East Asian Development: Will the East Asian Growth Miracle Survive
By (Author) F. Gerard Adams
By (author) Shinichi Ichimura
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Praeger Publishers Inc
28th October 1998
United States
Tertiary Education
Non Fiction
Political economy
Sustainability
338.95
Hardback
224
East Asia's rapid economic growth and the crisis of 1997 have caught the world's attention. As the Asian miracle has turned to meltdown, the critical question has become whether growth will resume. Based on research and conferences at ICSEAD in Kitakyushu, Japan, this book brings together the work of Asian economic development experts. It considers the forces behind the East Asian growth miracle, the process of growth, the effect of saving, and the effect of foreign direct investment and multinationals. Taking an optimistic view, the authors conclude that rapid growth may resume in East Asia once the crisis has been resolved. The authors argue that a growth process links East Asian countries to each other and to the industrial world, and that growth reflects a process that combines capital formation and technical and institutional change. The 1997 crisis grew out of excessively rapid boom and must be handled before growth will resume. But, the authors conclude, once the crisis has been resolved, the linked process of growth supported by appropriate policies, high levels of savings and investment, and foreign investment will allow growth to resume, although perhaps with a different geographic center of gravity.
It is an invaluable resource book with theoretical sources and approaches for economists, business people, researchers, and, most importantly, policymakes for Asian countries.-American Review of China Studies
The book is full of juicy accounts of corruption, political intrigue and scandals....In terms of substance, the authors advance a number of challenging propositions.-Development Bulletin
"The book is full of juicy accounts of corruption, political intrigue and scandals....In terms of substance, the authors advance a number of challenging propositions."-Development Bulletin
"It is an invaluable resource book with theoretical sources and approaches for economists, business people, researchers, and, most importantly, policymakes for Asian countries."-American Review of China Studies
F. GERARD ADAMS recently became McDonald Professor in the College of Business Administration at Northeastern University after a career of forecasting, model building and analysis for nations, industries, and commodity markets at the University of Pennsylvania, where he is Professor Emeritus./e During the past decade his work has focused on East Asian development and crisis. SHINICHI ICHIMURA is Director of the International Center for the Study of East Asian Development in Kitakyushu, Japan./e Previously, he was Professor of Economics at Kyoto University and Vice-Chancellor at Osaka University International.