To celebrate our birthday we’re offering 10% off all books throughout July!Discount will be applied automatically at checkout.

Europe, East Asia and APEC

A Shared Global Agenda?

David Vines editor Peter Drysdale editor

Format:Paperback

Publisher:Cambridge University Press

Published:21st Jul '11

Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back

This paperback is available in another edition too:

Europe, East Asia and APEC cover

This book contrasts regional economic integration in the Asia Pacific Region and in Europe.

This book was the first in a major series examining Global Economic Institutions and contrasts regional economic integration in the Asia Pacific Region and in Europe. An international team of contributors consider a number of important contemporary policy questions which arise in the light of these contrasts.This book was the first in a major series examining Global Economic Institutions and contrasts regional economic integration in the Asia Pacific Region and in Europe. In the Asia Pacific Region at the time of publication, regionalism was developing by means of 'open regionalism', constructed through the APEC (Asia Pacific Economic Cooperation Process). This was different from the regionalism which had developed in Europe, through the construction of a single European Market and Monetary Union within the European Union. In the light of this contrast, a number of important contemporary policy questions are considered by an international team of contributors. How should Europe and other parts of the world respond to the development of open regionalism in the Asia Pacific Region? Can these regions develop a shared global agenda directed toward sustaining genuinely multilateral solutions to international trade policy problems?

Review of the hardback: 'It is rare that a project can be described as 'visionary'. Yet the word is undoubtedly apt here … The fact that this book has emerged at the end of it is a testament indeed to its editors and planners … The gems, as is usual in any edited collection, are sprinkled through the work. To my mind, those that shine most brightly are from writers who look one or two decades ahead. Kym Anderson and Joseph François use econometric modelling to consider the effect of three scenarios - APEC completing its tariff cuts on schedule; the successful conclusion of another WTO round, leading to extensive reductions in trade barriers; the China and Taiwan entering the WTO (a topic also dealt with in a pithy piece of Justin Lin). Yongzheng Yang, Ron Duncan and Tony lawson analyse an even more fascinating question - what if APEC and the EU each adopted the other's policy on trade liberalisation? Australian Journal of International Affairs

ISBN: 9780521168434

Dimensions: 229mm x 152mm x 19mm

Weight: 490g

332 pages