Capitalizing on Globalization
Eichengreen, Barry | June 2002
Abstract
This paper reviews the challenges facing Asia as it seeks to cope with and capitalize on globalization. It asks how the Asian model of economic development needs to be modified in order for the region’s economies to grow and prosper in an increasingly integrated and intensely competitive global environment. Doing so, it argues, will entail modifying institutions for managing innovation, for managing poverty, and for managing volatility. The paper concludes by asking whether the capacity to adapt existing institutions is best developed at the national, regional, or global level and whether initiatives to address the challenge at these three levels are properly regarded as substitutes or complements.
Citation
Eichengreen, Barry. 2002. Capitalizing on Globalization. © Asian Development Bank. http://hdl.handle.net/11540/5403.Keywords
Aid And Development
Asian Development Bank
Comprehensive Development Framework
Development Cooperation
Development Management
Development Planning
Development Strategies
Alleviating Poverty
Anti-Poverty
Extreme Poverty
Fight Against Poverty
Global Poverty
Health Aspects Of Poverty
Indicators Of Poverty
Participatory Poverty Assessment
Poverty Eradication
Poverty Analysis
Poverty In Developing Countries
Poverty Reduction Efforts
Urban Poverty
Rural planning
Aid coordination
Industrial projects
Infrastructure projects
Natural resources policy
Educational development
Development Indicators
Environmental Indicators
Economic Indicators
Educational Indicators
Demographic Indicators
Health Indicators
Disadvantaged Groups
Low Income Groups
Socially Disadvantaged Children
Rural Conditions
Rural Development
Social Conditions
Urban Development
Urban Sociology
Communication in rural development
Communication in community development
Economic development projects
Development banks
Economic forecasting
Environmental auditing
Cumulative effects assessment
Human rights and globalization
Poor
Economic forecasting
Health expectancy
Social groups
Political participation
Distribution of income
Inequality of income
Developing countries
Rural community development
Mass society
Social change
Social policy
Social stability
Population
Sustainable development
Peasantry
Urban policy
Urban renewal
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