Managing fluctuations in U.S.-China relations: World politics, national priorities, and policy leadership
In: Asian survey: a bimonthly review of contemporary Asian affairs, Band 40, Heft 2, S. 269-295
ISSN: 0004-4687
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In: Asian survey: a bimonthly review of contemporary Asian affairs, Band 40, Heft 2, S. 269-295
ISSN: 0004-4687
World Affairs Online
A theory of political change -- The Confucian authority structure -- Claiming political authority -- State builds nation -- Changing of the guards -- State-led industrialization -- Shifts in authority structure -- Shaping of national political culture -- The logic of political order.
World Affairs Online
In: International Political Economy Ser.
Cover -- Series -- Title -- Copyright -- Contents -- List of Illustrations -- Notes on Contributors -- List of Abbreviations -- 1 Modern Economic Development in Time and Place: Why Japan and China? -- 2 Mapping Japan and China in the World Economic System -- 1 Japan and China -- 2 The shaping of modern world capitalism -- 3 Japan, China, and the East Asian model -- 4 Mapping Japan and China in the world economic system -- 3 Dynamic Comparative Advantage and the Evolution of the Capitalist World System -- 1 Introduction -- 2 Dynamic comparative advantage -- 3 Minsky's fi nancial instability hypothesis and super Minsky cycle -- 4 The rise and fall of the golden age and catching-up industrialization -- 5 The structural crisis of bureaucratic capitalism -- 6 Diversifi cation of bureaucratic capitalism -- 7 The fall of the neoliberal capital accumulation regime -- 8 Conclusion -- 4 Neoliberal and Classical Developmentalism: A Comparative Analysis of the Chinese and Japanese Models of Economic Development -- 1 Japan's classical developmentalism -- 2 China's neoliberal developmentalism -- 3 Comparative analysis of the two development models -- 4 The global conditions of time and place for the classical and neoliberal development models -- 5 The historical origins of China's neoliberal development model -- 6 Challenges in transformation of China's economic model -- 7 Conclusion -- 5 Chinese Developmentalism: Beyond the Japanese Model Marc Lanteigne -- 1 China considers globalization -- 2 Models for Chinese growth -- 3 China adapts to developmentalism -- 4 Beyond developmentalism: The Beijing consensus -- 5 The challenges ahead for China -- 6 Japan's FDI and the Development of the Automobile Industry in China: Firms, Production Structure, and Government -- 1 Introduction -- 2 The global shift of automobile production.
The book examines the political and economic developments in East Asia since the end of the Cold War in an attempt to identify a broad pattern of transition, particularly in terms of the reshaping of the state's relations with forces and institutions in economy, politics and domestic- international interactions. The chapters are organised into three parts: I: The state in the new economy; II: The state in the new politics; III: The state in the new global environment. The contributors find a general pattern of the state's withdrawal from these three areas. But it is not simply that the mark
In: China policy series 32
pt. 1. Contending identities and evolving interests : China in search of itself -- part 2. Transforming wealth and capacity to institutional power, policy outcomes, and political influence -- part 3. The international system and rising power : impact, interaction, and mutual constitution.
In: International political economy series
The impressive, and recent, economic development of Japan and China, has led many to seek understanding beyond the theories of the developmental state, varieties of capitalism, and the world economic system. Leading global scholars on Japan and China provide a comparative analysis of the patterns of modern economic development, their political economy, and the historical and global context of their economic development. Japanese and Chinese experiences of modern economic development are larger than individual theories can make sense of. The experiences of China and Japan point to the fundamental challenge nations have faced in organizing economic and political activities under modern conditions.
In: China policy series, 18
In: China policy series, 18
In: RoutledgeCurzon studies in the growth economies of Asia 56
In: RoutledgeCurzon studies in the growth economies of Asia, 56
Huang examines a recurring pattern of rapid economic growth in East Asia from 1951 to the present and explores how far a single East Asian Growth model can be said to exist. Assessing the various theories put forward to explain the phenomenon and supported by the most comprehensive data, the book finds that methods of institutional enhancement were at the core of the growth. This institutional enhancement affected state structure and functions, economic policy, corporate arrangements, social structure and relations, individual behaviour, and domestic and international interaction. Each of.
In: The Japanese political economy, Band 46, Heft 2-3, S. 200-226
ISSN: 2329-1958
In: International studies review, Band 20, Heft 4, S. 723-724
ISSN: 1468-2486
In: Politics in Pacific Asia, S. 36-59