Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of figures
- List of tables
- Contributors to this volume
- Preface
- Abbreviations
- Symbols
- 1 Economic Development in East Asia: Doing What Comes Naturally?
- 2 Industrialization and Growth: Alternative Views of East Asia
- 3 The Role of Trade Policies in the Industrialization of Rapidly Growing Asian Developing Countries
- 4 The Role of Foreign Capital in East Asian Industrialization, Growth and Development
- 5 The Role of Government in Overcoming Market Failure: Taiwan, Republic of Korea and Japan
- 6 Growth, Industrialization and Economic Structure: Latin America and East Asia Compared
- 7 Ideology and Industrialization in India and East Asia
- 8 Japan: Model for East Asian Industrialization?
- 9 The Politics of Industrialization in the Republic of Korea and Taiwan
- 10 Economic Growth in the Asean Region: the Political Underpinnings
- 11 Culture and Industrialization
- Bibliography
- Index
Preface
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 06 October 2009
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of figures
- List of tables
- Contributors to this volume
- Preface
- Abbreviations
- Symbols
- 1 Economic Development in East Asia: Doing What Comes Naturally?
- 2 Industrialization and Growth: Alternative Views of East Asia
- 3 The Role of Trade Policies in the Industrialization of Rapidly Growing Asian Developing Countries
- 4 The Role of Foreign Capital in East Asian Industrialization, Growth and Development
- 5 The Role of Government in Overcoming Market Failure: Taiwan, Republic of Korea and Japan
- 6 Growth, Industrialization and Economic Structure: Latin America and East Asia Compared
- 7 Ideology and Industrialization in India and East Asia
- 8 Japan: Model for East Asian Industrialization?
- 9 The Politics of Industrialization in the Republic of Korea and Taiwan
- 10 Economic Growth in the Asean Region: the Political Underpinnings
- 11 Culture and Industrialization
- Bibliography
- Index
Summary
This book was conceived in response to widespread interest in the economic success of the East Asian market-oriented economies. Whether growth and development are judged in purely economic terms or by a combination of economic and welfare criteria, this group of East Asian countries has established a clear lead over other developing countries. Despite the world-wide recession of the early 1980s, two East Asian economies – Hong Kong and Singapore – are catching up with the high income industrial countries and several other East Asian market economies are poised to do so. The economic performance of the Republic of Korea and Thailand has been particularly striking for they were both among the very low income countries of the world in the 1950s. Even the Philippines, a poor performer among this group of countries, has a better than average record among developing countries.
The East Asian countries range in population size from city states to middle-sized countries and have widely divergent resource endowments and economic histories, but they have faced the same international environment as other countries. Why is their economic performance so successful?
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Achieving Industrialization in East Asia , pp. xv - xviPublisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 1988
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