grows richer, so will the type of work
improve that the majority of its working age population are engaged in. Looking
at our own experiences in Western Europe, this transitory phase seems to be a
regrettable but unavoidable phase of industrialisation. After all, the state of
many a working class neighbourhood in late 19th century London wasn’t that
glamorous either. In my view, if well-directed and regulated, FDI can speed up
this development process, while stalling it will delay such progress.
Myanmar currently imports much more than it exports, which
is unsustainable and harmful. It needs to make use of its competitive advantage
to produce things at a price and quality that nobody else can beat, which would
allow them to export it. Currently, looking at its fertile land and cheap
labour, agricultural products and cheap garments fit the bill. Let’s hope the
former will further develop so that the country may become an agri export
powerhouse, while the latter will transition towards something more skilful.
So, hopefully, in a decade’s time, people will answer to
your questions that they are on their way to a value-added job, which came
about on the back of FDI, while answering that, thanks to a thriving
agricultural sector, not only they have eaten, but also their Indian and
Chinese neighbours have.
Teun THANKS AGAIN, and quick reply: 1) I did not want to sound like aiming for the "romantic" or "idyllic" because I am very well aware of the poor situation smallholder farmers are living in. I can totally see what pushes young people out of the rural areas, and what pulls them into the city (both stimulated by their parents!). However my point was that I still see opportunities for youth in agriculture, also because of food security reasons (see my argument, based on FAO research: smallholders still produce 80% of our world's food today). Not to remain smallholders, but to work together and jointly grow bigger through innovation and mechanization. Moving to urban areas to work in factories does not help to realise that vision, which, I assume, we both share. See also an earlier blog: http://includeplatform.net/.../involve-empower-young.../ 2) Concerning the garment factories, my main issue was that the EU brings this up as a contribution to "sustainable" development. This is way too easy for me. If they promote "sustainable" consumerism in Europe, why then strongly advocating for more of these garment factories in other countries? I think it is inconsistent at best and hypocritical at worst. You might also be interested in this very recent research about Ethiopian sweatshops: https://www.nytimes.com/.../do-sweatshops-lift-workers... 3) Indian and Chinese neighbours are already eating almost all of Myanmar's mungbeans, hehe. See also an earlier blog: https://rsr.akvo.org/en/project/3717/update/16664/ Let's continue our discussion soon!
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