Yap Island and the present world
Make up your own mind. I have, too.
Yap Island is part of the Caroline
Islands in the Pacific Ocean, near the bigger Philippine Islands. It was a
small part of WWII back then. Yet it is still a big deal if one had relatives
who died there fighting for their Country, like even in today's times. I had
such a relative from Texas, and I have not forgotten. For the record, I am age
65 and have been to William Clay's gravesite in Arlington National Cemetery. He did die at Yap, was buried there by the
locals, and then reinterred later in the his present grave, circa 1947.
So here's some recent posts you
might enjoy.
Hi Clay;
I have been watching this play out for the last few years. The
Chinese have been going around Yap handing out huge sums of cash bribes to
chiefs and government officials. My Yap friends tell me that it's likely this
will fall through in the end but it still has stream at this point. It would be
very sad to see Yap turned into a Chinese Disney land.
Respectfully,
-Pat
A
Pacific Island Prefers Chinese Investment to U.S. Welfare
For
decades, American aid did little but promote dependency. Now here comes a
Chinese entrepreneur.
A
Micronesian island of about 39 square miles in the western Pacific will in the
coming years became a destination for Chinese tourists if a massive resort
complex proceeds as planned. The island, called Yap, is part of the Federated
States of Micronesia and is strategically located at the crossroads of the
Pacific, 500 miles southwest of the major U.S. military bases on Guam.
There are likely to be significant cultural,
environmental and economic side effects from the project proposed by Chinese
real-estate developer Deng Hong and his Exhibition and Travel Group, or ETG.
Certainly a 4,000-room casino-and-golf complex would transform Yap. Yap State,
a group of islands with a total population of 11,000, is one of the world's
most isolated and traditional societies.
There will also likely be a shift of
influence as the Chinese take de facto control over an airport and seaport—both
will undergo major improvements for the development—at the heart of a region
once termed "the American Pacific." The region is one that the
post-World War II Pentagon promised would never again be ceded to foreign
influence, as it had been to the Japanese in 1917.
Americans
will be tempted to focus on growing Chinese influence in a former U.S. client
state and strategic ally. Yet the real lesson is about America's 75-year
failure to export one of its greatest assets: free-market capitalism. Since
1945, the U.S. has seemed to direct little more than state socialism to
Micronesia and the rest of the American-affiliated Pacific.
The
many billions of dollars sent to Micronesia in direct foreign aid was intended
to finance the development of economic and political systems across these
remote islands and atolls. The Micronesians have instead used the aid to feed a
government bureaucracy that mirrors the worst excesses and inefficiencies of
the U.S. Department of the Interior, the agency that controls most of the aid.
The
sad result is a huge, U.S.-funded Micronesian public sector that crowds out
economic development. This has ensured the perpetual dependency of the people,
like the Yap islanders, on the state and federal government of the Federated
States of Micronesia.
So oppressive is the bureaucracy that the
World Bank estimates it takes a year and a half's worth of personal
income—spent, for instance, on licensing and attorney fees—to open a small
business in Micronesia. In 2013, the bank ranked Micronesia second-worst in the
world (behind East Timor) in policies for land registration. The difficulty of
recording and holding assets that will be protected under law makes credit
virtually unobtainable. The public sector is effectively the sole source of
jobs, services, benefits and entitlements—unless Micronesians migrate to Hawaii
or Guam (where they are eligible for entitlements on par with native-born U.S.
citizens) or enlist in the U.S. military (a career option opened by the
"free association" status between the U.S. and Micronesian state
governments).
There is no more telling indictment of U.S.
policy than the Chinese resort complex planned for Yap. Certain key decision
makers publicly justified the deal under the banner of free-market development.
Advocates of the plan insist that it is a once-in-a-century opportunity to
replace aid dependency with economic development. In short, they are trading in
U.S. government handouts—which are scheduled to end in 2023—for the wide-open
promise of Chinese-style capitalism.
The U.S. could have spent the past seven
decades working with Micronesians to develop modern property rights and an
adherence to the rule of law. Washington could have given them the tools to
envision and pursue the political and economic future of their own design.
Instead the U.S. has devoted itself to keeping the lights on in countless
cinder-block government buildings and handing out cheap perishables such as
rice and Spam.
The Chinese plan for Yap is not universally
popular on the island, where locals still use stone money and dugout canoes.
That is particularly true among villagers outside the town center of Colonia,
citizens of the more remote municipalities, and peoples from the nearby Outer
Islands. Still, the project offers something other than the stagnation and
nurtured self-pity of the status quo.
Mr.
Mellen was a Peace Corps volunteer in Yap State from 2002-05. He is the
president of "Habele," a U.S.-based nonprofit serving kindergarten
through 12th-grade-age students across Micronesia.
From
the Wall Street Journal
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