Avoiding the Apocalypse: The Future of the Two Koreas [ISBN not on www]Peterson Institute, 2000 |
¨Ò¡´éÒ¹ã¹Ë¹Ñ§Ê×Í
¼Å¡Òäé¹ËÒ 1 - 5 ¨Ò¡ 86
˹éÒ
... China 3.600 6.270 37.675 28.000 UN agencies Other humanitarian aid 3.600 6.270 37.675 28.000 KEDO Czech Republic 0.015 0.148 UN agencies 0.020 Other humanitarian aid 0.015 KEDO 0.128 Cyprus 0.003 0.005 UN agencies 0.003 0.005 Other ...
... China 3.600 6.270 37.675 28.000 UN agencies Other humanitarian aid 3.600 6.270 37.675 28.000 KEDO Czech Republic 0.015 0.148 UN agencies 0.020 Other humanitarian aid 0.015 KEDO 0.128 Cyprus 0.003 0.005 UN agencies 0.003 0.005 Other ...
˹éÒ
... China agreed to provide 150,000 MT of food and 40,000 tons of coal . c . 10,000 MT of rice provided to WFP . | | | │││ | | | k . The. d . 150,000 MT of food provided on concessional terms , 150,000 MT of food provided gratis . 500,000 ...
... China agreed to provide 150,000 MT of food and 40,000 tons of coal . c . 10,000 MT of rice provided to WFP . | | | │││ | | | k . The. d . 150,000 MT of food provided on concessional terms , 150,000 MT of food provided gratis . 500,000 ...
˹éÒ 1
... China to its north and west and Japan to its south and east . After repelling a 17th century Manchurian invasion , the 1. Committee on Armed Services and Committee on Foreign Relations , United States Senate . 1951. Military Situation ...
... China to its north and west and Japan to its south and east . After repelling a 17th century Manchurian invasion , the 1. Committee on Armed Services and Committee on Foreign Relations , United States Senate . 1951. Military Situation ...
˹éÒ 2
... China ( 1894-95 ) and then Russia ( 1904-05 ) . The United States was among the Western powers that acquiesced to Japan's seizure of Korea in 1905 and its formal annex- ation in 1910 . During the period of Japanese occupation , the ...
... China ( 1894-95 ) and then Russia ( 1904-05 ) . The United States was among the Western powers that acquiesced to Japan's seizure of Korea in 1905 and its formal annex- ation in 1910 . During the period of Japanese occupation , the ...
˹éÒ 3
... China to enter the war in October under pressure from Stalin in order to prevent a North Korean defeat . By March 1951 , a stalemate emerged , and truce talks , which dragged on for two years , began in June . The conflict ended in 1953 ...
... China to enter the war in October under pressure from Stalin in order to prevent a North Korean defeat . By March 1951 , a stalemate emerged , and truce talks , which dragged on for two years , began in June . The conflict ended in 1953 ...
à¹×éÍËÒ
The Bubble Story | 191 |
The Crisis | 196 |
PostCrisis Developments | 209 |
Recovery | 235 |
Conclusions | 237 |
The Prospect for Successful Reform in the North | 239 |
Reform in the North | 240 |
A General Equilibrium Perspective on Reform | 254 |
10 | |
12 | |
17 | |
45 | |
47 | |
49 | |
61 | |
70 | |
75 | |
121 | |
128 | |
131 | |
133 | |
The Agreed Framework | 139 |
The Suspect Site and the Missile Test | 146 |
Evaluation | 154 |
The SlowMotion Famine in the North | 159 |
The Food Balance | 168 |
Food for Peace | 170 |
The Peoples Republic of Misery | 179 |
The Financial Crisis in the South | 183 |
Financial Fragility | 187 |
The Likelihood of Reform | 269 |
The Implications of North Korean Collapse | 273 |
The German Experience | 274 |
Relevance to Korea | 283 |
A General Equilibrium Perspective on Collapse and Absorption | 289 |
Conceptualizing the Costs and Benefits of Unification | 295 |
Dynamic Results | 298 |
Policy Lessons of the German Experience for South Korea | 306 |
Thinking Beyond the German Case | 308 |
Can the North Muddle Through? | 311 |
Socialism in One Family | 312 |
Muddling Through in Our Own Style | 321 |
Sustainability | 330 |
Conclusions | 335 |
North Korea | 336 |
South Korea | 340 |
Other Actors | 355 |
Final Thoughts | 363 |
References | 365 |
Appendix | 389 |
Index | 393 |
©ºÑºÍ×è¹æ - ´Ù·Ñé§ËÁ´
¤ÓáÅÐÇÅÕ·Õ辺ºèÍÂ
activities additional agencies Agreed agreement agricultural announced appears argues assistance attempt banks began capital central chaebol chapter China Chinese collapse continued countries crisis debt demand discussed domestic East East German economic effect enterprises estimates example exchange existing expected exports famine figure firms forced foreign Fund German given growth humanitarian aid imports income increase indicated industrial initial Institute interest investment issue Japan Japanese KEDO Korean economy labor less liberalization loans military million missile North Korean nuclear observed official opening Organization output peninsula percent political possible problems production reform regard regime relations relatively reported response result sector Seoul share significant social Source South supply tion trade unification Union United Washington