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Costs and Benefits of Economic Integration in Asia (eBook, PDF)
Redaktion: Barro, Robert J.; Lee, Jong-Wha
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Costs and Benefits of Economic Integration in Asia brings together authoritative essays that identify and examine various initiatives to promote economic integration in Asia.
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Costs and Benefits of Economic Integration in Asia brings together authoritative essays that identify and examine various initiatives to promote economic integration in Asia.
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Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Verlag: Oxford University Press
- Erscheinungstermin: 4. Januar 2011
- Englisch
- ISBN-13: 9780199780778
- Artikelnr.: 38143351
- Verlag: Oxford University Press
- Erscheinungstermin: 4. Januar 2011
- Englisch
- ISBN-13: 9780199780778
- Artikelnr.: 38143351
- Herstellerkennzeichnung Die Herstellerinformationen sind derzeit nicht verfügbar.
Robert J. Barro is Paul M. Warburg Professor of Economics at Harvard University, a senior fellow of the Hoover Institution of Stanford University, and a research associate of the National Bureau of Economic Research. His recent books include Macroeconomics: A Modern Approach, Economic Growth, Nothing Is Sacred: Economic Ideas for the New Millennium, and Determinants of Economic Growth. Jong-Wha Lee is former Chief Economist and Head of the Office of Regional Economic Integration of the Asian Development Bank, and currently Professor at the Economics Department of Korea University. He has worked as an economist at the International Monetary Fund, taught at Harvard University as a visiting professor, and served as a consultant to various institutions such as the Harvard Institute for International Development, the Inter-American Development Bank, the United Nations Development Programme, and the World Bank.
* Foreword
* Acknowledgements
* Contributors
* Acronyms
* I. Introductory Essay
* Robert J. Barro and Jong-Wha Lee
* II. East Asian Currency Union
* Jong-Wha Lee and Robert J. Barro
* 1. Introduction
* 2. The Benefits and Costs of an East Asian Currency Union
* 2.1 Benefits and Costs of Currency Unions
* 2.2 Optimum Currency Area (OCA) Criteria
* 3. Which Currency Union for East Asia?
* 3.1 Data for East Asia Monetary Union Analysis
* 3.2 Is East Asia an OCA?
* 4. Welfare Effects of East Asian Currency Unions
* 4.1 The Effects of Currency Unions on Growth and Volatility
* 4.2 Rare Disasters and Currency Unions
* 4.3 Estimation of Welfare Effects of East Asian Currency Unions: An
Illustration
* 5. Concluding Remarks
* III. Asian Financial Integration: Trends and Interruptions
* Eduardo Borensztein and Prakash Loungani
* 1. Introduction
* 2. Convergence in Interest Rates and Equity Premia
* 3. Portfolio Holdings and Home Bias
* 3.1 Portfolio Holdings: Summary Statistics
* 3.2 Portfolio Holdings: Gravity Model Estimates
* 3.3 Home Bias
* 4. Risk-Sharing and Financial Stability
* 4.1 Risk-Sharing
* 4.2 Financial Integration and Crises
* 4.3 Local vs. Foreign Investors: Recent Studies
* 4.4 Investor Behavior during the Subprime Crisis: Evidence from
Brazil
* 5. Conclusions
* IV. Understanding Business Cycle Synchronization: Is Inflation
Targeting Paving the Way to Asian Monetary Union?
* Andrew K. Rose
* 1. Motivation and Introduction
* 2. The Effect of Trade on Business Cycle Synchronization
* 3. Inflation Targeting and Business Cycle Synchronization: Theory and
Literature
* 4. The Data Set
* 5. Decoupling
* 6. Business Cycle Synchronization and Inflation Targeting
* 7. Regression Analysis
* 8. Estimating Treatment Effects via Matching
* 9. Why?
