[The Economic Development of Southeast Asia Volume I – Hal Hillupdated 06.11.00]

Contents

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Acknowledgements

Introduction Hal Hill

PART IINTRODUCTION [278 pp]

AHistorical Backdrop

1.H. Myint (1967), ‘The Inward and Outward Looking Contries of Southeast Asia’, Malayan Economic Review, XII (1), April, 1-13 [13]

2.Anne Booth (1991), ‘The Economic Development of Southeast Asia: 1870-1985’, Australian Economic History Review, XXXI (1), March, 20-52 [33]

BCountry Overviews

3.Romeo M. Bautista and Mario B. Lamberte (1996), ‘The Philippines: Economic Developments and Prospects’, Asian-Pacific Economic Literature, 10 (2), November, 16-31 [16]

4.Hal Hill (1994), ‘The Economy’, in Hal Hill, Indonesia’s New Order: The Dynamics of Socio-economic Transformation, Chapter 2, Sydney: Allen & Unwin, 54-122 [69]

5.W.G. Huff (1999), ‘Singapore’s Economic Development: Four Lessons and Some Doubts’, Oxford Development Studies, 27 (1), February, 33-55 [23]

6.Robert E.B. Lucas and Donald Verry (1999), ‘National Economic Trends’, in Restructuring the Malaysian Economy: Development and Human Resources, Chapter 2, London: Macmillan, 5-23 [19]

7.James Riedel and Bruce Comer (1997), ‘Transition to a Market Economy in Viet Nam’, in Wing Thye Woo, Stephen Parker, and Jeffrey D. Sachs (eds), Economies in Transition: Comparing Asia and Eastern Europe, Chapter 7, Cambridge, MA: MIT Press, 189-213, references [25]

8.P. Warr (1994), ‘The Thai Economy’, in The Thai Economy in Transition, Chapter 1, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1-80 [80]

PART IIMACROECONOMICS AND THE INTERNATIONAL ECONOMY [314 pp]

AOutcomes and Policy Instruments

9.W.M. Corden (1996), ‘Pragmatic Orthodoxy: Macroeconomic Policies in Seven East Asian Economies, Occasional Papers Number 61, San Francisco: International Center for Economic Growth, 1-46 [46]

10.Ross H. McLeod (1997), ‘Explaining Chronic Inflation in Indonesia’, Journal of Development Studies, 33 (3), February, 392-410 [19]

BExchange Rate Policy

11.Ross Garnaut (1999), ‘Exchange Rates in the East Asian Crisis’, in H.W. Arndt and Hal Hill (eds), Southeast Asia’s Economic Crisis: Origins, Lessons, and the Way Forward, Chapter 8, Singapore: Institute of Southeast Asian Studies, 93-106 [14]

12.S. Grenville and D. Gruen (1999), ‘Capital Flows and Exchange Rates’, in D. Gruen and L. Gower (eds), Capital Flows and the International Financial System, Sydney: Reserve Bank of Australia, 109-28 [20]

CInternational Financial Markets

13.G. de Brouwer (1999), ‘Capital Flows to East Asia: the Facts’, in D. Gruen and L. Gower (eds), Capital Flows and the International Financial System, Sydney: Reserve Bank of Australia, 76-88 [13]

14.David C. Cole and Betty F. Slade (1999), ‘The Crisis and Financial Sector Reform’, in H.W. Arndt and Hal Hill (eds), Southeast Asia’s Economic Crisis: Origins, Lessons, and the Way Forward, Chapter 9, Singapore: Institute of Southeast Asian Studies, 107-118 [12]

DFiscal Policy

15.Mukul Asher, Ismail Muhd Salleh and Datuk Kamal Salih (1994), ‘Tax Reform in Malaysia: Trends and Options’, in Richard A. Musgrave, Ching-huei Chang and John Riew (eds), Taxation and Economic Development Among Pacific Asian Countries, Chapter 5, Boulder: Westview Press, 82-103 [22]

16.Malcolm Gillis (1994), ‘Indonesian Tax Reform, 1985-1990’, in Richard A. Musgrave, Ching-huei Chang and John Riew (eds), Taxation and Economic Development Among Pacific Asian Countries, Chapter 2, Boulder: Westview Press, 11-43 [33]

