No.
If you respect and support your children as individuals then they will respect you in turn, and they will respect others.
"Tiger" parents treat their children like possessions, and can frankly take a running jump onto a bollard and **** themselves with it.
Also I have never, and will never, raise my hand to my children as discipline. Not even the lightest tap. "How hard" is totally irrelevant, it's the intention behind it that's wrong and that's upsetting. My and my 6-year-old daughter actually play-fight fairly roughly, but I'd never EVER even grab her or smack her hand in anger or as punishment.
For one, it's simply disrespectful of them as a person (which children are, people forget that too easily). Secondly, it teaches them absolutely nothing. The child learns to "behave" based on the motivation of not angering or upsetting their "Tiger parent", out of fear of punishment... which means that their behaviour is totally different (and often destructive / unsafe) as soon as their parent is no longer around. You need to talk to them and make them understand the WHY, not have them blindly adhere to "because I say so".
Case in point; A child who properly understands road safety and the danger of them being hurt or killed on a busy road will be cautious on roads at all times. A child who knows that they're not supposed to run into the road "because their mum will be angry and will punish them" might well run straight into the road if mum isn't with them to see them do it.
This works as an allegory for later life, too. Kids who hit adulthood having been respected, talked to like adults their whole lives, and allowed to explore will be ready for independence when it comes. Kids who hit 18 having done everything they're told their entire life, scared of the consequences of upsetting Tiger Mummy, end up leaving home (e.g. for University) and as soon as they have that independence they go ****ing wild.