* 10. Summary and Conclusion
* V. Trading Silver for Gold: Nineteenth-Century Asian Exports and the
Political Economy of Currency Unions
* Kris James Mitchener and Hans-Joachim Voth
* 1. Introduction
* 2. Historical Background and Context
* 3. Data
* 4. Method and Results
* 4.1 Multilateral Resistance
* 4.2 Results for Sub-Periods
* 4.3 Discussion
* 5. Identifying the Effects of Currency Choice
* 6. The Political Economy of Currency Arrangements
* 7. Conclusion
* VI. The ASEAN Free Trade Agreement: Impact on Trade Flows and
External Trade Barriers
* Hector Calvo-Pardo, Caroline Freund and Emanuel Ornelas
* 1. Introduction
* 2. Trade Creation, Trade Diversion, and Import Barriers on Outsiders
* 3. The ASEAN Free Trade Agreement
* 3.1 Data
* 3.2 Tariffs
* 3.3 Aggregate Trade
* 4. The Effect of Tariffs on Trade in ASEAN
* 5. Preferences and External Tariffs in ASEAN
* 6. Conclusion
* VII. Economic Integration in Remote Resource-Rich Regions
* Anthony J. Venables
* 1. Introduction
* 2. Regional Characteristics
* 3. Trade Policy for Remote-Rich Economies
* 3.1 Low Supply Response of External Exports
* 3.2 The Distribution of Natural Resources
* 3.3 Regionally and Globally Traded Goods
* 4. A Benchmark Model
* 5. Trade Liberalizations
* 5.1 Trade Policy and the Intra-Regional Terms of Trade
* 5.2 Trade Policy: General Equilibrium Outcomes
* 5.3 Non-Resource Income and Within Country Income Distribution
* 5.4 Trade Creation and Trade Diversion
* 6. Policy Implications
* 7. Concluding Comments
* VIII. Regional Trade Integration and Multinational Firm Strategies
* Pol Antràs and C. Fritz Foley
* 1. Introduction
* 2. A First Look at the Data
* 3. Theoretical Framework
* 3.1 A Simple Model of FDI
* 3.2 Analysis
* 3.3 Effects of a Regional Trade Agreement
* 4. Econometric Evidence
* 5. Conclusion
* IX. A World Factory in Global Production Chains: Estimating Imported
Value-Added in Exports by the People's Republic of China
* Robert Koopman, Zhi Wang and Shang-Jin Wei
* 1. Introduction
* 2. Conceptual Framework and Estimation Method
* 2.1 When Special Features of Processing Exports Are Not Taken Into
Account
* 2.2 Domestic Content in Exports When Processing Trade is Prevalent
* 2.3 Estimation Issues
* 3. Estimation Results on Domestic and Foreign Content in Exports of
the PRC
* 3.1 Data
* 3.2 Domestic and Foreign Contents in Total Exports
* 4. Slicing Up the Value Chains along Multiple Countries: Methodology
* 4.1 When a World Input-Output Table (That Covers All Countries) is
Available
* 4.2 Working with an Inter-Regional Input-Output Table (for a Subset
of Countries)
* 5. Empirical Estimates on Value-Added Along Production Chains
* 5.1 Data Source
* 5.2 Comparing the PRC with Other Asian Economies in Production Chain
* 5.3 Slicing Up Production Chains Across Countries
* 5.4 Multinational Value-Added Chains in the PRC for Disaggregated
Export Categories
* 6. Concluding Remarks
* Acknowledgements
* Contributors
* Acronyms
* I. Introductory Essay
* Robert J. Barro and Jong-Wha Lee
* II. East Asian Currency Union
* Jong-Wha Lee and Robert J. Barro
* 1. Introduction
* 2. The Benefits and Costs of an East Asian Currency Union
* 2.1 Benefits and Costs of Currency Unions
* 2.2 Optimum Currency Area (OCA) Criteria
* 3. Which Currency Union for East Asia?
* 3.1 Data for East Asia Monetary Union Analysis
* 3.2 Is East Asia an OCA?
