2024-03-28T19:43:18Z
https://eprints.soas.ac.uk/cgi/oai2
oai:eprints.soas.ac.uk:71
2024-02-09T13:45:48Z
7374617475733D707562
7375626A656374733D53:38353030
7375626A656374733D58:46:34303030
7375626A656374733D50:38303930
74797065733D626F6F6B5F73656374696F6E
This article discusses the limitations of the law incorporating a corporation (‘incorporation law’) as a control or governance mechanism in a world where it is increasingly difficult to prevent corporations choosing the incorporation law which suits them best. It uses as an example of the globalising pressures in this field three important cases on the right of establishment in the European Union.application/pdfhttps://eprints.soas.ac.uk/71/1/Imperialism_and_accountability_in_corporate_law_-_with_diagrams.pdfenHart Publishing9781841134062850040008090Imperialism and accountability in corporate law: the limitations of incorporation law as a regulatory mechanismFoster, Nicholas HDBall, JaneMcLeod, SorchaBrownsword, Roger2006Book chapterAMhttp://doi.org/10.5040/9781472563798.ch-005
oai:eprints.soas.ac.uk:74
2024-03-28T02:35:21Z
7374617475733D756E707562
7375626A656374733D53:38353230
7375626A656374733D58:46:33393030
74797065733D636F6E666572656E63655F6974656D
Whistleblowers have an essential role in the fight against economic crime, but their position is also not without risk. There are a number of ways in which they need protection, ranging from strong employment law provisions to witness protection programmes for themselves and their families. Although a number of jurisdictions, including the U.K., have provisions catering for these issues, they do not provide a perfect solution and, not least in a country such as Nigeria, the solutions themselves can give rise to issues which need to be addressed.application/pdfhttps://eprints.soas.ac.uk/74/1/NSEC_2004.pdfenNational Seminar on Economic Crimes 200485203900The Role of Whistleblowers in the Fight Against Economic CrimeAlexander, Richard2004-06-29Conference Paper/Proceeding/AbstractNA
oai:eprints.soas.ac.uk:75
2024-02-09T13:45:49Z
7374617475733D707562
7375626A656374733D53:38353230
7375626A656374733D58:46:33393030
74797065733D626F6F6B5F73656374696F6E
The money laundering rules, both those contained in the Proceeds of Crime Act 2002 (and the legislation which preceded it) and the provisions of the Money Laundering Regulations 1993, impose considerable liabilities not just on institutions but on their individual officers and employees. Although the Money Laundering Reporting Officer / Compliance Officer has particular responsibilities, this does not absolve the other employees of the firm from the requirement to exercise considerable diligence on their own account.application/pdfhttps://eprints.soas.ac.uk/75/1/Mikolajki_2002.pdfenTNOiK978837285139085203900Criminal liability of employees of financial intermediaries for money laundering: a British perspectiveAlexander, RichardAdamski, Andrzej2003-01Book chapterAO
oai:eprints.soas.ac.uk:87
2024-03-28T02:35:21Z
7375626A656374733D53:38353430
7375626A656374733D58:46:33383030
7375626A656374733D58:46:33353030:33373030
74797065733D6D6F6E6F6772617068
application/pdfhttps://eprints.soas.ac.uk/87/1/unequal2.pdfenSchool of Oriental and African Studies854038003700Unequal prospects: disparities in the quantity and quality of labour supply in sub-Saharan AfricaSender, JohnCramer, ChristopherOya, Carlos2005-03MonographAO145
oai:eprints.soas.ac.uk:89
2024-03-28T02:35:22Z
7374617475733D707562
7375626A656374733D53:38353230
7375626A656374733D58:46:33393030
74797065733D61727469636C65
Whistleblowers have an essential role in the fight against economic crime, but their position is also not without risk. There are a number of ways in which they need protection, ranging from strong employment law provisions to witness protection programmes for themselves and their families. Although a number of jurisdictions, including the U.K., have provisions catering for these issues, they do not provide a perfect solution and the solutions themselves can give rise to issues which need to be addressed.application/pdfhttps://eprints.soas.ac.uk/89/1/JFC_-_Dec_2004.pdfenEmerald1359079085203900The Role of Whistleblowers in the Fight Against Economic CrimeAlexander, Richard2004-12Journal Article/ReviewAOhttp://doi.org/10.1108/13590790510624945
oai:eprints.soas.ac.uk:90
2024-02-09T13:45:53Z
7374617475733D707562
7375626A656374733D53:38353230
7375626A656374733D58:46:33393030
74797065733D61727469636C65
The Money Laundering Regulations 2003 came into force in the early part of 2004 in order to implement the EU Second Money Laundering Directive. They are much wider-ranging than the 1993 Regulations, which had preceded them: in addition to banks and other financial institutions, which were already covered, and bureaux de change and money transmission offices, added in 2001, they also apply to, inter alia, lawyers, accountants, estate agents, casinos and dealers in high value goods, such as jewellers and art dealers.
Dealers in high value goods, however, are only covered in respect of transactions which are of a value of at least €15,000 and, moreover, in cash. That customers will be dealt with differently, in respect of the same transaction, depending on how payment is made, is unfortunate. A threshold stated in sterling would also be preferable: jewellers are often less well used to dealing in other currencies than financial institutions. More generally, if particular care is seen as required in relation to cash transactions, the threshold should arguably be lower.
