It doesn't. Should it? That wasn't the question I asked, neither the statement I made. I said that industrial development of all colonies was retarded relative to the metropole.PainRack wrote:So, just HOW does it answer the question of why Malaya and Singapore received more industrial development than the Gold Coast or India?
"Rubbish statement"? Really? I'm not saying a certain settlement - a city - would've been richer without colonization, but it is quite possible that without foreign interference industrial development of Asia wouldn't be so seriously lagging behind. I'm looking at the bigger picture. Singapore may not necessarily become the industrial center it happened to be in reality - some other city might have taken its place - but it is all irrelevant. To see the real outcomes people would have to change too much of history.PainRack wrote:You can't just claim colonial possessions were poor during British era, thus,the British held back their economic potential and sabotaged it as can be seen by their success post colonialisation. That's a rubbish statement for Malaysia and Singapore.
However, it is true that colonial period growth in Asia was generally lower than post-colonial growth, on the average. Unless I'm seriously mistaken here. It may be false for Africa, but it is true for Asia. The very fact that Asia is for the first time in recent history expanding economically with such speed to actually restore its share of world production that it had before the Great Divergence indicates that independence has been overall a beneficial development for Asia, while its colonization, subsequent infighting and foreign conquests led to Asia's share of world production to decline massively.
I am not sure how one can concentrate on the minor aspects of whether city X or Y would be more developed in an alternative scenario and not notice the huge decline in Asia's share of world production which just somehow coincided with colonization and its massive expansion back to normal levels relative to population size after regaining independence. Colonialist apologists would of course try to paint this massive trend as a mere coincidence, but such huge coincidences on such a vast territory? Bullshit in my view. When foreigners that directly controlled ports and some key areas left Asia to its own devices and the infighting more or less stopped, key ports resumed operation under control of independent nations and Asian growth in general started accelerating.