* 4. Welfare Effects of East Asian Currency Unions
* 4.1 The Effects of Currency Unions on Growth and Volatility
* 4.2 Rare Disasters and Currency Unions
* 4.3 Estimation of Welfare Effects of East Asian Currency Unions: An
Illustration
* 5. Concluding Remarks
* III. Asian Financial Integration: Trends and Interruptions
* Eduardo Borensztein and Prakash Loungani
* 1. Introduction
* 2. Convergence in Interest Rates and Equity Premia
* 3. Portfolio Holdings and Home Bias
* 3.1 Portfolio Holdings: Summary Statistics
* 3.2 Portfolio Holdings: Gravity Model Estimates
* 3.3 Home Bias
* 4. Risk-Sharing and Financial Stability
* 4.1 Risk-Sharing
* 4.2 Financial Integration and Crises
* 4.3 Local vs. Foreign Investors: Recent Studies
* 4.4 Investor Behavior during the Subprime Crisis: Evidence from
Brazil
* 5. Conclusions
* IV. Understanding Business Cycle Synchronization: Is Inflation
Targeting Paving the Way to Asian Monetary Union?
* Andrew K. Rose
* 1. Motivation and Introduction
* 2. The Effect of Trade on Business Cycle Synchronization
* 3. Inflation Targeting and Business Cycle Synchronization: Theory and
Literature
* 4. The Data Set
* 5. Decoupling
* 6. Business Cycle Synchronization and Inflation Targeting
* 7. Regression Analysis
* 8. Estimating Treatment Effects via Matching
* 9. Why?
* 10. Summary and Conclusion
* V. Trading Silver for Gold: Nineteenth-Century Asian Exports and the
Political Economy of Currency Unions
* Kris James Mitchener and Hans-Joachim Voth
* 1. Introduction
* 2. Historical Background and Context
* 3. Data
* 4. Method and Results
* 4.1 Multilateral Resistance
* 4.2 Results for Sub-Periods
* 4.3 Discussion
* 5. Identifying the Effects of Currency Choice
* 6. The Political Economy of Currency Arrangements
* 7. Conclusion
* VI. The ASEAN Free Trade Agreement: Impact on Trade Flows and
External Trade Barriers
* Hector Calvo-Pardo, Caroline Freund and Emanuel Ornelas
* 1. Introduction
* 2. Trade Creation, Trade Diversion, and Import Barriers on Outsiders
* 3. The ASEAN Free Trade Agreement
* 3.1 Data
* 3.2 Tariffs
* 3.3 Aggregate Trade
* 4. The Effect of Tariffs on Trade in ASEAN
* 5. Preferences and External Tariffs in ASEAN
* 6. Conclusion
* VII. Economic Integration in Remote Resource-Rich Regions
* Anthony J. Venables
* 1. Introduction
* 2. Regional Characteristics
* 3. Trade Policy for Remote-Rich Economies
* 3.1 Low Supply Response of External Exports
* 3.2 The Distribution of Natural Resources
* 3.3 Regionally and Globally Traded Goods
* 4. A Benchmark Model
* 5. Trade Liberalizations
* 5.1 Trade Policy and the Intra-Regional Terms of Trade
* 5.2 Trade Policy: General Equilibrium Outcomes
* 5.3 Non-Resource Income and Within Country Income Distribution
* 5.4 Trade Creation and Trade Diversion
* 6. Policy Implications
* 7. Concluding Comments
* VIII. Regional Trade Integration and Multinational Firm Strategies
* Pol Antràs and C. Fritz Foley
* 1. Introduction
* 2. A First Look at the Data
* 3. Theoretical Framework