The actual requirements imposed have, however, changed little: the only major change is that certain types of business now need to be registered with Customs & Excise.application/pdfhttps://eprints.soas.ac.uk/90/1/JMLC_-_Jul_04.pdfenEmerald1368520185203900The 2003 Money Laundering RegulationsAlexander, Richard2004-09Journal Article/ReviewAOhttp://doi.org/10.1108/13685200510621262
oai:eprints.soas.ac.uk:96
2018-06-22T15:50:47Z
oai:eprints.soas.ac.uk:104
2018-06-22T15:50:48Z
oai:eprints.soas.ac.uk:105
2024-02-21T02:55:45Z
7374617475733D707562
7375626A656374733D58:46:33383030
74797065733D6D6F6E6F6772617068
Since the mid-1990s, China’s state leadership has adopted a policy of nurturing the competitiveness of large state-owned industrial enterprises. The implications of this policy have been a matter of debate in the literature. This paper seeks to provide some useful input into the debate. With a view of investigating into the potential of long-term development of large enterprises, we estimate the “sequential production technology” in computing the Malmquist productivity index for various size-groups of enterprises in Chinese industry. Our findings indicate that large enterprises did register the fastest productivity growth and improvement in technical efficiency in the 1994-97 period. It thus appears that large-scale, mainly state-owned Chinese enterprises have exhibited the potential of making noticeable improvements and the relevant state policy does have its justification.application/pdfhttps://eprints.soas.ac.uk/105/1/econ144.pdfenSOAS Department of Economics Working Paper Series; No. 144175358163800Firm Size, Technical Efficiency and Productivity Growth in Chinese IndustryCheng, Yuk-ShingLo, Dic2004-12MonographAO
oai:eprints.soas.ac.uk:106
2024-03-28T02:35:22Z
7374617475733D707562
7375626A656374733D58:46:33383030
74797065733D6D6F6E6F6772617068
Using a range of specifications that are standard in the relevant literature, this paper finds that China’s rapid and sustained economic growth in the reform era has tended to be negatively correlated with its export growth and positively correlated with its import growth. This finding runs counter to widely-held perceptions on China’s nexus of foreign trade and economic growth, and thus presents a serious challenge for interpretation. On the basis of some further regression analyses, and drawing on a number of applied studies on the subject matter, the paper argues that the finding is plausible and of complex ramifications. The conclusion which this paper arrives at, therefore, is that the Chinese experience has tended to be a case of strategic integration into the world market, rather than conforming to the standard neoclassical thesis of trade regime neutrality.application/pdfhttps://eprints.soas.ac.uk/106/1/econ143.pdfenSOAS Department of Economics Working Paper Series; No. 143175358163800China’s Nexus of Foreign Trade and Economic Growth: Making Sense of the AnomalyLo, Dic2004-08MonographVoR
oai:eprints.soas.ac.uk:107
2024-02-21T02:55:46Z
7374617475733D707562
7375626A656374733D58:46:33383030
74797065733D6D6F6E6F6772617068
Ottoman industrialisation in cotton spinning was led by the town of Naoussa in Macedonia. This paper shows that Naoussa capitalists grasped the opportunities created by trade liberalisation, accumulated capital in domestic manufacture of woollen cloth, and secured a regular supply of low-wage female labour and free hydraulic energy. It is further shown that they took advantage of local institutional and political mechanisms within the Christian community independent of the relatively remote Ottoman state. But there was no capitalist transformation of agriculture, even though Naoussa capitalists often owned large land estates. Lack of broader institutional and political influence and absence of capitalist transformation of agriculture hampered the transformation of Naoussa capitalists from a provincial social group into a broad-based capitalist class.application/pdfhttps://eprints.soas.ac.uk/107/1/econ142.pdfenSOAS Department of Economics Working Paper No. 142175358163800Social origins of Ottoman industrialisation: Evidence from the Macedonian town of NaoussaLapavitsas, Costas2004-09MonographVoR
oai:eprints.soas.ac.uk:108
2024-02-21T02:55:47Z
7374617475733D707562
7375626A656374733D53:38353330
7375626A656374733D58:46:33383030
74797065733D6D6F6E6F6772617068
Does globalisation entail a demand for uniformity, or diversity, of the (political) economic institutions of nation-states? What is the theoretical underpinning of the demand? And what are the implications of the demand for economic development? The conventional literature known as comparative economic systems has been unable to answer these question, because there is an intrinsic tension between its methodology (the neoclassical framework of individualistic rational choices and their equilibrium) and the subject matter (the multiplicity of economic institutions and development experiences in the real world). The new comparative economics has consisted of a variety of attempts to cope with this tension: some aimed at preserving the neoclassical framework at a more fundamental level, while some others aimed at transcending the framework to arrive at a new theory of economic systems and development. This paper argues that attempts that adhere to the neoclassical tradition is likely to lead to dead ends, while attempts that encompass collective as well as individualistic rationality represent more promising directions. Fuller developments of the literature, however, require incorporating objectified institutions and paradigmised technology into its sphere of inquiry. It is submitted that there are important lessons to learn from classical political economy and their modern presentations, particularly Marxian theories of the social forces of production, in this regard.application/pdfhttps://eprints.soas.ac.uk/108/1/econ137.pdfenSOAS Department of Economics Working Paper No. 137https://ideas.repec.org/p/soa/wpaper/137.html1753581685303800Globalisation and Comparative Economics: Of Efficiency, Efficient Institutions, and Late DevelopmentLo, Dic2004-06MonographVoR
oai:eprints.soas.ac.uk:109
2024-02-21T02:55:47Z
7374617475733D707562
7375626A656374733D53:38353330
7375626A656374733D58:46:33383030
74797065733D6D6F6E6F6772617068
The objective of this paper is to assess the role of FDI in China’s economic development with reference to the broader literature on FDI and late development. Three main findings come out from the analyses in the paper. First, it is found that FDI tends to promote the improvement in allocative efficiency, while having a negative impact on productive efficiency. Second, insofar as FDI does promote overall productivity growth, this tends to be a matter of cumulative causation rather than one of single-direction causation. Third, in the context of a comparative analysis of two distinctive regional models, it is found that the economic impact of FDI tends to be more favourable in the inward-looking, capital-deepening pattern of development (the ‘Shanghai model’) than that in the export-oriented, labour-intensive pattern (the ‘Guangdong model’). Further analyses, however, suggest that the ‘Shanghai model’ has its intrinsic problems of sustainability. The scope for applying it to China as a whole is thus judged to be limited.application/pdfhttps://eprints.soas.ac.uk/109/1/econ137.pdfenSOAS Department of Economics Working Paper No. 1351753581685303800Assessing the Role of Foreign Direct Investment in China’s Economic Development: Macro Indicators and Insights from Sectoral-Regional AnalysesLo, Dic2004-01MonographVoR
oai:eprints.soas.ac.uk:111
