AuthorDrysdale, Peter
TitleInternational economic pluralism : Economic policy in East Asia and the Pacific / Peter Drysdale
Imprint Australia : Allen & Unwin Australia Pty Ltd, 1988
Edition 1st ed.
Descript 294 p. : chart ; 23 cm.

CONTENT

Perspectives : Protective policies within regional economies. -- The global trade policy regime. -- Nature of the policy issues : National interest and the international community. -- Domains for international collective action. -- The nature of regional economic cooperation. -- The logic of collective choice. -- Economic power and sovereignty: coercive or collective action. -- Challenges to economic sovereignty. -- The Pacific economy : The shape of the Pacific economy. -- The emergence of Pacific cooperation. -- Other Pacific economic links. -- Political links and shared Pacific interests. -- Central policy issues. -- East Asian and Pacific trade interdependence : Analysis of trade intensity. -- Complementarity and bias in Pacific trade. -- Trade intensity and comparative advantage. -- Proximity and regional trade bias. -- Energy and resource trade security : Economic and trade security national resources and comparative advantage. -- Pacific trade in mineral and energy. -- Security and the structure of minerals markets. -- Food and agricultural trade security. -- Collective choice and the energy regime. -- Policy requirements for resource trade security. -- Outward-looking developing strategies : East Asian industralisation and the trade share. -- The dynamics of outward-looking growth. -- The transformation of Pacific trade structure. -- Access for Pacific industrial exports. -- Trade prospects for policy commitments. -- Financing Pacific development : The structure of Pacific capital flows. -- Managing Pacific financial interdependence. -- Foreign capital and East Asian development. -- Japan and Pacific sources of capital. -- Concessionary development finance. -- The growth of bank lending. -- Integration European style? : Alternative routes to integration. -- The free trade area proposal. -- Regional organization. -- OPTAD, and OPTAD revisited. -- Economic diplomacy and the pratice of cooperation. -- Goals for Pacific cooperation. -- The trade regime as an object of policy. -- The GATT legacy under challenge. -- The principal Pacific players. -- Regionalism without discrimination. -- Pacific priorities in trade policy. -- Heterogeneous values and common preferences. -- Coalition for collective action. -- Whither the rules of trade?. -- Policy strategy.


SUBJECT

  1. Pacific Area -- Economic policy
  2. East Asia -- Economic policy
  3. East Asia -- Economic integration
  4. Pacific Area -- Economic integration

LOCATIONCALL#STATUS
Political Science Library338.95 D811I CHECK SHELVES