EDomestic Saving and External Debt

17.Eli M. Remolona, Mahar Mangahas and Filologo Pante, Jr. (1986), ‘Foreign Debt, Balance of Payments, and the Economic Crisis of the Philippines in 1983-84’, World Development, 14 (8), August, 993-1018 [26]

18.Steven Radelet (1995) ‘Indonesian Foreign Debt: Headed for a Crisis or Financing Sustainable Growth?’, Bulletin of Indonesian Economic Studies, 31 (3), December, 39-72 [34]

19.Ross H. McLeod (1996), ‘Indonesian Foreign Debt: A Comment’; and Steven Radelet (1996), ‘Indonesian Foreign Debt: A Reply’, Bulletin of Indonesian Economic Studies, 32 (2), August, 119-42 [24]

20.Frank Harrigan (1998), ‘Asian Saving: Theory, Evidence, and Policy’, in F. Gerard Adams and Shinichi Ichimura (eds), East Asian Development: Will the East Asian Growth Miracle Survive?, Westport: Praeger, 127-57 [31]

FASEAN Economic Cooperation [20 pp]

21.Chia Siow Yue (1996), ‘The Deepening and Widening of ASEAN’, Journal of the Asia Pacific Economy, 1 (1), 59-78 [20]

Name Index

[592 pp]

[The Economic Development of Southeast AsiaVolume II – Hal Hillupdated 06.11.00]

Contents

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Acknowledgements

An introduction by the editor to all four volumes appears in volume I

PART IEXPLANATIONS [238 pp]

AGrowth

1.Helen Hughes (1995), ‘Why Have East Asian Countries Led Economic Development?’, Economic Record, 71 (212), March, 88-104 [17]

2.Asian Development Bank (1997), ‘Economic Growth and Transformation’, in Emerging Asia: Changes and Challenges, Chapter 2, Manila: Asian Development Bank, 61-85 [25]

BThe Crisis

3.P.-C. Athukorala (2000), ‘Capital Account Regimes, Crisis and Adjustment in Malaysia’, Working Papers in Trade and Development, Australian National University (forthcoming in Asian Development Review)[1] [40]

4.H. Hill (2000), ‘Indonesia: The Strange and Sudden Death of a Tiger Economy’, Oxford Development Studies, 28 (2), June, 117-139 [23]

5.Joseph Y. Lim (1998), ‘The Philippines and the East Asian Economic Turmoil’, in Jomo K.S. (ed.), Tigers in Trouble: Financial Governance, Liberalisation and Crises in East Asia, Chapter 9, London: Zed Books, 199-221 [23]

6.Steven Radelet and Jeffrey D. Sachs (1998), ‘The East Asian Financial Crisis: Diagnosis, Remedies, Prospects’ and ‘Comments and Discussion’,Brookings Papers on Economic Activity, 1, 1-90 [90]

7.Peter Warr (1999), ‘What Happened to Thailand?’, World Economy, 22 (5), 631-50[2] [20]

PART IISOCIAL AND DISTRIBUTIONAL ISSUES [406 pp]

APoverty and Inequality

8.Arsenio M. Balisacan (1995), ‘Anatomy of Poverty during Adjustment: The Case of the Philippines’, Economic Development and Cultural Change, 44 (1), October, 33-62 [30]

9.A. Booth (2000), ‘The Impact of the Indonesian Crisis on Welfare: What Do We Know Two Years On?’, in C. Manning and P. van Diermen (eds), Indonesia in Transition: Social Aspects and Reformasi and Crisis, Singapore: Institute of Southeast Asian Studies, 145-62[3] [18]

10.Medhi Krongkaew (1994), ‘Income Distribution in East Asian Developing Countries: An Update’, Asian-Pacific Economic Literature, 8 (2), November, 58-73 [16]

11.Martin Ravallion and Monika Huppi (1991), ‘Measuring Changes in Poverty: A Methodological Case Study of Indonesia During an Adjustment Period’, World Bank Economic Review, 5 (1), January, 57-82 [26]

BLabour Markets and Human Resources

12.Prema-Chandra Athukorala and Jayant Menon (1999) ‘Outward Orientation and Economic Development in Malaysia’, World Economy, 22 (8), November, 1119-39 [21]

13.Anne Booth (1999), ‘Education and Economic Development in Southeast Asia: Myths and Realities’, ASEAN Economic Bulletin, 16 (3), December, 290-306 [17]

