ANZUS Economics: Economic Trends and Relations among Australia, New Zealand, and the United States
By (Author) Richard W. Baker
Edited by Gary R. Hawke
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Praeger Publishers Inc
30th November 1992
United States
Tertiary Education
Non Fiction
International relations
330.9
Hardback
276
This work is the second in a series examining the changing nature of one of the United States most important relationships, the ANZUS Alliance, linking the US, Australia and New Zealand. The volume describes the evolution of the three countries' respective domestic economic structures, international economic orientations, and relationships with each other in the period since World War II. The study concludes that the most significant common economic interest of the three is the preservation and strengthening of an open international economic order and trading system, an interest sorely tested in current difficult economic times. Still, the experts here find that Australia, New Zealand and the US must match trends toward greater economic interdependence with workable mechanisms and concerted action to achieve their truly common interests in the international economic system. This work should be of interest to scholars in international relations generally, and to those in international economic systems, specifically.
RICHARD W. BAKER is a Research Associate in the International Relations Program of the East-West Center in Honolulu, Hawaii. He is the editor of Australia, New Zealand and the United States: Internal Change and Alliance Relations in the ANZUS States (Praeger, 1991). GARY R. HAWKE is Professor of Economic History at Victoria University of Wellington in New Zealand.