2024-02-21T02:55:47Z
7374617475733D707562
7375626A656374733D58:46:33383030
74797065733D6D6F6E6F6772617068
This paper examines the genesis of liberalisation in India, it argues that once we locate its origin we can understand its direction and underlying political economy with much greater clarity. In particular the paper seeks to answer three questions. Why was reform launched in 1991 when the real economy was essentially in good condition? Why did the state choose a neo-liberal policy package when other options were available? Why did the state sustain liberalisation even after the economy had recovered from the immediate crisis? Existing answers to these questions are found to be inadequate. Instead this paper focuses on an alternative explanation that emphasises continuity, the reforms in 1991 can be traced back to the early 1970s. The Momentum of reform was sustained and assumed a particular form due to an underlying ‘logic of capital’.application/pdfhttps://eprints.soas.ac.uk/111/1/econ134.pdfenSOAS Department of Economics Working Paper No. 134https://ideas.repec.org/p/soa/wpaper/134.html175358163800‘Episodes of Liberalisation’ or ‘The Logic of Capital’: The Genesis of Liberalisation in IndiaMcCartney, Matthew2004-01MonographVoR
oai:eprints.soas.ac.uk:112
2024-02-09T13:46:00Z
7374617475733D707562
7375626A656374733D58:46:33383030
74797065733D6D6F6E6F6772617068
This paper examines various schools of trade policy reform and finds little difference between them in regards their essential export optimism. This optimism is based on an unwarranted assumption in cross-country empirical studies. In practise the increasing number of large LDC’s shifting towards export promotion since the 1980s is found to coincide with declining terms of trade for labour-intensive manufactures. So far this decline has been offset by growth in volume. The positive relation is actually dependent on market growth in developed countries rather than domestic policy reform. Marx (the Moor) provides a useful framework in which to analyse this process. His analysis of competition and accumulation within a national economy is transposed to that of international trade. Finally, the increasing integration of capital into ‘value chains’ and the formation of regional trading blocs can be related to the crisis tendencies of competition and the erosion of profit margins.application/pdfhttps://eprints.soas.ac.uk/112/1/econ133.pdfenSOAS Department of Economics Working Paper No. 1333800Export Promotion, the Fallacy of Composition and Declining Terms of Trade (or the Moors’ Last Sigh)McCartney, Matthew2004-01MonographVoR
oai:eprints.soas.ac.uk:113
2024-02-21T02:55:48Z
7374617475733D707562
7375626A656374733D53:38353330
7375626A656374733D58:46:33383030
74797065733D6D6F6E6F6772617068
There is an influential, neo-liberal proposition in the scholarly literature on China’s economic transformation since the late 1970s. It states that China’s reformed economic institutions are a mix of market-conforming and market-supplanting elements, that its developmental achievements so far have been ascribable to the conforming elements whereas the accumulated problems being ascribable to the supplanting elements, and that the problems have tended to outweigh the achievements as the country’s economic transition progresses from the allegedly easy phase to the difficult phase. This paper offers an alternative interpretation of the Chinese experience. The central proposition is that China’s economic institutions could be seen in favourable light both theoretically and with reference to the East Asian development experience. Specifically, the developmental implications of the market-conforming and market-supplanting elements should not be understood in any absolute sense, but rather depend on the appropriate match or otherwise between the institutions and the external environment. The developmental achievements to date indicate that China’s economic reform has managed to achieve a basically appropriate match between the two aspects, although enormous uncertainties still cloud over the future prospects owing to changes both in the external environment and the reform strategies of the state leadership.application/pdfhttps://eprints.soas.ac.uk/113/1/econ131.pdfenSOAS Department of Economics Working Paper No. 1311753581685303800China, the ‘East Asian Model’ and Late DevelopmentLo, Dic2003-11MonographVoR
oai:eprints.soas.ac.uk:114
2024-02-21T02:55:48Z
7374617475733D707562
7375626A656374733D58:46:33383030
74797065733D6D6F6E6F6772617068
application/pdfhttps://eprints.soas.ac.uk/114/1/econ130.pdfenSOAS Department of Economics Working Paper No. 130175358163800Money as a 'Universal equivalent' and its origin in commodity exchangeLapavitsas, Costas2003-05MonographVoR
oai:eprints.soas.ac.uk:115
2024-02-21T02:55:48Z
7374617475733D707562
7375626A656374733D53:38353330
7375626A656374733D58:46:33383030
74797065733D6D6F6E6F6772617068
This paper provides new national accounts consistent poverty estimates for low-income countries. The properties of the new estimates are compared to the existing estimates by the World Bank based on household survey means. We also use the new estimates to reflect on the recent controversies regarding the relationship between economic growth and poverty reduction. It is argued that the controversy is mainly due to the lack of distinction between what one can refer to as ‘generalized extreme poverty’ in low-income countries and the more ‘normal’ poverty situations in higher income economies.application/pdfhttps://eprints.soas.ac.uk/115/1/econ129.pdfenSOAS Department of Economics Working Paper No. 129https://ideas.repec.org/p/erg/wpaper/0201.html1753581685303800Measurement and Nature of Absolute Poverty in Least Developed CountriesKarshenas, Massoud2001-11MonographVoR
oai:eprints.soas.ac.uk:116
2024-02-21T02:55:49Z
7374617475733D707562
7375626A656374733D58:46:33383030
74797065733D6D6F6E6F6772617068
Banks in bank-based financial systems tend to engage in long-term lending that requires substantial own capital to guarantee solvency. In market-based systems, in contrast, they tend to undertake short-term lending that requires adequate reserves to guarantee liquidity. Theoretical support for these two approaches to banking can be found in,respectively, Steuart and Smith. The innovative Marxist analysis of banking by Hilferding combined elements of both. Banks in the early stages of development are Smith-like but, as the scale of fixed investment in industry grows, they lend long-term and become Steuart-like, also developing ‘commitment’ relations with enterprises. However, Hilferding also implied, erroneously, that financial systems historically evolve
in a bank-based direction. Based on Hilferding but also drawing on Japanese Marxist analysis of finance, it is suggested instead that bank behaviour in bank-based systems results from institutional changes imposed by policy-makers in order to achieve ‘catching up.’application/pdfhttps://eprints.soas.ac.uk/116/1/econ128.pdfenSOAS Department of Economics Working Paper No. 128https://ideas.repec.org/p/soa/wpaper/128.html175358163800Banks and the Design of the Financial System: Underpinnings in Steuart, Smith and HilferdingLapavitsas, Costas2002-11MonographVoR
oai:eprints.soas.ac.uk:118
2024-02-21T02:55:49Z
7374617475733D707562
7375626A656374733D58:46:33383030
74797065733D6D6F6E6F6772617068