14.Sirilaksana Khoman (1995), ‘Thailand’s Industrialization: Implications for Health, Education, and Science and Technology’, in Medhi Krongkaew (ed.), Thailand’s Industrialization and its Consequences, Chapter 14, London: Macmillan, 289-323 [35]

15.Chris Manning (1994), ‘What Has Happened to Wages in the New Order?’, Bulletin of Indonesian Economic Studies, 30 (3), December, 73-114 [42]

16.Chris Manning (1999), ‘Labour Markets in the ASEAN-4 and the NIEs’, Asian-Pacific Economic Literature, 13 (1), May, 50-68 [19]

CDemographics

17.Gavin W. Jones (1999), ‘The Population of South-East Asia’, Working Papers in Demography, No. 81, Australian National University: Demography Program, Research School of Social Sciences, 1-38 and Abstract [39]

DEnvironmental Issues

18.Harold Brookfield (1993), ‘The Dimensions of Environmental Change and Management in the South-East Asian Region’, in Harold Brookfield and Yvonne Byron (eds), South-East Asia’s Environmental Future: The Search for Sustainability, Chapter 1, Kuala Lumpur: Oxford University Press, 5-32 [28]

19.Ian Coxhead (2000), ‘Consequences of a Food Security Strategy for Economic Welfare, Income Distribution and Land Degradation: The Philippine Case’, World Development, 28 (1), January, 111-28 [18]

20.T. Tomich et al (1998), ‘Agricultural Development with Rainforest Conservation: Methods for Seeking Best Bet Alternatives to Slash-and-burn, with Applications to Brazil and Indonesia, Agricultural Economics, 19, 159-74 [16]

21.Jeffrey R. Vincent andRozali Mohamed Ali with Chang Yii Tan, Jahara Yahaya, Khalid Abdul Rahim, Lim Teck Ghee, Anke Sofia Meyer, Mohd. Shahwahid Haji Othman and G. Sivalingam, (1997), ‘Conclusions’, in Environment and Development in a Resource-Rich Economy: Malaysia under the New Economic Policy, Chapter 11, Harvard: Harvard Institute for International Development, 351-64 [14]

ERegional Development

22.Hal Hill (1997), ‘Regional Development in Southeast Asia: The Challenges of Subnational Diversity’, Journal of the Asia Pacific Economy, 2 (3), 261-302 [42]

23.M.Govinda Rao, Richard M. Bird and JennieI. Litvack (1998), ‘Fiscal Decentralization and Poverty Alleviation in a Transitional Economy: The Case of Vietnam’, Asian Economic Journal, 12 (4), December, 353-78 [26]

Name Index

[647 pp]

[The Economic Development of Southeast AsiaVolume III – Hal Hillupdated 06.11.00]

Contents

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Acknowledgements

An introduction by the editor to all four volumes appears in volume I

PART IPUBLIC POLICY, INSTITUTIONS AND OWNERSHIP [603 pp]

AOverviews

1.Stephan M. Haggard (1998), ‘Business, Politics, and Policy in East and Southeast Asia’, in Henry S. Rowen (ed.), Behind East Asian Growth: The Political and Social Foundations of Prosperity, Chapter 4, London: Routledge, 78-104 [27]

2.J.A.C. Mackie (1988), ‘Economic Growth in the ASEAN Region: The Political Underpinnings’, in Helen Hughes (ed.), Achieving Industrialization in East Asia, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 283-326 [44]

3.Andrew MacIntyre (1999), ‘Political Institutions and the Economic Crisis in Thailand and Indonesia’, in H.W. Arndt and Hal Hill (eds), Southeast Asia’s Economic Crisis: Origins, Lessons, and the Way Forward, Chapter 12, Singapore: Institute of Southeast Asian Studies, 142-57 [16]

4.Jon S.T. Quah (1998), Singapore’s Model of Development: Is it Transferable?’, in Henry S. Rowen (ed.), Behind East Asian Growth: The Political and Social Foundations of Prosperity, Chapter 5, London: Routledge, 105-25 [21]

BCase Studies of Intervention and Reform

5.Ammar Siamwalla (1999), ‘Can A Developing Democracy Manage its Macroeconomy? The Case of Thailand’, in Thailand’s Boom and Bust: Collected Papers, Bangkok: Thailand Development Research Institute, 303-13[4] [11]

