China and East Asia [[electronic resource] ] : after the Wall Street crisis / / editors, Lam Peng Er, Qin Yaqing, Yang Mu |
Pubbl/distr/stampa | Singapore ; ; Hackensack, NJ, : World Scientific, c2013 |
Descrizione fisica | 1 online resource (331 p.) |
Disciplina | 327.5105 |
Altri autori (Persone) |
LamPeng Er <1959->
QinYaqing <1953-> YangMu |
Collana | Series on contemporary China |
Soggetto topico |
International cooperation
Regionalism - East Asia |
Soggetto genere / forma | Electronic books. |
ISBN |
1-299-28113-3
981-4407-27-5 |
Formato | Materiale a stampa ![]() |
Livello bibliografico | Monografia |
Lingua di pubblicazione | eng |
Nota di contenuto |
CONTENTS; Introduction China and East Asia: After the Wall Street Crisis LAM Peng Er, YANG Mu and QIN Yaqing; Chapter Summaries; Acknowledgments; Bibliography; East Asia's Political and Economic Architecture; Chapter 1 East Asian Regionalism: Architecture, Approach and Attributes QIN Yaqing; I. Architecture: Multi-layered and Pluralistic Governance; II. Approach: ASEAN-led "Processualism"; III. Attributes: Pragmatic Functionalism, Cooperative Multilateralism and Open Regionalism; IV. Powers and the Region: China, Japan and the US; V. East Asian Regionalism: Prospects and Limits
VI. ConclusionBibliography; Chapter 2 China in the Post-Financial Crisis East Asia: Towards a New Regional Economic Order John WONG; I. China's Economic Rise; II. East Asia as a Dynamic Economic Region; III. Towards a China-centric Regional Economic Order; Bibliography; Chapter 3 China as the World's Second Largest Economy: Qualifications and Implications HE Liping; I. Ranking of Nations' Economic Size: The Factor of Exchange Rate and Price; II. Is China Today as Large as Japan in 1980?; III. How will the Chinese Economy Rely on the Outside World? IV. China as the World's Second Largest Economy: Some ImplicationsPostscript; Bibliography; Chapter 4 Trade and Investment Facilitation in East Asia: Development, Challenges and Cooperation FAN Ying and LI Wentao; I. TIF Achievements and Latest Developments in East Asia; 1. TIF cooperation under APEC; 2. TIF cooperation under AFTA; 3. TIF cooperation under GMS; 4. TIF cooperation among China, Japan and ROK; 5. TIF cooperation under bilateral free trade agreements in East Asia; II. Obstacles and Challenges for Further TIF Cooperation 1. Varying levels of infrastructure among countries in the region, resulting in hardware insufficiency for furthering TIF cooperation in East Asia2. Disparity in development levels leading to different perceptions about TIF and different capabilities to participate in TIF; 3. High cost of TIF unaffordable for comparatively less developed countries in the region; 4. Complex international investment policies with different standards in the region; 5. Difficulties in quantifiable assessment of TIF costs and effects III. A Framework and Roadmap for East Asia Trade and Investment Facilitation Cooperation1. Goals; 1.1 General goals; 1.2 Specific goals; 2. Guiding principles for cooperation; 2.1 Being complete; 2.2 Being flexible; 2.3 Being transparent; 2.4 Being comparable; 2.5 Being inclusive; 3. Approaches of cooperation; 3.1 Consensus-based collective action; 3.2 Pathfinder pattern; 3.3 Narrow the development gap through capacity building; 3.4 Synergy of the public sector, the private sector and academia; 3.5 Quantitative assessment mechanism 3.6 Steering committee for East Asian trade and investment facilitation cooperation |
Record Nr. | UNINA-9910465409603321 |
Singapore ; ; Hackensack, NJ, : World Scientific, c2013 | ||
![]() | ||
Lo trovi qui: Univ. Federico II | ||
|
China and East Asia [[electronic resource] ] : after the Wall Street crisis / / editors, Lam Peng Er, Qin Yaqing, Yang Mu |
Pubbl/distr/stampa | Singapore ; ; Hackensack, NJ, : World Scientific, c2013 |
Descrizione fisica | 1 online resource (331 p.) |
Disciplina | 327.5105 |
Altri autori (Persone) |
LamPeng Er <1959->
QinYaqing <1953-> YangMu |
Collana | Series on contemporary China |
Soggetto topico |
International cooperation
Regionalism - East Asia |
ISBN |
1-299-28113-3
981-4407-27-5 |
Formato | Materiale a stampa ![]() |
Livello bibliografico | Monografia |
Lingua di pubblicazione | eng |
Nota di contenuto |
CONTENTS; Introduction China and East Asia: After the Wall Street Crisis LAM Peng Er, YANG Mu and QIN Yaqing; Chapter Summaries; Acknowledgments; Bibliography; East Asia's Political and Economic Architecture; Chapter 1 East Asian Regionalism: Architecture, Approach and Attributes QIN Yaqing; I. Architecture: Multi-layered and Pluralistic Governance; II. Approach: ASEAN-led "Processualism"; III. Attributes: Pragmatic Functionalism, Cooperative Multilateralism and Open Regionalism; IV. Powers and the Region: China, Japan and the US; V. East Asian Regionalism: Prospects and Limits
VI. ConclusionBibliography; Chapter 2 China in the Post-Financial Crisis East Asia: Towards a New Regional Economic Order John WONG; I. China's Economic Rise; II. East Asia as a Dynamic Economic Region; III. Towards a China-centric Regional Economic Order; Bibliography; Chapter 3 China as the World's Second Largest Economy: Qualifications and Implications HE Liping; I. Ranking of Nations' Economic Size: The Factor of Exchange Rate and Price; II. Is China Today as Large as Japan in 1980?; III. How will the Chinese Economy Rely on the Outside World? IV. China as the World's Second Largest Economy: Some ImplicationsPostscript; Bibliography; Chapter 4 Trade and Investment Facilitation in East Asia: Development, Challenges and Cooperation FAN Ying and LI Wentao; I. TIF Achievements and Latest Developments in East Asia; 1. TIF cooperation under APEC; 2. TIF cooperation under AFTA; 3. TIF cooperation under GMS; 4. TIF cooperation among China, Japan and ROK; 5. TIF cooperation under bilateral free trade agreements in East Asia; II. Obstacles and Challenges for Further TIF Cooperation 1. Varying levels of infrastructure among countries in the region, resulting in hardware insufficiency for furthering TIF cooperation in East Asia2. Disparity in development levels leading to different perceptions about TIF and different capabilities to participate in TIF; 3. High cost of TIF unaffordable for comparatively less developed countries in the region; 4. Complex international investment policies with different standards in the region; 5. Difficulties in quantifiable assessment of TIF costs and effects III. A Framework and Roadmap for East Asia Trade and Investment Facilitation Cooperation1. Goals; 1.1 General goals; 1.2 Specific goals; 2. Guiding principles for cooperation; 2.1 Being complete; 2.2 Being flexible; 2.3 Being transparent; 2.4 Being comparable; 2.5 Being inclusive; 3. Approaches of cooperation; 3.1 Consensus-based collective action; 3.2 Pathfinder pattern; 3.3 Narrow the development gap through capacity building; 3.4 Synergy of the public sector, the private sector and academia; 3.5 Quantitative assessment mechanism 3.6 Steering committee for East Asian trade and investment facilitation cooperation |
Record Nr. | UNINA-9910792054803321 |
Singapore ; ; Hackensack, NJ, : World Scientific, c2013 | ||
![]() | ||
Lo trovi qui: Univ. Federico II | ||
|