Asian economic development
Recommended readings (Machine generated): 1.Tetsuji Okazaki and Masahiro Okuno-Fujiwara (1999), 'Japan's Present-Day Economic System and Its Historical Origin', in The Japanese Economic System and Its Historical Origins, Oxford, UK and New York, NY, USA: Oxford University Press, 1-37[...
Ausführliche Beschreibung
Recommended readings (Machine generated): 1.Tetsuji Okazaki and Masahiro Okuno-Fujiwara (1999), 'Japan's Present-Day Economic System and Its Historical Origin', in The Japanese Economic System and Its Historical Origins, Oxford, UK and New York, NY, USA: Oxford University Press, 1-37[37] -- 2.Dwight H. Perkins (2015), 'The Historical Foundations of East Asian Development', in East Asian Development: Foundations and Strategies, Cambridge, Mass: Harvard University Press, 14-47[34] -- 3.Louis Putterman (1992),'Dualism and Reform in China', Economic Development and Cultural Change, 40 (3), April, 467-93[27] -- 4.B.H. Farmer (1993), 'The British Period, the Coming of Independence and Partition', in An Introduction to South Asia: Second Edition, Chapter 3, London, UK and New York, NY, USA: Routledge, 26-46, 174-6[24] -- 5.Kaushik Basu (2018), 'A Short History of India's Economy: A Chapter in the Asian Drama', WIDER Working Paper 2018/124, United Nations University, World Institute for Developmental Research, i-ii, 1-26[28] -- 6.Michael Beckley, Yusaku Horiuchi and Jennifer M. Miller (2018), 'America's Role in the Making of Japan's Economic Miracle', Journal of East Asian Studies, 18 (1), March, 1-21[21] -- 7.Mushtaq H. Khan (2018), 'Institutions and Asia's Development: The Role of Norms and Organizational Power', WIDER Working Paper 2018/132, United Nations University, World Institute for Developmental Research, i-ii, 1-20[22] -- 8.Dwight H. Perkins (2004), 'Corporate Governance, Industrial Policy, and Rules of Law', in Shahid Yusuf, M. Anjun Altaf and Kaoru Nabeshima (eds), Global Change and East Asian Policy Initiatives, Washington DC: World Bank, 293-336[44] -- 9.Stephan Haggard (2004), 'Institutions and Growth in East Asia', Studies in Comparative International Development, 38 (4), Winter, 53-81[29] -- 10.Gustav Ranis (1995), 'Another Look at the East Asian Miracle', The World Bank Economic Review, 9 (3), September, 509-34[26] -- 11.Lawrence J. Lau, Yingyi Qian and Gérard Roland (2000), 'Reform Without Losers: An Interpretation of China's Dual-Track Approach to Transition', Journal of Political Economy, 108 (1), February, 120-43[24] -- 12.Chen Ling and Barry Naughton (2016), 'An Institutionalized Policy-Making Mechanism: China's Return to Techno-Industrial Policy', Research Policy, 45 (10), December, 2138-52[15] -- 13.Atul Kohli (1994), 'Where do High Growth Political Economies Come From? The Japanese Lineage of Korea's "Developmental State"', World Development, 22 (9), September, 1269-93[25] -- 14.Ha-Joon Chang (1993), 'The Political Economy of Industrial Policy in Korea', Cambridge Journal of Economics, 17 (2), June, 131-57[27] -- 15.James Riedel (2015), 'Lessons for Last Comers from Vietnam's Transition', Journal of Southeast Asian Economies, 32 (1), 125-39[15] -- 16.Ronald Findlay, Cyn-Young Park, Jean-Pierre A. Verbiest (2016), 'Myanmar: Building Economic Foundations', Asian-Pacific Economic Literature, 30 (1), May, 42-64[23] -- 17.Sukhamoy Chakravarty (1987), 'Foundation of India's Development Strategy: The Nehru-Mahalanobis Approach', in (ed), Development Planning: The Indian Experience, Chapter 2, Delhi, India: Oxford University Press, 7-18[12] -- 18.Arvind Panagariya (2018), 'India: Three and a Half Years of Modinomics', Working Paper 2018-01, Deepak and Neera Raj Center on Indian Economic Policies, New York, NY USA: Columbia University, i-ii, 1-34[36] -- 19.Amartya Sen (2005), 'Democracy and Secularism in India', in Kaushik Basu (ed.), India's Emerging Economy: Performance and Prospects in the 1900s and Beyond, Cambridge, MA: MIT Press, 35-47[13] Ausführliche Beschreibung