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Architect of Prosperity - Sir John Cowperthwaite and the Making of Hong Kong (Hardcover)
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Architect of Prosperity - Sir John Cowperthwaite and the Making of Hong Kong (Hardcover)
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This is a book about Sir John Cowperthwaite - the man Nobel
Prize-winning economist Milton Friedman identified as being behind
Hong Kong's remarkable post-war economic transformation. Despite
there being some articles about him and effusive obituaries there
have, until now, been no published biographies of Cowperthwaite. At
the end of the Second World War, Hong Kong lived up to its
description as "the barren island." It had few natural resources,
its trade and infrastructure lay in tatters, its small
manufacturing base had been destroyed and its income per capita was
less than a quarter of its mother country, Britain. As a British
colony it fell to a small number of civil servants to confront
these difficult challenges, largely alone. But by the time of the
handover of Hong Kong to China in 1997, it was one of the most
prosperous nations on Earth. By 2015 its GDP per capita was over
40% higher than Britain's. How did that happen? Around the world,
post-war governments were turning to industrial planning, Keynesian
deficits and high inflation to stimulate their economies. How much
did the civil servants in Hong Kong adopt from this emerging global
consensus? Virtually nothing. They rejected the idea that
governments should play an active role in industrial planning -
instead believing in the ability of entrepreneurs to find the best
opportunities. They rejected the idea of spending more than the
government raised in taxes - instead aiming to keep a year's
spending as a reserve. They rejected the idea of high taxes -
instead keeping taxes low, believing that private investment would
earn high returns, and expand the long-term tax base. This strategy
was created and implemented by no more than a handful of men over a
fifty-year period. Perhaps the most important of them all was John
Cowperthwaite, who ran the trade and industry department after the
war and then spent twenty years as deputy and then actual Financial
Secretary before his retirement in 1971. He, more than anyone,
shaped the economic policies of Hong Kong for the quarter century
after the war and set the stage for a remarkable economic
expansion. His resolve was tested constantly over his period in
office, and it was only due to his determination, independence, and
intellectual rigor that he was not diverted from the path in which
he believed so strongly. This book examines the man behind the
story, and the successful economic policies that he and others
crafted with the people of Hong Kong.
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