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Burmese Way to Socialism

 
Wikipedia: Burmese Way to Socialism
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the History of Burma series

Early history of Burma
Pyu city-states (c. 100 BC–c. 840 AD)
Mon kingdoms (9th–11th, 13th–16th, 18th c.)
Bagan dynasty (849–1287, 1st Empire)
Ava (1364–1555)
Pegu (1287–1539, 1747–1757)
Mrauk U (1434–1784)
Toungoo dynasty (1486–1752, 2nd Empire)
Konbaung dynasty (1752–1885, 3rd Empire)
Wars with Britain (1824–1826, 1852, 1885)
British Arakan (1824–1852)
British Tenasserim (1824–1852)
British Lower Burma (1852–1886)
British Upper Burma (1885–1886)
British rule in Burma (1824–1942, 1945–1948)
Nationalist movement in Burma (after 1886)
Ba Maw
Aung San
Japanese occupation of Burma (1942–1945)
Democratic period (1948–1962)
U Nu and U Thant
1st military rule (1962–1989)
Ne Win
8888 Uprising (1988)
Aung San Suu Kyi
2nd military rule (1989–present)
Saffron Revolution (2007)
Cyclone Nargis (2008)
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The Burmese Way to Socialism (also known as the Burmese Road to Socialism) is the name of the ideology of Burmese ruler, Ne Win, who ruled the country from 1962 to 1988. It included such ideals as the nationalisation of industries, repression of minorities, and a police state. However, it also encouraged more unorthodox views. These included a severe isolationism, expulsion of foreigners, discouragement of tourists and closing off of the economy. Ne Win's ideology also encouraged "bona fide" religion to make the people more selfless. In practice this meant encouraging or forcing a state-sanctioned form of Buddhism, although initially it claimed to favour religion generally rather than any specific religion. In practice Ne Win also relied on numerology in his system,[citation needed] but this was not officially part of it.

It greatly increased poverty, isolation,[1][2] and is described as "disastrous".[3] Some say it increased domestic stability and keeping Burma from being as entangled in the Cold War struggles that affected other Southeast Asian nations.[4][5] Ne Win's later attempt to make the currency based in denominations divisible by 9, a number he considered lucky[6] proved purely negative and led the military to revolt. This caused the authoritarian "Burmese Way to Socialism" to be replaced by a new authoritarian system.

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