Weighing up the costs and benefits of economic interdependence in a finance-driven world, this book argues that globalization has been oversold to the Global South, and that the South should be as selective about globalization as the North.
Inhaltsverzeichnis
Introduction; PART I: LIBERALIZATION, STABILITY AND GROWTH; Chapter 1: Financial Liberalization: The Key Issues; Chapter 2: Managing Financial Instability in Emerging Markets: A Keynesian Perspective; Chapter 3: From Liberalization to Investment and Jobs: Lost in Translation; Chapter 4: Exchange Rate Management, Growth and Stability: National and Regional Policy Options in Asia; Chapter 5: Reforming the IMF: Back to the Drawing Board; PART II: THE GLOBAL ECONOMIC CRISIS AND DEVELOPING COUNTRIES; Chapter 6: The Current Global Financial Turmoil and Asian Developing Countries; Chapter 7: The Global Economic Crisis and Asian Developing Countries: Impact, Policy Response and Medium-Term Prospects; Chapter 8: The Staggering Rise of the South?