Assumptions applied in Orthodox Economic methods are criticised for being an inadequate depiction of reality. This is particularly the case from the perspective of Feminist Economics. Gender biases are reflected in the quantitative data sources and methods commonly applied for economic research. These include male biases in statistical data, a focus on outcomes rather than processes as well as the neglect of reproductive work and its interaction with market work. To overcome these problems, this paper introduces between-method triangulation, i.e. the combination of quantitative and qualitative methods of data generation and analysis, as an innovative and more realistic methodology to conduct gendered economic analysis. It draws on the authors’ recent empirical work on the Indonesian and Mauritian labour markets where between-method triangulation was employed. The approach is shown to be able to enhance empirical economic analysis by mutually validating results. Furthermore, the approach is shown to remove gender biases in economic analysis by analysing conflicting evidence and by complementing quantitative with qualitative findings in light of feminist economics theory.application/pdfhttps://eprints.soas.ac.uk/118/1/econ_146.pdfenSOAS Department of Economics Working Paper No. 146175358163800The Best of Two Worlds: Between-Method Triangulation in Feminist Economic ResearchBlin, MyriamSiegmann, Karin Astrid2006-02MonographVoR
oai:eprints.soas.ac.uk:119
2024-03-28T02:35:23Z
7374617475733D707562
7375626A656374733D58:46:33383030
74797065733D6D6F6E6F6772617068
This paper, looking at the case study of Mauritius, attempts to understand the factors affecting the relationship between EOP, women’s work burden along different social backgrounds. The analysis is based on between-method triangulation consisting of a quantitative survey in the industrial sector and a qualitative survey in the industrial and services sectors. The main result shows that women and the social reproductive process were not affected in the same way depending on the socioprofessional background of the woman.application/pdfhttps://eprints.soas.ac.uk/119/1/econ147.pdfenSOAS Department of Economics Working Paper No. 147175358163800Export-Oriented Policies, Women’s Work Burden and Human Development in MauritiusBlin, Myriam2006-02MonographVoR
oai:eprints.soas.ac.uk:120
2024-03-28T02:35:23Z
7374617475733D707562
7375626A656374733D58:46:33383030
74797065733D6D6F6E6F6772617068
China’s sustained rapid economic growth over the post-1978 reform era, which is also the era of globalisation, is of worldwide importance. This growth experience has been based mainly on China’s internal dynamics. In the first half of the era, economic growth was propelled by improvement in both allocative efficiency and productive efficiency. From the early 1990s until the present time, however, economic growth has been increasingly based on dynamic increasing returns associated with a growth path that is characterised by capital deepening. In both periods, the growth paths and their associated long-term-oriented institutions contradict principles of the free market economy – i.e., doctrines of globalisation. In the form of an analytical overview, this article seeks to explain and interpret the historical background, logic of evolution, and developmental and social implications of China’s economic transformation. The analytics draws on a range of relevant economic theories including Marxian theory of economic growth, Post-Keynesian theory of demand determination, and Neo-Schumpeterian theory of innovation. It is posited that these alternative theoretical perspectives offer better insights than mainstream neoclassical economics in explaining and interpreting China’s economic transformation.application/pdfhttps://eprints.soas.ac.uk/120/1/econ_148.pdfenSOAS Department of Economics Working Paper No. 148175358163800Making Sense of China’s Economic TransformationLo, Dic2006-03MonographVoR
oai:eprints.soas.ac.uk:130
2023-09-28T08:56:01Z
7374617475733D756E707562
7375626A656374733D58:46:33353030
74797065733D6F74686572
This paper presents some results from the largest rural labour market survey yet conducted in Mozambique. Evidence from three provinces shows that labour markets have a significant impact on the lives of a large number of poor people and that employers exercise considerable discretion in setting wages and conditions of casual, seasonal and permanent wage employment. The evidence presented comes from a combination of a quantitative survey based on purposive sampling with other techniques, including interviews with large farmers. The findings contrast with ideas that rural labour markets are irrelevant to poverty reduction policy formulation in Africa and the paper concludes with methodological, analytical and policy recommendations.application/pdfhttps://eprints.soas.ac.uk/130/1/Lifting_the_Blinkers_for_working_paper.pdfenSchool of Oriental and African Studies3500Lifting the Blinkers: A New View of Power and Poverty in Mozambican Rural Labour MarketsSender, JohnOya, CarlosCramer, Christopher2006-05otherAO
oai:eprints.soas.ac.uk:135
2024-02-09T13:46:06Z
7374617475733D756E707562
7375626A656374733D58:46:33353030
74797065733D6F74686572
In this short paper, I attempt to find what theoretical grounds might support the term ownership as used in aid relations and critically to discuss these grounds. Three possible sources for thinking through the concept are: property rights, relationships made or sustained through gifts, and principal-agent theory. After setting the concept of ownership in development aid within the context of its origins, the paper explores the relevance and implications of seeing ownership as the effect of a gift, and then, in more detail, explores the way in which principal-agent theory has been applied to the analysis of ownership. Where this has been done, a particular controversy emerges around the relationship between ownership and conditionality: some regard these notions as fully compatible while others highlight the tension between them.application/pdfhttps://eprints.soas.ac.uk/135/1/SidaPaperChris__2_.pdfenFirst workshop under the Sida/UTV Evaluation of Partner Country Ownership3500Own up! Does anyone out there have a decent theory of ownership?Cramer, Christopher2002-01otherNA
oai:eprints.soas.ac.uk:137
2024-02-09T13:46:07Z
7374617475733D707562
7375626A656374733D58:46:33353030
74797065733D6D6F6E6F6772617068
Compared to other rural women, a high proportion of female wageworkers in rural Mozambique are divorced, separated or widowed. The paper explores the factors underlying this difference and establishes a significant relationship between labor market participation and female divorce or widowhood. The association is likely to work in both directions. Moreover, contrastive exploration suggests that divorced/separated women differ from non-divorced women in many other important respects: They tend to get access to better jobs; also, divorced and separated mothers are remarkably good at investing in their daughters’ education compared to other mothers and to male respondents. The paper concludes by stressing the limits of regression techniques in teasing out causation and the interactions between variables, and by suggesting that policies to increase female access to decently remunerated wage employment could make a substantial difference to the welfare of very poor rural women in Africa and their children.application/pdfhttps://eprints.soas.ac.uk/137/1/Moza_demo_paper_JSCO2007.pdfenSOAS University of London: Department of Development Studies3500Divorced, separated and widowed female workers in rural MozambiqueSender, JohnOya, Carlos2007-01MonographAO
oai:eprints.soas.ac.uk:138
2024-02-09T13:46:07Z
7374617475733D756E707562
7375626A656374733D53:38353430
7375626A656374733D58:46:33353030
74797065733D636F6E666572656E63655F6974656D
