The East Asian Phenomenon: The Consensus, the Dissent, and the Significance of the Present Crisis
- 1 March 1999
- journal article
- research article
- Published by SAGE Publications in Capital & Class
- Vol. 23 (1) , 1-23
- https://doi.org/10.1177/030981689906700101
Abstract
This article offers an interpretation of East Asia's on-going financial and economic crisis, and of its developmental achievements in the previous decades known as the ‘East Asian miracle’. The interpretation centres on the notion of a regime of accumulation that covers the region as a whole. It submits that the competitive advantages and disadvantages of the regime rest on the interaction between the region's economic institutions and world capitalist development. This interaction has been, in turn, mediated by a range of history-specific developments in East Asian economies and societies.Keywords
This publication has 9 references indexed in Scilit:
- Taming the tigers: The IMF and the Asian crisisThird World Quarterly, 1998
- Machinery and China's nexus of foreign trade and economic growthJournal of International Development, 1998
- The Asian debt-and-development crisis of 1997-?: Causes and consequencesWorld Development, 1998
- Contradictions of Capitalist Industrialization in East Asia: A Critique of "Flying Geese" Theories of DevelopmentEconomic Geography, 1998
- The Capital Myth: The Difference between Trade in Widgets and DollarsForeign Affairs, 1998
- Market and Institutional Regulation in Chinese Industrialization, 1978-94Published by Springer Nature ,1997
- Why isn't the whole world experimenting with the East Asian model to develop?: Review of the East Asian miracleWorld Development, 1994
- Governing the MarketPublished by Walter de Gruyter GmbH ,1990
- Export-Led Industrialization in the Third World: Manufacturing ImperialismReview of Radical Political Economics, 1979