Japan and Dynamic East Asian Economies under Globalisation
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概要
- 論文の詳細を見る
This article discusses the overall implications of new industrialisation of east Asia, its historical perspective, and the outstanding emergence of China as a so-called 'the factory of the world'. Asian export-led industrialisation has ostensibly transmitted from Japan to ANIEs, ASEAN4 and China, in order of development. But, there are, on the one side, some historical features of the background of this process as Asian types of land-ownership and agriculture, state-autocracy, economic development under colonialism and 'dividend of the Cold War'. On the other, it needs some essential conditions as attraction of multinational corporations' direct investment under export-led industrialisation policy by despotic host governments. This process differed from Latin American process of development in some points, namely, that Asian process has been supported by 'piled-up economic integration' in the Pacific and Asian arena, and by transfer into these countries of Japanese business resources in package especially since Plaza Accord of 1985. Progressive economic development and industrialisation of China are now changing these substantial terms of East Asian economic development as powerful exporters not only of primary products but also of manufactured ones. China has large population for unlimited supply model of labour with big market and natural resources. At the same time, China is a continent state as like the U. S. A. and E. U., with less-developed domestic area that could become some jumping-boards for new industries. So, it should be very important to consider the changing aspects of Asian economy in the beginning of 21th century.
- 立命館大学の論文
- 2003-03-30