6.Richard R. Barrichello and Frank R. Flatters (1991), ‘Trade Policy Reform in Indonesia’, in Dwight H. Perkins and Michael Roemer (eds), Reforming Economic Systems in Developing Countries,Chapter 10, Cambridge, MA.: Harvard Institute for International Development, 271-91 [21]

7.David C.E. Chew (1993), ‘Civil Service Pay in the Asian-Pacific Region’, Asian-Pacific Economic Literature, 7 (1), May, 28-52 [25]

8.George Fane and Timothy Condon (1996), ‘Trade Reform in Indonesia, 1987-1995’, Bulletin of Indonesian Economic Studies, 32 (3), December, 33-54 [22]

9.David K. Linnan (1999), ‘Insolvency Reform and the Indonesian Financial Crisis’, Bulletin of Indonesian Economic Studies, 35 (2), August, 107-37 [31]

10.G. Sicat (1985), ‘A Historical and Current Perspective of Philippine Economic Problems’, Philippine Economic Journal, 24 (1), 24-63 [40]

11.M.H. Soesastro (1989), ‘The Political Economy of Deregulation in Indonesia’, Asian Survey, 29 (9), 853-68 [16]

COwnership and Business Structures

12.Kelly Bird (1999), ‘Concentration in Indonesian Manufacturing, 1975-93’, Bulletin of Indonesian Economic Studies, 35 (1), April, 43-73 [31]

13.Stijn Claessens, Simeon Djankov and Larry H.P. Lang (1999), ‘Who Controls East Asian Corporations?’, Policy Research Working Paper, 2054, Washington D.C.: World Bank, 1-40 [40]

Stijn Claessens, Simon Djankov and Larry H.P. Lang (2000), ‘The Separation of Ownership and Control for East Asian Firms’, Journal of Financial Economics, October

14.Edmund Terence Gomez and Jomo K.S. (1997), ‘Privatising State Assets’, in Malaysia’s Political Economy: Politics, Patronage and Profits, Chapter 4, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 75-116 [42]

15.Hal Hill and Prema-chandra Athukorala (1998), ‘Foreign Investment in East Asia: A Survey’, Asian-Pacific Economic Literature, 12 (2), November, 23-50 [28]

16.L.Y.C. Lim (1996), ‘The Evolution of Southeast Asian Business Systems’, Journal of Asian Business, 12 (1), 51-74 [24]

17.Jamie A.C. Mackie (1992), ‘Changing Patterns of Chinese Big Business in Southeast Asia’, in Ruth McVey (ed.), Southeast Asian Capitalists,Ithaca: Cornell University Southeast Asia Program, 161-90 [30]

18.Ng Chee Yuen and Toh Kin Woon (1992), ‘Privatization in the Asian-Pacific Region’, Asian-Pacific Economic Literature, 6 (2), November, 42-68 [27]

19.Eric D. Ramstetter (1999), ‘Comparisons of Foreign Multinationals and Local Firms in Asian Manufacturing Over Time’, Asian Economic Journal, 13 (2), June, 163-204 [42]

20.Yuri Sato (1993), ‘The Salim Group in Indonesia: The Development and Behavior of the Largest Conglomerate in Southeast Asia’, Developing Economies, XXXI (4),December, 408-41 [34]

21.K. Yoshihara (1986), ‘Rent-seekers and Speculators’, in The Rise of Ersatz Capitalism in South-East Asia, Chapter 4, Singapore: Oxford University Press, 68-98 [31]

Name Index

[603 pp]

[The Economic Development of Southeast AsiaVolume IV – Hal Hillupdated 06.11.00]

Contents

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Acknowledgements

An introduction by the editor to all four volumes appears in volume I

PART ISECTORS [583 pp]

AAgriculture

1.Ponciano Intal, Jr. and John H. Power (1991), ‘The Philippines’, in Anne O. Krueger, Maurice Schiff and Alberto Valdés (eds), The Political Economy of Agricultural Pricing Policy, Volume 2: Asia, Chapter 5, Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press, 149-94 [46]

2.A. Siamwalla, S. Setboonsarng, and D. Patamasiriwat (1993), ‘Agriculture’, in P. Warr (ed.), The Thai Economy in Transition, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 81-117 [37]

3.Steven R. Tabor (1992), ‘Agriculture in Transition’, in Anne Booth (ed.), The Oil Boom and After: Indonesian Economic Policy and Performance in the Soeharto Era, Chapter 6, Singapore: Oxford University Press, 161-203 [43]

