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LOS ANGELES --- The Financial Times, ordinarily a great newspaper
(despite being published in London, the Western worlds Babylon
of hysterical journalism) -- got editorially all shook up last week
over press freedom shortcomings in Asia.
It breathlessly
indicted South Korea, where some media bosses are facing government
prosecution; Thailand and Indonesia, where journalists have been
threatened with expulsion; and Taiwan, where a newspaper planning
to run a major corruption story was raided.
Theres
no doubt the news media of Asia are, by and large, less than what
US press pundits, plenipotentiaries and potentates would prefer.
But is the US media so utterly exemplary? Consider the near-psychotic
pack journalism on O.J. Simpson, Monica Lewinsky and Gary Condit
-- not to mention our extraordinary general inattentiveness to international
news that borders on either parochial arrogance or sheer stupidity.
Or both.
Even so, as
with the West, East Asia is better served when the people are more
informed -- and better governed. After all, between 1960 and 1997,
East Asias high-performing economies consistently grew faster
than the world rate of growth. This remarkable record rests
in part on innovations in policy and in governance made by governments
in Indonesia, Malaysia, the Philippines, Singapore, South Korea,
Taiwan and Thailand, says Dr. Hilton Root, a US Treasury official,
and one of the few Bush administration officials who knows a whole
lot about Asia.
It is notable
that all the nations on Roots honor roll have been evolving
(with inevitable stops and starts) more professional news media.
Its no coincidence (indeed, its both a cause and an
effect) that adult literacy rates in East Asia are 20 percent higher
than the world average; that the number of Internet hosts per capita
is four times greater than in Latin America; and that personal computer
usage is three times what it is in Latin America.
This general
trend of more open and accurate publicly available information,
through whatever media (print, video or Internet), is a necessary
(though by no means sufficient) condition if Asia is to realize
a rightful and powerful place in the 21st century. China, especially,
needs to face up to this painful but necessary truth, though the
notable handful of terrific newspapers in Hong Kong gives it a huge
overall national leg up on sorry excuses for societies like Burma
and North Korea.
Even so, the
average Chinese citizen has to be a bit confused when one March
day China Daily, the high-quality but Beijing-controlled English-language
daily, splashes the Page 1 headline: WAR ON CORRUPTION CONTINUES.
Thats a good thing, right? But hold on to your reformist hat!
Less than two weeks later, people hear that the well-respected Chinese
investigative paper Southern Weekend, down in the south of China,
has to kill a hot expose on corruption. Pressure from the Ministry
of Propaganda was said to be one factor. Now how in the world can
this be good for China?
East Asia will
continue its advance up the economic and political ladder only if
it continues to open up -- whether via the Internet or through the
more conventional media. Note the recent large-scale labor protests
in China, as reform and restructuring put people out of work. Beijing
needs to come up with new safety nets for these people -- and fast.
One more Tiananmen-like incident in China and the current government,
so dependent on foreign investment and acceptance, may not be long
for this world. A more informative news media would not only be
in the best interests of the people -- for they would have a better
idea of whats going on -- but also of true reformists (such
as Chinas savvy Premier Zhu Rongji), because theyd now
have a more credible news media as a public ally.
Ditto in South
Korea, where the new-style labor mobility triggered
by the governments privatization program is leading to similar
large-scale street protests. This country may have a more U.S.-like
news media than almost anyone in East Asia, but crackdowns on media
leaders, whatever the motivation, are a cure worse than the disease.
The Kim Dae Jung government, however well -intentioned, needs to
find a better way to address media conglomerate tax evasion (undoubtedly
a real issue) than by jailing media bosses. It just doesnt
look good.
Openness --
in reality as well as in appearance -- is not a drag on economic
and political reform but, in most cases, a key driver. A press need
not be as irresponsible as most in London to be as effective as
some of the great newspapers of Asia, not to mention the Financial
Times, whose readers on the issue it raised last week, however,
would have benefited from a more sophisticated perspective.
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