* 3.1 A Simple Model of FDI
* 3.2 Analysis
* 3.3 Effects of a Regional Trade Agreement
* 4. Econometric Evidence
* 5. Conclusion
* IX. A World Factory in Global Production Chains: Estimating Imported
Value-Added in Exports by the People's Republic of China
* Robert Koopman, Zhi Wang and Shang-Jin Wei
* 1. Introduction
* 2. Conceptual Framework and Estimation Method
* 2.1 When Special Features of Processing Exports Are Not Taken Into
Account
* 2.2 Domestic Content in Exports When Processing Trade is Prevalent
* 2.3 Estimation Issues
* 3. Estimation Results on Domestic and Foreign Content in Exports of
the PRC
* 3.1 Data
* 3.2 Domestic and Foreign Contents in Total Exports
* 4. Slicing Up the Value Chains along Multiple Countries: Methodology
* 4.1 When a World Input-Output Table (That Covers All Countries) is
Available
* 4.2 Working with an Inter-Regional Input-Output Table (for a Subset
of Countries)
* 5. Empirical Estimates on Value-Added Along Production Chains
* 5.1 Data Source
* 5.2 Comparing the PRC with Other Asian Economies in Production Chain
* 5.3 Slicing Up Production Chains Across Countries
* 5.4 Multinational Value-Added Chains in the PRC for Disaggregated
Export Categories
* 6. Concluding Remarks
* Foreword
* Acknowledgements
* Contributors
* Acronyms
* I. Introductory Essay
* Robert J. Barro and Jong-Wha Lee
* II. East Asian Currency Union
* Jong-Wha Lee and Robert J. Barro
* 1. Introduction
* 2. The Benefits and Costs of an East Asian Currency Union
* 2.1 Benefits and Costs of Currency Unions
* 2.2 Optimum Currency Area (OCA) Criteria
* 3. Which Currency Union for East Asia?
* 3.1 Data for East Asia Monetary Union Analysis
* 3.2 Is East Asia an OCA?
* 4. Welfare Effects of East Asian Currency Unions
* 4.1 The Effects of Currency Unions on Growth and Volatility
* 4.2 Rare Disasters and Currency Unions
* 4.3 Estimation of Welfare Effects of East Asian Currency Unions: An
Illustration
* 5. Concluding Remarks
* III. Asian Financial Integration: Trends and Interruptions
* Eduardo Borensztein and Prakash Loungani
* 1. Introduction
* 2. Convergence in Interest Rates and Equity Premia
* 3. Portfolio Holdings and Home Bias
* 3.1 Portfolio Holdings: Summary Statistics
* 3.2 Portfolio Holdings: Gravity Model Estimates
* 3.3 Home Bias
* 4. Risk-Sharing and Financial Stability
* 4.1 Risk-Sharing
* 4.2 Financial Integration and Crises
* 4.3 Local vs. Foreign Investors: Recent Studies
* 4.4 Investor Behavior during the Subprime Crisis: Evidence from
Brazil
* 5. Conclusions
* IV. Understanding Business Cycle Synchronization: Is Inflation
Targeting Paving the Way to Asian Monetary Union?
* Andrew K. Rose
* 1. Motivation and Introduction
* 2. The Effect of Trade on Business Cycle Synchronization
* 3. Inflation Targeting and Business Cycle Synchronization: Theory and
Literature
* 4. The Data Set
* 5. Decoupling
* 6. Business Cycle Synchronization and Inflation Targeting
* 7. Regression Analysis
* 8. Estimating Treatment Effects via Matching
* 9. Why?
