Die folgenden Links führen aus den jeweiligen lokalen Bibliotheken zum Volltext:
Alternativ können Sie versuchen, selbst über Ihren lokalen Bibliothekskatalog auf das gewünschte Dokument zuzugreifen.
Bei Zugriffsproblemen kontaktieren Sie uns gern.
19 Ergebnisse
Sortierung:
In: Richard Snape Lecture, Productivity Commission, Melbourne November 22, 2010
SSRN
In: Southeast Asian affairs, Band 1992, Heft 1, S. 140-159
ISSN: 1793-9135
In: Trade and development
The recently launched Doha round of trade talks will have profound implications for economic growth in the developed and developing world. Here a team of authors from developing and developed countries in the Asia-Pacific identify ways in which progress might be made on the key negotiating topics
In: Economics and finance in Indonesia: EFI, Band 56, Heft 1, S. 3
ISSN: 2442-9260
.
Japan's Future in East Asia and the Pacific takes a 'big-picture' approach to Japan's economic place in East Asia alongside that of China. It analyses Japan's successes and experiments in trade policy as well as its failures in macro-economic policy. Japan's diplomatic and economic integration strategies are also examined for their impact on East Asia and on Australia. The collection assesses China's growth and dynamism and questions the nature of the competition for economic influence between Japan and China. Contributors to Japan's Future in East Asia and the Pacific are all graduates of The Australian National University who are making their mark in the region as scholars and economists on East Asian and Pacific affairs.
This note commemorates and celebrates the life and contribution of M. Hadi Soesastro, a Bulletin board member who passed away on 4 May 2010. Hadi was arguably Indonesia's leading public intellectual in the fields of international economic policy and political economy, ASEAN economic cooperation, and East Asian economic integration. He made seminal contributions in these fields, and on the political economy of reform in Indonesia, the economic development of East Timor, and energy economics. He also played a major role in institutional development, most notably at the Centre for Strategic and International Studies, and in many other official, academic and research endeavours in Indonesia and East Asia.
BASE
This note commemorates and celebrates the life and contribution of M. Hadi Soesastro, a Bulletin board member who passed away on 4 May 2010. Hadi was arguably Indonesia's leading public intellectual in the fields of international economic policy and political economy, ASEAN economic cooperation, and East Asian economic integration. He made seminal contributions in these fields, and on the political economy of reform in Indonesia, the economic development of East Timor, and energy economics. He also played a major role in institutional development, most notably at the Centre for Strategic and International Studies, and in many other official, academic and research endeavours in Indonesia and East Asia.
BASE
In: IMF Working Paper, S. 1-35
SSRN
In: The developing economies: the journal of the Institute of Developing Economies, Tokyo, Japan, Band 38, Heft 4, S. 454-489
ISSN: 1746-1049
In: Capitalism & Society, Band 15, Heft 1
SSRN
The Republic of Indonesia's former Minister of Trade and former Minister of Tourism and Creative Economy, Professor Mari Pangestu, talks about the country's resilience, and going beyond the 'new normal', in this interview with Philip Zerrillo.
BASE
In: Asian perspective, Band 5, Heft 1, S. 26-47
ISSN: 2288-2871
In: World Scientific Studies in International Economics Ser. v.13
In: World Scientific studies in international economics v. 13
Key Features:Indonesian Trade Minister Mari Pangestu is a co-editor and contributorAn up-to-date volume, relevant to today's trade policy questions, that will be of interest to policy makersComplements material from textbooks on trade policy used at upper undergraduate and postgraduate levels.
Even a year or two ago, observers could have been relatively sanguine about the boom of interest in free trade agreements (FTAs). Progress was much slower than people originally expected, and negotiations seemed to drag on without agreement being reached. That situation has now changed. The large economies – not just the United States but also China, Japan and South Korea – are pursuing FTAs. Motivations apparently include their contribution to domestic and international political targets, the mobilisation of reform and dealing with new types of impediments in order to intensify trade flows in the region. ASEAN members are also actively involved but there are doubts about ASEAN's capacity to reach a consensus on trade policy issues. While its members might hope otherwise, a hub-and-spoke outcome in which ASEAN members make up the spokes, and not the hub, is a plausible scenario, and one of the worst in terms of a regional trading regime. We therefore argue the case for the application of a new set of principles to provide a framework for risk management, including progress in the World Trade Organization (WTO) on liberalisation, new WTO rules on regional agreements, higher levels of transparency, and more work on other forms of agreement to facilitate trade. Overall, multilateralisation of preferential tariff reductions should be the main benchmark in any new set of principles for risk management in the tactic of trading with favourites.
BASE