Ten years ago the countries of Southeast Asia were being hailed, together with the 'newly industrialising countries' (NICs) of Asia and Latin America, including Hong Kong, Taiwan, South Korea, Brazil and Mexico, as the shining lights of the international economy. All were maintaining high rates of growth, and industrial deepening was taking place. According to a number of theorists, and especially those associated with the World Bank and the International Monetary Fund (IMP), they were showing the way forward for the less-developed nations-industrialisation was possible, and a new generation of industrial nations was in the making (Garnaut, ed., 1980; Kreuger, 1982)
International economic power (the ability to shape rules of global economic conduct) needs to be und...
[Extract] In 1990 there were signs that Japan might not be able to sustain its economic dynamic, but...
This article is presented before the 19th Annual Meeting of the Philippine Economic Society at the M...
Hong Kong, Singapore, Korea, and Taiwan (the Asian newly industrialized economies [NIEs]) were the e...
The current global economic crisis has been disastrous for many millions of people. But it has also ...
The East Asian countries achieved extraordinarily fast economic growth during the last four decades...
"In sum, it is undeniable that the NIC strategy of export-oriented growth delivered high-speed growt...
Already in the 1960s the four $.little dragons$- Hong Kong, Singapore, South Korea and Taiwan starte...
This book provides a much-needed review of Asia\u27s economic growth and its challenges in the conte...
Typical of the opposing trends that have been a part of the decade 1989 to 1999, many of the states ...
Since Independence in 1957 Malaysia’s economic development strategy can be described as one that es...
Abstract The East Asian countries achieved extraordinarily fast economic growth during the last ...
In international circles, the concern of the day is the state of the world economy. There is a gener...
In the past twenty to thirty years, only a few of the more than 140 developing countries in the worl...
For more about the East-West Center, see http://www.eastwestcenter.org/The economic crisis of 2008–0...
International economic power (the ability to shape rules of global economic conduct) needs to be und...
[Extract] In 1990 there were signs that Japan might not be able to sustain its economic dynamic, but...
This article is presented before the 19th Annual Meeting of the Philippine Economic Society at the M...
Hong Kong, Singapore, Korea, and Taiwan (the Asian newly industrialized economies [NIEs]) were the e...
The current global economic crisis has been disastrous for many millions of people. But it has also ...
The East Asian countries achieved extraordinarily fast economic growth during the last four decades...
"In sum, it is undeniable that the NIC strategy of export-oriented growth delivered high-speed growt...
Already in the 1960s the four $.little dragons$- Hong Kong, Singapore, South Korea and Taiwan starte...
This book provides a much-needed review of Asia\u27s economic growth and its challenges in the conte...
Typical of the opposing trends that have been a part of the decade 1989 to 1999, many of the states ...
Since Independence in 1957 Malaysia’s economic development strategy can be described as one that es...
Abstract The East Asian countries achieved extraordinarily fast economic growth during the last ...
In international circles, the concern of the day is the state of the world economy. There is a gener...
In the past twenty to thirty years, only a few of the more than 140 developing countries in the worl...
For more about the East-West Center, see http://www.eastwestcenter.org/The economic crisis of 2008–0...
International economic power (the ability to shape rules of global economic conduct) needs to be und...
[Extract] In 1990 there were signs that Japan might not be able to sustain its economic dynamic, but...
This article is presented before the 19th Annual Meeting of the Philippine Economic Society at the M...