This paper discusses the political economy of development aid flows to poor countries in Sub-Saharan Africa and the potential role of China to generate opportunities for a recovery of policy space in these countries. We argue that the loss of policy space in many poor SSA countries is associated with donor-recipient relations in aid flows over the past two decades. The influential role of Western donor agencies and the growing marginalisation of SSA countries from international capital flows have left scarce policy space to their governments for more innovative trade, agricultural and industrial policies. The recent New Aid Agenda and the concomitant Western aid harmonization through budget support are likely enhance donors’ influence on policy making and to exacerbate this process despite claims of greater ‘ownership’. Learning from East Asian success stories has been hampered by the unequal bargaining power of SSA governments vis-à-vis their ‘development partners’. More recently, China has started to become an increasingly important player for some SSA countries and Chinese FDI and aid flows are already s significant reality there. Typically these ‘new’ relations may be seen with suspicion by Western ‘development’ partners, but we argue that this (and the cooperation of other Asian governments in a South-South cooperation framework) may be a significant opportunity for some SSA countries to regain part of the policy space lost in the 1980s and 1990s.application/pdfhttps://eprints.soas.ac.uk/138/1/Oya_Beijing.pdfenInternational Forum on Comparative Political Economy of Globalization85403500The political economy of development aid as main source of foreign finance for poor African countries: loss of policy space and possible alternatives from East AsiaOya, Carlos2006-08Conference Paper/Proceeding/AbstractAO
oai:eprints.soas.ac.uk:149
2018-06-22T15:50:53Z
oai:eprints.soas.ac.uk:151
2024-02-09T13:46:08Z
7374617475733D707562
7375626A656374733D58:46:34303030
74797065733D61727469636C65
application/pdfhttps://eprints.soas.ac.uk/151/1/Sachs_Book_Review_for_EoT_v2.pdfenWiley257769754000Book Review of: The End of Poverty: How We Can Make It Happen in Our Lifetime by Jeffrey D. SachsGlinavos, Ioannis2006-07-12Journal Article/ReviewAOhttp://doi.org/10.1111/j.1468-0351.2006.00262.x
oai:eprints.soas.ac.uk:155
2023-09-28T08:56:06Z
7374617475733D756E707562
7375626A656374733D58:46:34363030
7375626A656374733D54
74797065733D746865736973
http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0This thesis examines state-society relations in Egypt, and the logic of durable authoritarianism since 1952. It does so through an examination of the Egyptian state’s neglectful rule, from the 1970s through the 1990s, of its capital Cairo. In particular, the thesis focuses on state inaction vis-à-vis Cairo’s informal housing sector: those neighbourhoods established on land not officially sanctioned for urbanization.
The central research question of the thesis is to explain why the Egyptian state has been unable to intervene effectively in these informal neighbourhoods—despite their stigmatization in Egyptian public discourse as threats to the nation’s social, moral and political health; the authoritarian state’s considerable unilateral power; and the availability of western assistance for development interventions. The short answer to the question, is that the very factors which sustain the authoritarian political order constrain the Egyptian state’s ability to intervene in its capital. Neglectful rule is a consequence of the autocratic post-1952 dispensation of power.
That this neglect is not simply the result of structural resource constraints, is demonstrated through the examination of donor-funded urban-development projects—aimed at fostering an administratively competent Egyptian state able to intervene in its capital—none of which were successful or sustainable. The failure of these reform initiatives, which could have allowed Egyptian state agencies to upgrade informal Cairo and re-orient its growth, can be plausibly explained in terms of the challenges they posed to the logic of autocratic rule. Thus the reproduction of the informal city is, in part, a consequence of the post-1952 dispensation.application/pdfhttps://eprints.soas.ac.uk/155/1/Dorman_Politics_of_Neglect.pdfen4600TThe Politics of Neglect: the Egyptian State in Cairo, 1974-98Dorman, W. J.ThesisSMURhttp://doi.org/10.25501/SOAS.00000155
oai:eprints.soas.ac.uk:179
2024-02-09T13:46:13Z
7374617475733D756E707562
7375626A656374733D58:46:34303030
74797065733D636F6E666572656E63655F6974656D
The modern literature on international development in conjunction with the rise of institutional economics has focused attention on the role of institutions in the operation of the economy and crucially on the function of law as setting a framework to market operations. An emerging consensus that views development as a legal in as much as an economic challenge is forcing us to revaluate the relationship between law, regulation, state power and the market. Indeed, the greater the need for law, the larger the role of the state in the economy. The purpose of this article is to enquire into the implications the modern literature on economic development emanating from international institutions (primarily the World Bank and the International Monetary Fund) has for law reform and the role of the state in the economy. The main question asked is whether regulation has a uniform role in all reform contexts or whether there is a difference between the role of law in the transition to a market economy as opposed to the promotion of general development. This article suggests that there is indeed a difference between the role of law in transition as opposed to development that centres on the primacy of the state in the design for reform. While transition, it is suggested, requires a more limited role for law (Washington Consensus), development necessitates a more thorough involvement of the state in the reform process (Post-Washington Consensus). This article offers some preliminary evidence to suggest that a minimal role for regulation focused on market promotion required by ‘transition type’ reforms is adopted across the board and applied indiscriminately to all development scenarios. This means that reform packages remain rather minimal in the involvement of the state and in the scope for law despite the input of institutional economics and the apparent enthusiasm for the promotion of the rule of law. The article concludes that once a distinction is drawn between the different designs needed for transition and development, it becomes evident that a larger role for law and state regulation is needed that goes beyond mere market promotion. The promotion of development which encompasses political, social and economic aspects therefore asks for a wider role for the state.application/pdfhttps://eprints.soas.ac.uk/179/1/Conference_Article_Glinavos_1.pdfenChange, Rules and Institutions: Law and Economics in the Context of Development4000Transition or Development? Reassessing Priorities for Law ReformGlinavos, IoannisConference Paper/Proceeding/AbstractSMUR
oai:eprints.soas.ac.uk:180
2023-09-28T08:56:10Z
7374617475733D756E707562
7375626A656374733D58:46:34303030
74797065733D636F6E666572656E63655F6974656D
The ‘Washington Consensus’ supporting competitive frames and market solutions in economics and law was shown inadequate to address social problems in non-U.S. settings. So would diversity and dynamics suggest theories in need of adjustment to other realities such as culture, increasing returns and market power. Reform must account for an economics of falling cost, ecological limits and complementarity in our relations. Such shall open new applications for economics and law.
