
The Pacific Rim is a dynamic and diverse economic region, containing the world's three largest economies (US, China, and Japan), as well as many of the world's fastest growing and emerging market economies. Trans-Pacific economic exchange, including trade and capital movements, has been an important driver of the world economy, simultaneosly contributing to growth and global imbalances. Within the Asia-Pacific region there has been an increase in trade and investment, as well as the development of value chain linkages through outsourcing and foreign direct investment. The new debate in this region centers around managing this economic integration and the vagaries of globalization while supporting continued high growth.The Oxford Handbook of the Economics of the Pacific Rim provides institutional and historical perspectives on the Pacific Rim's unique economic situation, considers various dimensions of economic policies, and examines the growth process and specific challenges to growth. It discusses the key theme of regional economic integration in its many dimensions, including trade, investment, monetary coordination, crisis management, and value networks.
This volume investigates the complex economic dynamics, growth trajectories, and integration challenges defining the Pacific Rim region. Editors Inderjit Kaur and Nirvikar Singh compile contributions from leading scholars to analyze how the region's diverse economies—ranging from established powers like the United States and Japan to emerging markets—interact through trade, capital flows, and value chain networks. The text provides a comprehensive framework for understanding the institutional and historical factors that shape regional economic policy and global market stability.
What You Will Find
Experts recognize this handbook as a comprehensive reference for researchers and policymakers interested in the structural economic shifts within the Asia-Pacific region. Readers frequently note the academic density of the prose, which serves as a rigorous foundation for understanding the complexities of trans-Pacific economic exchange.
Page Count:
738
Publication Date:
2013-01-01
Publisher:
Oxford University Press
ISBN-10:
0199383995
ISBN-13:
9780199383993
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