4.Colin Barlow (1997), ‘Growth, Structural Change and Plantation Tree Crops: The Case of Rubber’, World Development, 25 (10), October, 1589-1607 [19]

5.R. Bautista (1993), ‘Trade and Agricultural Development in the 1980s and the Challenges for the 1990s’, Agricultural Economics, 8, 345-75 [31]

6.Takamasa Akiyamaand Akihiko Nishio (1997), ‘Sulawesi’s Cocoa Boom: Lessons of Smallholder Dynamism and a Hands-off Policy’, Bulletin of Indonesian Economic Studies, 33 (2), August, 97-121 [25]

7.C.Peter Timmer (1993), ‘Rural Bias in the East and South-east Asian Rice Economy: Indonesia in Comparative Perspective’, Journal of Development Studies, 29(4), July, 149-76 [28]

BServices: Finance

8.H.W. Arndt (1989), ‘Trade in Services with Special Reference to ASEAN’, ASEAN Economic Bulletin, 6 (1), 1-7 [7]

9.Maxwell J. Fry (1995), ‘Financial Development in Asia: Some Analytical Issues’, Asian-Pacific Economic Literature, 9 (1), May, 40-57 [18]

10.Ross H. McLeod (1999), ‘Control and Competition: Banking Deregulation and Re-regulation in Indonesia’, Journal of the Asia Pacific Economy, 4 (2), 258-97 [40]

11.Rob Vos and Josef T. Yap (1996), ‘Financial Intermediation and Adjustment of Internal and External Balances’, in The Philippine Economy: East Asia’s Stray Cat? Structure, Finance and Adjustment, Chapter 5, London: Macmillan, 93-145 [53]

CIndustry

12.Hal Hill (1999), ‘Industrialisation in ASEAN: Some Analytical and Policy Lessons’, in Suiwah Leung (ed.), Vietnam and the East Asian Crisis, Chapter 8, Cheltenham: Edward Elgar, 121-45 [25]

13.E.M. Medalla et al (1995), ‘Efficiency, Competitiveness and Structure of the Philippine Manufacturing Industries’, in Philippine Trade and Industrial Policies: Catching Up With Asia’s Tigers, Volume I, Part I: Main Report, Chapter 7, Makati: Philippine Institute for Development Studies, 95-122[5] [28]

14.Suphat Suphachalasai (1995), ‘Export-Led Industrialization’, in Medhi Krongkaew (ed.), Thailand’s Industrialization and its Consequences, Chapter 3, London: Macmillan, 66-84 [19]

15.Albert Berry and Dipak Mazumdar (1991), ‘Small-Scale Industry in the Asia-Pacific Region’, Asian-Pacific Economic Literature, 5 (2), September, 35-67 [33]

16.H. Sandee, R.K. Andadari and S. Sulandjari (2000), ‘Small Firm Development During Good Times and Bad: The Jepara Furniture Industry’, in C. Manning and P. van Diermen (eds), Indonesia in Transition: Social Aspects and Reformasi and Crisis, Singapore: Institute of Southeast Asian Studies, 184-98[6] [15]

17.Hal Hill (1996), ‘Indonesia’s Industrial Policy and Performance: "Orthodoxy" Vindicated’, Economic Development and Cultural Change, 45 (1), October, 147-74 [28]

18.Sanjaya Lall (1995), ‘Malaysia: Industrial Success and the Role of the Government’, Journal of International Development, 7 (5), 759-73 [15]

19.P. Warr (1989), ‘Export Processing Zones: The Economics of Enclave Manufacturing’, World Bank Research Observer, 4 (1), 65-88 [24]

20.Edward K.Y. Chen (1997), ‘The Total Factor Productivity Debate: Determinants of Economic Growth in East Asia’, Asian-Pacific Economic Literature, 11 (1), May, 18-38 [21]

21.Mike Hobday (1994), ‘Technological Learning in Singapore: A Test Case of Leapfrogging’, Journal of Development Studies, 30 (3), April, 831-58 [28]

Name Index

[583 pp]

[1]Use working copy version.

[2]Replaces:Peter G. Warr (1998), ‘Thailand’, in Ross H. McLeod and Ross Garnaut (eds), East Asia in Crisis: From Being a Miracle to Needing One?, Chapter 3, London: Routledge, 49-65

[3] Not yet published.

[4]Check reference.

[5] Check reference.

[6]Not published.