The very name Cambodia evokes many different responses
among outsiders. There is first of all, of course, the
association with the magnificent and extraordinary ruins
of Angkor, which are unparalleled and remain etched in the
memory long after the initial viewing. Then there are
other more traumatic associations with violence: the
appalling and massive illicit carpet bombing of the
Cambodian countryside by the United States military as it
struggled to cope with its losses against Vietnam in the
early 1970s; the subsequent, much-publicised atrocities of
the Khmer Rouge against its own population between 1975
and 1977; the quieter but systematic economic and
political violence of the US-led international community
which penalised Cambodia with more than a decade of
sanctions and isolation until 1991.
For others, there would be the association of Cambodia
with other Least Developed Countries, a poor backward
nation with an anguished history and little development.
It is this feature which has spawned what may well be the
secret response of many outsiders who are at present
living in Cambodia, which of course would almost never be
admitted to. The country is a haven for the international
do-gooder. And the past decade and more of international
manipulation and interference in Cambodia's polity and
economy, while it may have contributed little to the
living conditions of the average Cambodian, has enriched
and even captivated the lives of the many expatriates who
have flocked there over the years.
It is this which makes Cambodia so very different, and yet
so disturbingly similar, to other less developed
countries. It is a poor and beautiful country, with
citizens who are remarkably gracious and friendly to
foreigners, despite (or perhaps because of?) their
uncertain experience of them. Of course the dependence
upon tourism encourages this, but the warmth of Cambodians
extends well beyond that found in other countries of
Southeast Asia. The extremes of wealth and poverty that
now appear characteristic of almost the whole world, are
also found in their extremes in this country as well.
One of the first things that strikes the visitor, is how
this small and backward economy is almost completely
dollarised. The US dollar apparently forms the medium of
exchange for as much as 90 per cent of the total value of
domestic transactions, according to one estimate. This
obviously renders domestic monetary policy completely
ineffective, but even more than that, it reveals the
extent of dependence of the economy to the inflow of
aid-related dollars.
Around 43 per cent of the government's budget is financed
by aid. In addition, there are aid inflows to NGOs, many
of whom then fund other NGOs within the economy. These
flows may be relatively small in the total portfolio of
donors, but they are huge in relation to Cambodia's tiny
economy, and dwarf the effects of other sources of foreign
exchange, which are mainly through tourism and more
recently, garment exports.
Such aid is what explains how the capital Phnom Penh is
literally swarming with donors and experts of all
varieties and many nationalities. Multilateral, bilateral,
non-governmental – they are all there, in activities as
disparate as the crucial clearing of landmines and dealing
with disabled people, to advice on education and plant
regeneration, to macroeconomic policy guidance. The
largest number of NGOs deal in some way with human rights,
even though, on civil and political rights, the current
government's record is probably better than that of say,
the administration of George Bush.
The personnel of these outfits range from experienced and
perceptive old Cambodia hands to young people who have
barely graduated from college, eager to impose their
expertise, however inappropriate, on the hapless
residents. And young Cambodians with education see the
most rapid route to mobility and success as being achieved
through working with such organisations, or even through
forming NGOs of their own which will receive aid funds.
Phnom Penh is not a big city – the population is just
above a million people - but it must boast of one of the
widest ranges of international cuisine available in the
region, in chic restaurants, cafes and bistros that cater
dominantly to the expatriate population. Many of the
restaurants and smaller boutique-style hotels that dot the
city as well as the town of Siem Reap (the base for
visiting the famous Angkor sites) are actually owned and
run by foreigners, who originally came as part of the
aid-disbursing community.
Lives of expatriates in Cambodia are not just pleasant but
typically delightful, with a little discount for some
inevitable inconveniences of living in a poor country. Not
only can resident foreigners have lavish lifestyles with
all the consumption goods that are now international, but
they live in a country where labour is cheap and generally
obedient. Unlike in some other recipient countries,
aid-givers and other foreign do-gooders are treated with
great respect, hospitality and generosity, and are easily
allowed to persuade themselves of their usefulness and
importance. It is little wonder that very few people leave
this paradise.
Yet the record of economic and social outcomes of the
donor community over the past decade is not an impressive
one. While political stability and peace have come to the
country after years of devastating fighting, the economic
growth of the past decade has not translated into any
decline in the incidence of poverty.
Instead, there are indications that the lot of most
ordinary people has worsened. Per capita consumption has
fallen even as inequality has increased substantially.
Infant and child mortality is on the increase again after
the recovery of the 1980s. There is growing landlessness
in the rural areas. Rapidly rising unemployment along with
underemployment have become even more significant given
Cambodia's relatively young population. Public education
facilities are poor and deteriorating. Public health
services are poor or non-existent in most of the rural
areas. Basic economic services, including agricultural
extension services to farmers, are simply non-existent.
The past few years have seen deterioration even in more
conventional macroeconomic performance as well.
Agricultural output and rural incomes have both been on
the decline since 1999. Foreign direct investment – mainly
in the garments sector and in non-tradeable services such
as telecom – has been declining for the past two years.
The big source of export growth in garments was the
filling up of MFA quotas made available to Cambodia by the
US and the European Union; as these get filled, such
exports are tapering off and in the past two years several
garments factories have closed.