In this paper a theory of planning horizons is introduced and then employed to raise some meaningful questions about the neoclassical view with respect to its substitution, decreasing returns and independence assumptions. Suppositions of complementarity, increasing returns and interdependence suggest that competition is inefficient by upholding a myopic culture resistant to change. Growth – though long believed to rise from markets and competitive values – may not derive from these sources. Instead, as civilizations advance, shifting from material wants to higher-order intangible output, they evolve from market tradeoffs (substitution and scarcity) into realms of common need (complementarity and abundance). If so, then neoclassical arguments shall no longer apply to any advanced information economy also restrained by its ecology.
Indeed, this paper opens standard theory into a more general framework constructing ‘horizon effects’ into a case for cooperation – as more efficient than competition for all long-term problems of growth. The case is made that competition is keeping us stupid and immature, rewarding a myopic culture at the expense of learning and trust, therefore retarding economic growth instead of encouraging it as believed.
The policy implications of horizonal theory are explored, with respect to regulatory aims and economic concerns. Such an approach emphasizes strict constraints against entry barriers, ecological harm, market power abuse and ethical lapses. Social cohesion – not competition – is sought as a means to extend horizons and thereby increase efficiency, equity and ecological health. The overriding importance of horizon effects for regulatory assessment dominates other orthodox standards in economics and law. In sum, much of the reason for the failure of the Washington Consensus stems from myopic concerns central to any horizonal view. Reframing economics along horizonal lines suggests some meaningful insight to how regulations should be designed to keep pace with this approach in economics and law.application/pdfhttps://eprints.soas.ac.uk/180/1/paper_Jennings.pdfenChange, Rules and Institutions: Law and Economics in the Context of Development4000The Design of Free-Market Economies in a Post-Neoclassical WorldJennings, Frederic2007-09-29Conference Paper/Proceeding/AbstractSMUR
oai:eprints.soas.ac.uk:183
2024-02-09T13:46:14Z
7374617475733D756E707562
7375626A656374733D4C:36303530
7375626A656374733D53:38353130
7375626A656374733D58:46:34363030
74797065733D6D6F6E6F6772617068
What is at stake, politically, in abandoning claims that one's actions are legitimized by some form of transcendent authority? Analysing this question moves us beyond human rights debates about foundationalism, and asks whether the efficacy of claims made by human rights advocates is undermined by their inability, conceptually and politically, to make the case that human rights are moral truths rather than a more temporal and secular doctrine. Through an analysis of Amnesty International and its ambivalent grounding in Kantian notions of morality, and by considering competing religious and national claims to authority, I assess whether or not human rights activism suffers from an inescapable political ineptitude that must eventually see it decline in the face of more ardent and politically effective authority claims.application/pdfhttps://eprints.soas.ac.uk/183/1/The_Politics_of_Moral_Authority%2C_20th_Sept_2007.pdfenSOAS Department of Politics and International Studies605085104600The Politics of Moral AuthorityHopgood, Stephen2007-09MonographAO
oai:eprints.soas.ac.uk:977
2024-02-09T13:48:45Z
7374617475733D707562
7375626A656374733D53:38353130
7375626A656374733D58:46:34363030
74797065733D61727469636C65
application/pdfhttps://eprints.soas.ac.uk/977/1/as.2003.43.1.pdfenUniversity of California Press1533838X85104600India in 2002: The BJP’s Faltering Mandate and the Morphology of Nuclear WarSaez, Lawrence2003-01Journal Article/ReviewNAhttp://doi.org/10.1525/as.2003.43.1.186
oai:eprints.soas.ac.uk:978
2024-02-09T13:48:46Z
7374617475733D707562
7375626A656374733D53:38353130
7375626A656374733D58:46:34363030
74797065733D61727469636C65
application/pdfhttps://eprints.soas.ac.uk/978/1/as.2004.44.1.pdfenUniversity of California Press1533838X85104600India in 2003: Pre-Electoral Maneuvering and the Prospects for Regional PeaceSaez, Lawrence2004-01Journal Article/ReviewAOhttp://doi.org/10.1525/as.2004.44.1.23
oai:eprints.soas.ac.uk:1539
2022-05-13T18:37:29Z
7374617475733D707562
7375626A656374733D58:44:32343030
7375626A656374733D58:46:34303030:34353030
7375626A656374733D50:38303930
74797065733D626F6F6B5F73656374696F6E
enBrill9789004144446240045008090Islam, Religion of the EnvironmentAbdel-Haleem, MuhammadCotran, EugeneLau, Martin2006Book chapterNA
oai:eprints.soas.ac.uk:1550
2022-08-31T18:35:14Z
7374617475733D707562
7375626A656374733D53:38353130
7375626A656374733D58:46:34363030
74797065733D61727469636C65
enSpringer Nature0888723385104600The Deregulation of State-Owned Enterprises in India and ChinaSaez, LawrenceYang, Joy2001-09Journal Article/ReviewNAhttp://doi.org/10.1057/ces.2001.14
oai:eprints.soas.ac.uk:1954
2023-03-28T13:54:55Z
7374617475733D707562
7375626A656374733D58:46:33393030
74797065733D61727469636C65
By assuming that fundamentals matter, this article builds a discounted cash flow (DCF) model (which is assumed to be commonly used by fundamentalists) where the determination of the fundamental is affected by variables proxying for the unobserved firm quality and for the value of its real option for expansion. It finds on a sample of high-tech stocks that the cross-sectional distance from the fundamental is significantly affected by chartists’ variables measuring stock momentum. It also tests whether stock returns are significantly affected by lagged deviations from the DCF fundamental value. Finding evidence of both ‘reversion to the DCF fundamental’ and insider trading (or delays in the adjustment of publicly available information), since negative deviations from the fundamental positively affect future stock returns but are, in the meantime, significantly affected by short-term future changes in fundamentalsenTaylor and Francis096031073900Do high-tech stock prices revert to their 'fundamental' value?Adriani, FabrizioBecchetti, Leonardo2004Journal Article/ReviewNAhttp://doi.org/10.1080/0960310042000220533
