Pacific-Asia and the Future of the World-System
By (Author) Ravi Palat
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Praeger Publishers Inc
30th March 1993
United States
Tertiary Education
Non Fiction
International economics
339
Hardback
224
By the late 1970s, scholars and journalists were quick to proclaim the dawn of a new era - "the Age of the Pacific". The 1980s - with the economic growth of Japan and the "Four Dragons", the industrialisation of several Southeast Asian states, the growth of new industries on the west coast of North America and decline of industry in the US Midwest and Northeast, and the collapse of centrally-planned economies - seemed to confirm this prognosis. Yet, despite consensus on these issues, there are still questions regarding the future directions of an impending Pacific century. This contributed volume considers those questions from a world-historical perspective, with one chapter from the viewpoint of a friendly critic of that perspective. The work opens with an introductory section, including Ravi Arvind Palat's overview, and a consideration of the amorphous nature of the term "Pacific Rim"; part two continues to analyse the changing patterns of the relational networks along Asia's Pacific parameters as integral parts of the ongoing restructuring of the capitalist world-economy; while part three examines the individual trajectories of two Asian giants - India and China. The final section explores how changes in the patterning of production processes have contoured the nature of anti-systemic movements in the 1980s.
RAVI ARVIND PALAT is Assistant Professor in the Asian Studies Program at the University of Hawaii at Manoa.