* 10. Summary and Conclusion
* V. Trading Silver for Gold: Nineteenth-Century Asian Exports and the
Political Economy of Currency Unions
* Kris James Mitchener and Hans-Joachim Voth
* 1. Introduction
* 2. Historical Background and Context
* 3. Data
* 4. Method and Results
* 4.1 Multilateral Resistance
* 4.2 Results for Sub-Periods
* 4.3 Discussion
* 5. Identifying the Effects of Currency Choice
* 6. The Political Economy of Currency Arrangements
* 7. Conclusion
* VI. The ASEAN Free Trade Agreement: Impact on Trade Flows and
External Trade Barriers
* Hector Calvo-Pardo, Caroline Freund and Emanuel Ornelas
* 1. Introduction
* 2. Trade Creation, Trade Diversion, and Import Barriers on Outsiders
* 3. The ASEAN Free Trade Agreement
* 3.1 Data
* 3.2 Tariffs
* 3.3 Aggregate Trade
* 4. The Effect of Tariffs on Trade in ASEAN
* 5. Preferences and External Tariffs in ASEAN
* 6. Conclusion
* VII. Economic Integration in Remote Resource-Rich Regions
* Anthony J. Venables
* 1. Introduction
* 2. Regional Characteristics
* 3. Trade Policy for Remote-Rich Economies
* 3.1 Low Supply Response of External Exports
* 3.2 The Distribution of Natural Resources
* 3.3 Regionally and Globally Traded Goods
* 4. A Benchmark Model
* 5. Trade Liberalizations
* 5.1 Trade Policy and the Intra-Regional Terms of Trade
* 5.2 Trade Policy: General Equilibrium Outcomes
* 5.3 Non-Resource Income and Within Country Income Distribution
* 5.4 Trade Creation and Trade Diversion
* 6. Policy Implications
* 7. Concluding Comments
* VIII. Regional Trade Integration and Multinational Firm Strategies
* Pol Antràs and C. Fritz Foley
* 1. Introduction
* 2. A First Look at the Data
* 3. Theoretical Framework
* 3.1 A Simple Model of FDI
* 3.2 Analysis
* 3.3 Effects of a Regional Trade Agreement
* 4. Econometric Evidence
* 5. Conclusion
* IX. A World Factory in Global Production Chains: Estimating Imported
Value-Added in Exports by the People's Republic of China
* Robert Koopman, Zhi Wang and Shang-Jin Wei
* 1. Introduction
* 2. Conceptual Framework and Estimation Method
* 2.1 When Special Features of Processing Exports Are Not Taken Into
Account
* 2.2 Domestic Content in Exports When Processing Trade is Prevalent
* 2.3 Estimation Issues
* 3. Estimation Results on Domestic and Foreign Content in Exports of
the PRC
* 3.1 Data
* 3.2 Domestic and Foreign Contents in Total Exports
* 4. Slicing Up the Value Chains along Multiple Countries: Methodology
* 4.1 When a World Input-Output Table (That Covers All Countries) is
Available
* 4.2 Working with an Inter-Regional Input-Output Table (for a Subset
of Countries)
* 5. Empirical Estimates on Value-Added Along Production Chains
* 5.1 Data Source
* 5.2 Comparing the PRC with Other Asian Economies in Production Chain
* 5.3 Slicing Up Production Chains Across Countries
* 5.4 Multinational Value-Added Chains in the PRC for Disaggregated
Export Categories
* 6. Concluding Remarks
* Acknowledgements
* Contributors
* Acronyms
* I. Introductory Essay
* Robert J. Barro and Jong-Wha Lee
* II. East Asian Currency Union
* Jong-Wha Lee and Robert J. Barro
* 1. Introduction
* 2. The Benefits and Costs of an East Asian Currency Union
* 2.1 Benefits and Costs of Currency Unions
* 2.2 Optimum Currency Area (OCA) Criteria
* 3. Which Currency Union for East Asia?
* 3.1 Data for East Asia Monetary Union Analysis
* 3.2 Is East Asia an OCA?
* 4. Welfare Effects of East Asian Currency Unions
* 4.1 The Effects of Currency Unions on Growth and Volatility
* 4.2 Rare Disasters and Currency Unions
* 4.3 Estimation of Welfare Effects of East Asian Currency Unions: An
Illustration
* 5. Concluding Remarks
* III. Asian Financial Integration: Trends and Interruptions
* Eduardo Borensztein and Prakash Loungani
* 1. Introduction
* 2. Convergence in Interest Rates and Equity Premia
* 3. Portfolio Holdings and Home Bias
* 3.1 Portfolio Holdings: Summary Statistics
* 3.2 Portfolio Holdings: Gravity Model Estimates
* 3.3 Home Bias
* 4. Risk-Sharing and Financial Stability
* 4.1 Risk-Sharing
* 4.2 Financial Integration and Crises
* 4.3 Local vs. Foreign Investors: Recent Studies
* 4.4 Investor Behavior during the Subprime Crisis: Evidence from
Brazil
* 5. Conclusions
* IV. Understanding Business Cycle Synchronization: Is Inflation
Targeting Paving the Way to Asian Monetary Union?