oai:eprints.soas.ac.uk:1955
2018-06-22T15:52:49Z
oai:eprints.soas.ac.uk:1956
2018-06-22T15:52:49Z
oai:eprints.soas.ac.uk:1957
2018-06-22T15:52:49Z
oai:eprints.soas.ac.uk:1958
2022-09-10T13:56:43Z
7374617475733D707562
7375626A656374733D58:46:33393030
74797065733D61727469636C65
enSociety for Economic Research101099943900Emergence and Evolution of Cross Border Banking: Evidence from the UKDeidda, LucaArestis, PhilipFattouh, Bassam2002Journal Article/ReviewNA
oai:eprints.soas.ac.uk:1959
2022-08-31T18:43:59Z
7374617475733D707562
7375626A656374733D58:46:33393030
74797065733D61727469636C65
enSOAS University of LondonCeFiMS Working paper series3900Emergence and Evolution of Banking CentresDeidda, LucaFattouh, Bassam2000Journal Article/ReviewNA
oai:eprints.soas.ac.uk:1960
2022-08-31T18:43:26Z
7374617475733D707562
7375626A656374733D58:46:33393030
74797065733D61727469636C65
enSOAS University of LondonCeFIMS Working Paper Series3900Interaction between Economic and Financial DevelopmentDeidda, Luca2000Journal Article/ReviewNA
oai:eprints.soas.ac.uk:1961
2018-06-22T15:52:49Z
7375626A656374733D58:46:33393030
74797065733D61727469636C65
enCRENoS Working paper series (University of Cagliari and Sassari)3900On the Growth Effects of Endogenous Financial DevelopmentDeidda, Luca2000Journal Article/ReviewNA
oai:eprints.soas.ac.uk:1962
2018-06-22T15:52:49Z
oai:eprints.soas.ac.uk:1963
2018-06-22T15:52:49Z
oai:eprints.soas.ac.uk:1964
2018-06-22T15:52:49Z
oai:eprints.soas.ac.uk:1965
2018-06-22T15:52:49Z
oai:eprints.soas.ac.uk:1966
2022-04-22T07:17:48Z
7374617475733D707562
7375626A656374733D58:46:33393030
74797065733D626F6F6B5F73656374696F6E
enPalgrave-McMillan97803338020453900Economic Growth and Evolution of Credit Market StructureDeidda, LucaBaldasarri, MichelePaganetto, Luigi2001Book chapterNA
oai:eprints.soas.ac.uk:1967
2022-09-05T20:37:11Z
7374617475733D707562
7375626A656374733D58:46:33393030
74797065733D61727469636C65
enEastern Economic Association009450563900Financial Policies and the Aggregate Productivity of the Capital Stock: Evidence from Developed and Developing EconomiesFattouh, BassamArestis, PhilipDemetriades, PanicosKoford, Kenneth2003Journal Article/ReviewNA
oai:eprints.soas.ac.uk:1968
2018-06-22T15:52:49Z
oai:eprints.soas.ac.uk:1969
2018-06-22T15:52:49Z
oai:eprints.soas.ac.uk:1970
2022-07-04T08:02:50Z
7374617475733D707562
7375626A656374733D58:46:33393030
74797065733D626F6F6B5F73656374696F6E
enRoutledge97804152207503900Financial Liberalisation and the Globalisation of Financial Services: Two Lessons from the East Asian ExperienceFattouh, BassamArestis, PhilipDemetriades, PanicosLahiri, Sajal2001Book chapterNAhttp://doi.org/10.4324/9780203183410-19
oai:eprints.soas.ac.uk:1971
2022-07-04T08:03:09Z
7374617475733D707562
7375626A656374733D58:46:33393030
74797065733D61727469636C65
enSociety for Economic Research101099943900Emergence and Evolution of Cross Border Banking: Evidence from the UKFattouh, BassamArestis, PhilipDeidda, LucaCourakis, A2002Journal Article/ReviewNA
oai:eprints.soas.ac.uk:1972
2021-12-29T10:22:59Z
7374617475733D707562
7375626A656374733D58:46:33393030
74797065733D61727469636C65
We collect data on a number of financial restraints, including restrictions on deposit and lending interest rates and reserve and liquidity requirements, from central banks of six developing countries. We estimate the effects of these policies on financial development, controlling for the effect of economic development and using standard econometric techniques. We find that the effects of financial policies vary considerably across our sample of countries. Our findings demonstrate that financial liberalisation is a much more complex process than has been assumed by earlier literature and its effects on financial development are ambiguous. Copyright © 2002 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.enWiley109911583900The Impact of Financial Liberalization Policies on Financial Development: Evidence from Developing EconomiesFattouh, BassamArestis, PhilipDemetriades, PanicosMouratidis, Kostas2002Journal Article/ReviewNAhttp://doi.org/10.1002/ijfe.181
oai:eprints.soas.ac.uk:1973
2018-06-22T15:52:50Z
oai:eprints.soas.ac.uk:1974
2018-06-22T15:52:50Z
oai:eprints.soas.ac.uk:1975
2022-05-02T12:15:00Z
7374617475733D707562
7375626A656374733D58:46:33393030
74797065733D626F6F6B5F73656374696F6E
enFitzroy Dearbon Publishers97815795809193900Financial Fragility/InstabilityFattouh, BassamMichie, Jonathan2001Book chapterNA
oai:eprints.soas.ac.uk:1976
2018-06-22T15:52:50Z
oai:eprints.soas.ac.uk:1977
2022-08-07T12:21:09Z
7374617475733D707562
7375626A656374733D58:46:33393030
74797065733D61727469636C65
enOxford University Press002058503900The South Korean Financial Crisis: Competing Explanations and Policy Lessons for Financial LiberalisationFattouh, BassamDemetriades, PanicosSoper, Caroline1999Journal Article/ReviewNAhttp://doi.org/10.1111/1468-2346.00108
oai:eprints.soas.ac.uk:1978
2022-06-04T07:52:57Z
7374617475733D707562
7375626A656374733D58:46:33393030
74797065733D626F6F6B5F73656374696F6E
enRoutledge97804152207503900Financial Liberalisation and the Globalisation of Financial Services: Two Lessons from the East Asian ExperienceFattouh, BassamLahiri, Sajal2001Book chapterNAhttp://doi.org/10.4324/9780203183410-19
oai:eprints.soas.ac.uk:1979
2018-06-22T15:52:50Z
oai:eprints.soas.ac.uk:1980
2018-06-22T15:52:50Z
7374617475733D707562
7375626A656374733D58:46:33393030
74797065733D626F6F6B5F73656374696F6E
enRoutledge97804152436293900Explaining New Public ManagementFlynn, NormanMcLaughlin, KateFerlie, EwanOsborne, Stephen P2002Book chapterNA
oai:eprints.soas.ac.uk:1981
2022-06-04T07:48:36Z
