By Marian L. Tupy on 2.2.06 @ 12:06AM
Adam Smith's man in Hong Kong died last month -- but his monumental work survives.
Sir John Cowperthwaite, who died at the age of 90 on January 21,
2006, was Hong Kong's Financial Secretary between 1961 and 1971. I
had the honor of knowing him and learning from him. He was a
principled and modest man, whose wisdom and courage of convictions
greatly contributed to the spectacular rise of Hong Kong from
poverty to prosperity. He will be missed.
I first met Sir John in 1999. As a postgraduate student at the
University of St Andrews in Scotland, Sir John's alma mater, I was
just beginning to be interested in economic development. Having
spent a part of my life in Africa, I wanted to understand the
reasons for the wealth and poverty of nations. Scotland proved a
propitious setting for such a study. After all, Scotland gave birth
to the liberal branch of the Enlightenment. Its leading lights
included such giants of political and economic thought as Adam
Ferguson, David Hume, and Adam Smith -- the celebrated author of
The Wealth of Nations.
By the time I met Sir John, the success of Hong Kong had already
been firmly established. Hong Kong was and is the world's freest
economy and one of the greatest triumphs of the laissez-faire
approach to economic development. Sir John arrived in Hong Kong in
1947. At that time, Hong Kong's residents were poorer than citizens
of some African countries. The territory was small in size and had
no natural resources. Many economists, Nobel laureate Gunnar Myrdal
among them, predicted prosperity for Africa and a bleak future for
Asia.
By the end of the 20th century, however, Hong Kong had become
one of the most prosperous territories in the world. Economist
Angus Maddison estimates that in 1950 Hong Kong's citizens were 40
percent poorer on a per capita basis than the citizens of the oil
rich African country of Gabon. By 1998, Hong Kong's residents were
over four times richer than the Gabonese. In the long run, in other
words, Hong Kong's free market policies proved more important than
Gabon's natural riches or its more advanced starting position.
At the time I started my studies, I did not know that the chief
architect of Hong Kong's prosperity lived on the same street as I
did -- a mere three houses away. Once I learned of his whereabouts,
I sent him a letter asking him for a meeting. His affirmative
reply, like so many of our future communications, came courtesy of
the Royal Mail. Sir John was an old-fashioned man. When I finally
met him, I found him to be modest but self-assured. While other
colonial administrators throughout the British Empire were busy
adopting statist economic policies, Sir John rejected the socialist
zeitgeist. Heavily influenced by Adam Smith, Sir John let the Hong
Kong economy grow unhindered by bureaucratic overreach. As he told
me, "I came to Hong Kong and found the economy working just fine.
So, I left it that way." Some 50 years after he first set foot in
Hong Kong, Sir John was clearly enjoying seeing his policies
vindicated.
In the best tradition of the British colonial service, Sir John
made few public statements after his retirement, but he was eager
to share his insights with the next generation of free market
liberals. We spent hours talking about Hong Kong's 16 percent tax
rate, business-friendly regulatory environment, lack of state
subsidies, tariff-free trade relations with the rest of the world
and other policies he promoted while Financial Secretary. Of all
the policies that we discussed, one stands out in my mind -- if for
no other reason than because it is so thoroughly counterintuitive.
I asked him to name the one reform that he was most proud of. "I
abolished the collection of statistics," he replied. Sir John
believed that statistics are dangerous, because they enable social
engineers of all stripes to justify state intervention in the
economy.
At some point during our first conversation I managed to irk him
by suggesting that he was chiefly known "for doing nothing." In
fact, he pointed out, keeping the British political busy-bodies
from interfering in Hong Kong's economic affairs took up a large
portion of his time. Throughout Sir John's tenure in office, the
British political elite tried to impose its own ailing socialist
economic model on Britain's colonies, including Hong Kong. Sir John
managed to quash all such attempts and Hong Kong benefited as a
result. In 2004, the World Bank estimated, Hong Kong's per capita
income adjusted for purchasing power parity (GNI PPP) was $31,510.
Great Britain's 2004 GNI PPP was $31,460.
I conjecture that it was Hong Kong's obviously successful
experiment with laissez-faire that helped to steel the nerves of
Britain's Iron Lady, Baroness Thatcher, as she prepared to rescue
her once-great country from the socialist rot. Hong Kong, a colony,
lit the way for Britain, the homeland. Moreover, Hong Kong's
success was vital in convincing the Chinese Communist Party that
socialism was a historical dead end. Capitalist countries lead best
when they lead by example, and what better example for a slave
society of over a billion people than an island of freedom and
prosperity right on its doorstep? Turning Hong Kong into an example
worthy for China to emulate -- that, I believe, is Sir John's
greatest legacy.
What about Sir John, the man? One story, I think, says it all.
As a senior civil servant, Sir John was once presented with a sum
of tax-payer money to upgrade his residence in Hong Kong. He
refused. He told me that he could not accept a housing subsidy
since that was a largess denied to other residents of the colony.
In his personal conduct, just as in his economic policies, Sir John
set the standard for future generations of public officials.
topics:
Trade, Business, Environment, Africa, Socialism, Oil