Much of this poor economic and social performance is the
direct result of the advice doled out by aid-givers,
especially the multilateral institutions including the IMF
and Asian Development Bank, which have encouraged, and
sometimes even forced, the government to cut down its own
provision of basic goods and services, and allow “market
forces” to flourish. Government investment has fallen and
the state has stopped trying to fulfil a number of basic
commitments. Established state structures and institutions
have been run down, and allowed to be replaced by private
profiteering or even by nothing more than a vacuum.
Instead, the basic activity of the state and its various
organs and personnel today seems to be in participating in
the free-for-all looting of the natural and human
resources of the country. While “corruption” and “bad
governance” have become grossly misused terms that are
often used to camouflage more serious structural issues,
there is no doubt that in Cambodia these issues have
become so significant as to dominate everyday reality.
Corruption is now so widespread and so extreme that it can
be mind-boggling. The enormous mansions of the rich – some
of them taking up several acres and fulfilling the most
expansive and flamboyant Bollywood dreams of luxury – bear
witness to the gains made by the political and military
elite. Several of these houses are said to be owned by
former and current generals and other military officers,
who have been associated with the extensive sale of forest
rights to plantation owners and loggers, including
multinational companies.
At the other end of the spectrum, the appallingly low
salaries paid to teachers and other civil servants have
created other parallel payments. The common practice in
government schools is for children to carry every day an
amount to be handed over to the teacher – usually up to a
dollar a day; if not, the child may well fail. This
practice extends even to rural areas, and helps to explain
the high dropout rate especially for girls after some
basic schooling.
Western donors like to point to such practices to explain
why their aid has not been more effective. But in fact
this misses the point, that the donors themselves have
been responsible for a lot of this dubious culture. Of
course, corruption is not new to Cambodia – the Lon Nol
regime propped up by the US government in the early 1970s
was famously corrupt, to the point of ensuring their own
undoing by some officers even selling military equipment
to the enemy Khmer Rouge for a fee.
But the period of the 1980s was marked by quite a
different social reality. Despite the international
isolation and the continuing war against the Khmer Rouge
(which was then supported, ironically, by Sihanouk's
forces and assistance from western countries) the People's
Republic of Kampuchea, led by Hun Sen's government,
struggled to rebuild society and economy after the
horrific violence and the continuing instability.
Reports of corruption were rare, and while economic
conditions were parlous, there was some stability in food
consumption and income distribution was much more
egalitarian. At that time, the main forces making for
instability in the country were openly and covertly helped
by western powers anxious to reduce Soviet and Vietnamese
influence. The collapse of the Soviet Union set in train a
set of processes in the region which culminated in the
growing power of the Khmer Rouge and Sihanoukist faction,
forcing a peace agreement on the government in 1991.
Thereafter, the UN stepped in, and UNTAC (the United
Nations Transitional Authority in Cambodia) was born in
1993. UNTAC had a very wide mandate, which it did not
fulfil. It barely kept the peace, which was finally
maintained only through the consolidation of power by the
Hun Sen group, and several observers point out that UNTAC
personnel were involved in attempts to destabilise the
regime and promote more rightwing and openly pro-Western
alternatives.
The dollarisation of the economy was generated by UNTAC,
coming in with resources which were huge relative to the
size of the economy, and spending in what turned out to be
indiscriminate and sometimes counterproductive fashion.
UNTAC also set the pace for privatisation, reduction of
state responsibility over a range of basic goods and
services, aid dependence and also the bending of laws,
especially in business dealings and parallel payments,
that has now become the norm.
By the time of the 1998 elections which confirmed the
control of the Hun Sen regime, the pattern had set, and
the government since then has done little even to try and
change the general direction of change. Nevertheless,
despite the evident cynicism operating at the level of
government, and the apparent reneging of the state's basic
responsibilities towards the people, the general
impression is that this government is better than the
available alternatives. Elections are due in July.
The current darling of the Western powers is the
Opposition leader Sam Rainsy, who lived for decades in
France prior to the 1990s, and who has been pushing a
right-wing agenda including inciting hatred against ethnic
Vietnamese living in Cambodia. This support for Rainsy is
rather absurd, because the current regime has already
given in on economic policies, virtually everything that
can be given to the advantage of the West. Changing it
would only involve a political shift to the right which
could be very destabilising in a country and region that
has a lot of recent history of potential and actual
explosion.
This is not to deny the role played by internal factors in
creating the inequalising tendencies in the economy, or to
downplay the very positive role played by some
expatriates, who have contributed and continue to
contribute greatly to Cambodian society. Even granting all
this, the net effect of foreign – especially US –
influence on Cambodia in the past decade has been largely
negative.
With its small size and complex recent history, it may be
that the current situation in Cambodia is the very extreme
case of what can happen once donor domination sets in. But
it may well be that it is a pointer to the new forms of
twenty-first century dependency of developing countries.
We now live in a world characterised by a combination of
rampant and bare-faced imperialism on one hand, and on the
other a more sophisticated and less obstreperous, but
still insidious and dangerous proto-colonialism.
|