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1 |
ID:
106396
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Publication |
2011.
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Summary/Abstract |
This article considers the policies that can help facilitate rebalancing in ASEAN economies. As the region moves away from policies to combat the effects of the global economic crisis, rebalancing growth becomes essential. Approaches to internal rebalancing, including shifts in current patterns of consumption and investment, as well as external rebalancing strategies, such as exchange rate adjustments and reducing trade costs, are explored as ways to diversify sources of growth. We also argue that regional cooperation, particularly on exchange rate and trade policy, is a key element of any concerted effort to ensuring sustained, long-term regional growth.
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2 |
ID:
101929
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3 |
ID:
149055
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Summary/Abstract |
The rise of mega-regionalism in the Asia-Pacific has become a significant development for the region itself as well as the global trading system. Europe, in particular, has a great deal at stake in this process. This paper considers the economic costs of EU exclusion from Asia-Pacific economic cooperation initiatives.
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4 |
ID:
073335
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Publication |
2006.
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Summary/Abstract |
This paper considers the quantitative effects of the proposed series of bilateral free trade agreements (FTAs) between the United States and qualifying ASEAN countries under the rubric of the Enterprise for ASEAN Initiative (EAI). The study uses several techniques to gauge the economic effects of the EAI, including: (1) an augmented gravity model to ascertain whether or not these FTAs would constitute a natural economic bloc; (2) a summary of the results of a computational general equilibrium (CGE) model; and (3) a novel disaggregated technique to anticipate the economic effects at the product level. All three exercises suggest that the EAI will generate overall positive economic effects for all partners. The study also uses two export-structure similarity techniques to show that intra-ASEAN export competition in the U.S. market is fairly high in certain cases, especially MalaysiaSingapore, but ASEAN countries (besides Singapore) actually compete more with China than each other. These results underscore the importance of a comprehensive EAI agreement in order to prevent trade diversion against individual ASEAN partners, as well as suggesting that the EAI might give the region a competitive edge over its key non-regional competitor (China).
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5 |
ID:
093689
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Publication |
Singapore, ISEAS, 2009.
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Description |
xxiv, 226 p.
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Standard Number |
9789814279345
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Copies: C:1/I:0,R:0,Q:0
Circulation
Accession# | Call# | Current Location | Status | Policy | Location |
054601 | 337.119/PLU 054601 | Main | On Shelf | General | |
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6 |
ID:
171885
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Summary/Abstract |
After President Donald Trump’s ill-advised pullout from the Trans-Pacic Partnership (TPP) and despite the absence of the US, the remaining 11 Asian and Pacic countries agreed on a deal, renamed the Comprehensive and Progressive Agreement for Trans-Pacic Partnership (CPTPP). The accord took effect on 30 December 2018 and provides rigorous, up-to-date rules for Asia−Pacic trade, but excludes the region’s two biggest economies: the US and China. In this paper, we calculate that Chinese membership in the CPTPP would yield large economic and political benefits to China and other members. The CPTPP, in its current form, would generate global income gains estimated at US$147bn annually. If China were to join, these gains would quadruple to US$632bn, or a quarter more than in the original TPP with the US. But to join the CPTPP, China would have to undertake unprecedented reforms and manage complex political challenges
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