An East Asian renaissance : ideas for economic growth

Bibliographic Information

An East Asian renaissance : ideas for economic growth

Indermit Gill, Homi Kharas ; together with Deepak Bhattasali ... [et al.]

World Bank, c2007

  • : [pbk.]
  • : [hard]
  • overview : pbk

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Note

Includes bibliographical references and index

[Text] (pbk., hard): xv, 365 p

Overview: xv, 365 p. -- "This overview also appears in the full volume, An East Asian Renaissance ..., which will be published in March, 2007"--T.p. verso

Description and Table of Contents
Volume

: [pbk.] ISBN 9780821367476

Description

East Asia is a very different region today as compared with the early nineties, the place described in the book ""The East Asia Miracle"", previously published by the World Bank. China has emerged as the biggest development story during the nineties even as the region was wracked by the most severe economic crisis of the decade. While the rest of the world is trying to adjust, East Asia has already changed from a set of countries that rapidly integrated with the world to a region that is also aggressively exploiting the sources of dynamism that lie within Asia. The challenge now is to complement international with domestic integration. This book assesses the options for ensuring that East Asia's ""third integration"" is as potent as the first two.
Volume

: [hard] ISBN 9780821372036

Description

An East Asian Renaissance is a major study on the recent economic growth in East Asia. Every four years the World Bank has published similar analysis beginning with the seminal, ""The East Asian Miracle"" in 1993. Three major developments since the early 1990s call for a reexamination of East Asian growth: the meteoric rise of China that has emerged as the biggest and most recent development story; the economic crisis of the nineties; and the rapid growth of cities such as Singapore, Hong Kong, Shanghai or Tokyo. In this timely book the authors address how development strategies should be adapted in response to these changes and how the region can complement international with domestic integration.

by "Nielsen BookData"

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