* Andrew K. Rose
* 1. Motivation and Introduction
* 2. The Effect of Trade on Business Cycle Synchronization
* 3. Inflation Targeting and Business Cycle Synchronization: Theory and
Literature
* 4. The Data Set
* 5. Decoupling
* 6. Business Cycle Synchronization and Inflation Targeting
* 7. Regression Analysis
* 8. Estimating Treatment Effects via Matching
* 9. Why?
* 10. Summary and Conclusion
* V. Trading Silver for Gold: Nineteenth-Century Asian Exports and the
Political Economy of Currency Unions
* Kris James Mitchener and Hans-Joachim Voth
* 1. Introduction
* 2. Historical Background and Context
* 3. Data
* 4. Method and Results
* 4.1 Multilateral Resistance
* 4.2 Results for Sub-Periods
* 4.3 Discussion
* 5. Identifying the Effects of Currency Choice
* 6. The Political Economy of Currency Arrangements
* 7. Conclusion
* VI. The ASEAN Free Trade Agreement: Impact on Trade Flows and
External Trade Barriers
* Hector Calvo-Pardo, Caroline Freund and Emanuel Ornelas
* 1. Introduction
* 2. Trade Creation, Trade Diversion, and Import Barriers on Outsiders
* 3. The ASEAN Free Trade Agreement
* 3.1 Data
* 3.2 Tariffs
* 3.3 Aggregate Trade
* 4. The Effect of Tariffs on Trade in ASEAN
* 5. Preferences and External Tariffs in ASEAN
* 6. Conclusion
* VII. Economic Integration in Remote Resource-Rich Regions
* Anthony J. Venables
* 1. Introduction
* 2. Regional Characteristics
* 3. Trade Policy for Remote-Rich Economies
* 3.1 Low Supply Response of External Exports
* 3.2 The Distribution of Natural Resources
* 3.3 Regionally and Globally Traded Goods
* 4. A Benchmark Model
* 5. Trade Liberalizations
* 5.1 Trade Policy and the Intra-Regional Terms of Trade
* 5.2 Trade Policy: General Equilibrium Outcomes
* 5.3 Non-Resource Income and Within Country Income Distribution
* 5.4 Trade Creation and Trade Diversion
* 6. Policy Implications
* 7. Concluding Comments
* VIII. Regional Trade Integration and Multinational Firm Strategies
* Pol Antràs and C. Fritz Foley
* 1. Introduction
* 2. A First Look at the Data
* 3. Theoretical Framework
* 3.1 A Simple Model of FDI
* 3.2 Analysis
* 3.3 Effects of a Regional Trade Agreement
* 4. Econometric Evidence
* 5. Conclusion
* IX. A World Factory in Global Production Chains: Estimating Imported
Value-Added in Exports by the People's Republic of China
* Robert Koopman, Zhi Wang and Shang-Jin Wei
* 1. Introduction
* 2. Conceptual Framework and Estimation Method
* 2.1 When Special Features of Processing Exports Are Not Taken Into
Account
* 2.2 Domestic Content in Exports When Processing Trade is Prevalent
* 2.3 Estimation Issues
* 3. Estimation Results on Domestic and Foreign Content in Exports of
the PRC
* 3.1 Data
* 3.2 Domestic and Foreign Contents in Total Exports
* 4. Slicing Up the Value Chains along Multiple Countries: Methodology
* 4.1 When a World Input-Output Table (That Covers All Countries) is
Available
* 4.2 Working with an Inter-Regional Input-Output Table (for a Subset
of Countries)
* 5. Empirical Estimates on Value-Added Along Production Chains
* 5.1 Data Source
* 5.2 Comparing the PRC with Other Asian Economies in Production Chain
* 5.3 Slicing Up Production Chains Across Countries
* 5.4 Multinational Value-Added Chains in the PRC for Disaggregated
Export Categories
* 6. Concluding Remarks