Development Centre Studies Policy Coherence Towards East Asia Development Challenges for OECD Countries: Development Challenges for OECD CountriesOECD Publishing, 17 พ.ย. 2005 - 620 หน้า This book looks at the impact of OECD-country policies on East Asia in a variety of areas: trade, investment, agriculture, finance and aid, as well as macroeconomic policies and regional co-operation. Further, and most importantly, the book examines the interaction of these OECD-country policies and their coherence with each other. This book is part of an attempt by the OECD to establish guidelines for defining and adopting coherent policies conducive to development outside the OECD area, thus contributing to the world-wide search for answers to questions of poverty reduction and growth with equity. It is also part of an attempt to provide policy makers in both developing and OECD countries with the tools to formulate policies in harmony with each other to foster the integration of poorer countries into the international economy. "This is an indispensable source of insight for all scholars seeking fresh and authoritative information and analysis of the still unfinished job to improve the coherence of OECD countries' policies toward East Asia after the crisis." --Professor Rolf J. Langhammer "This is a must read volume for anyone who would like to learn seriously about relevant policy coherence for development and actual practices for East Asia's outward-oriented growth within an increasingly integrated world." --Professor Suthiphand Chirathivat |
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... inflows of technology and know-how from more advanced countries and enhances competition in domestic markets. Although a significant proportion of FDI flows into developing countries in the 1960s and 1970s went into natural resource ...
... inflows have become increasingly important. This contrasts sharply with Japan, Korea and Chinese Taipei in the 1970s and 1980s, which relied much less on FDI packages and more on licensing arrangements to import foreign technology. Only ...
... inflows through various schemes of preferential treatment and the beginning of successive real effective devaluation of the Chinese currency (Fukasaku and Wall, 1994). Perhaps the most dramatic turnaround of the “Reform and Opening-up ...
... inflows into China's manufacturing sector have concentrated heavily in the so - called “ labour - intensive ... inflow of unskilled foreign workers ( Chalamwong , 2005 , in this volume ) . Migrant remittances have played an important ...
... inflows of private capital in the mid-1990s25. Fuelled by such capital inflows, private credit booms created pre-crisis vulnerabilities in the region. A greater availability of international private funds was considered a good thing for ...