7374617475733D707562
7375626A656374733D58:46:33393030
74797065733D626F6F6B5F73656374696F6E
enOxford University Press97818417419013900Organisation and management: a changing agendaFlynn, NormanWard, DavidLacey, Malcolm2002Book chapterNA
oai:eprints.soas.ac.uk:1982
2022-06-04T07:47:59Z
7374617475733D707562
7375626A656374733D58:46:33393030
74797065733D626F6F6B5F73656374696F6E
enHong Kong University Press97896220955713900Student Learning and the Quest for Quality Education: A Case Study of Secondary Schools in Hong KongFlynn, NormanKa-Ho, Mok2002Book chapterNA
oai:eprints.soas.ac.uk:1983
2021-12-28T10:45:22Z
7374617475733D707562
7375626A656374733D58:46:33393030
74797065733D6564697465645F626F6F6B
The introduction of market reforms has radically transformed China. Marketizing Social Policy in China examines the impact of a shift to market principles in the critical sector of social policy. The authors demonstrate how social policy reform has been driven by economic transformation, as profound structural change produced inevitable knock-on effects in people's livelihood. Marketization in social policy in turn creates new needs and raises issues that challenge commonly accepted notions of public-private responsibilities in a society undergoing rapid and deep social change.enPalgrave97803339177943900The Market in Chinese Social PolicyFlynn, NormanWong, LindaFlynn, NormanWong, Linda2001otherNAhttp://doi.org/10.1057/9781403919939
oai:eprints.soas.ac.uk:1984
2021-05-31T09:04:47Z
7374617475733D707562
7375626A656374733D58:46:33393030
74797065733D626F6F6B
enFinancial Times97802736463413900Public Sector Management, Fourth EditionFlynn, Norman2002BookNA
oai:eprints.soas.ac.uk:1985
2022-08-05T10:36:15Z
7374617475733D707562
7375626A656374733D58:46:33393030
74797065733D61727469636C65
enSage026010793900Asia's Schumpeter Crisis: Fundamentals and Financial Market InteractionHarris, Laurence2000Journal Article/ReviewNAhttp://doi.org/10.1177/02601079X00001100202
oai:eprints.soas.ac.uk:1986
2022-09-13T18:44:01Z
7374617475733D707562
7375626A656374733D58:46:33393030
74797065733D61727469636C65
enTaylor and Francis026921713900Keynesian Policy in Disarticulated EconomiesHarris, Laurence1996Journal Article/ReviewNAhttp://doi.org/10.1080/02692179600000013
oai:eprints.soas.ac.uk:1987
2022-06-04T07:44:25Z
7374617475733D707562
7375626A656374733D58:46:33393030
74797065733D626F6F6B5F73656374696F6E
enEdward Elgar97818589874223900How Credible are Credibility Models of Central Banking?Harris, LaurenceArestis, Philip1998Book chapterNA
oai:eprints.soas.ac.uk:1988
2022-07-24T13:17:43Z
7374617475733D707562
7375626A656374733D58:46:33393030
74797065733D626F6F6B5F73656374696F6E
enME Sharpe Armonk97805216437643900The Effects of Globalization on Policy Formation in South AfricaHarris, LaurenceBaker, DeanEpstein, GeraldPollin, Robert1998Book chapterNA
oai:eprints.soas.ac.uk:1989
2018-06-22T15:52:51Z
oai:eprints.soas.ac.uk:1990
2022-01-08T09:00:24Z
7374617475733D707562
7375626A656374733D58:46:33393030
74797065733D626F6F6B5F73656374696F6E
Economic performance in the long term is the result of interaction between an economy's internal characteristics and its external environment. The internal characteristics include economic and social institutions, governmental and legal frameworks, natural and human resources, and locational factors. The external environment consists of two parts, one made up of foreign resource configurations and potential opportunities for fruitful economic relationships, and the other of power networks and “rules of the game.” These broader frameworks determine the extent to which potential economic gains can actually be realized.enCambridge University Press97805210034383900Taiwan in the 20th Century: Model or Victim? Development Problems in a Small Asian EconomyHowe, ChristopherEdmonds, Richard LouisGoldstein, Steven M.2001Book chapterNAhttp://doi.org/10.1017/S0009443901000031
oai:eprints.soas.ac.uk:1991
2022-07-25T08:07:40Z
7374617475733D756E707562
7375626A656374733D58:46:33393030
74797065733D636F6E666572656E63655F6974656D
en3900Joint Seminar on Science Policy in the 21st Century: A Sino-British DialogueHowe, Christopher2003Conference Paper/Proceeding/AbstractNA
oai:eprints.soas.ac.uk:1992
2022-06-03T07:38:48Z
7374617475733D707562
7375626A656374733D58:46:33393030
74797065733D626F6F6B5F73656374696F6E
enRoutledge97807007153293900Development and International IntegrationHowe, ChristopherBroedsgaard, Kjeld ErikHeurlin, Bertel2002Book chapterNAhttp://doi.org/10.4324/9780203037379-14
oai:eprints.soas.ac.uk:1993
2021-12-30T10:21:39Z
7374617475733D707562
7375626A656374733D58:46:33393030
74797065733D626F6F6B5F73656374696F6E
enEdward Elgar97804151405153900''Hong Kong'', Reversion to China: the political, administrative and economic dimensionsHowe, ChristopherAsh, RobertBooth, Anne2000Book chapterNA
oai:eprints.soas.ac.uk:1994
2022-09-26T07:15:40Z
7374617475733D707562
7375626A656374733D58:46:33393030
74797065733D61727469636C65
enCambridge University Press030574103900The Taiwan Economy: The Transition to maturity and the political economy of its changing international statusHowe, Christopher1996Journal Article/ReviewNAhttp://doi.org/10.1017/S0305741000050591
oai:eprints.soas.ac.uk:1995
2022-05-25T09:08:58Z
7374617475733D707562
7375626A656374733D58:46:33393030
74797065733D626F6F6B5F73656374696F6E
enEdward Elgar97818589824583900Introduction [and] Technology and Competitiveness in Asia: Case Studies in Japanese Technology Transfer with Implications for the PRCHowe, ChristopherFeinstein, CharlesHowe, Christopher1997Book chapterNA
oai:eprints.soas.ac.uk:1996
2022-07-24T13:18:17Z
7374617475733D707562
7375626A656374733D58:46:33393030
74797065733D626F6F6B
enChicago University Press97818506553813900The Origins of Japanese Trade Supremacy: Development and Technology in Asia from 1540 to the Pacific WarHowe, Christopher1999BookNA
oai:eprints.soas.ac.uk:1997
2022-06-03T08:17:14Z
7374617475733D707562
7375626A656374733D58:46:33393030
74797065733D626F6F6B5F73656374696F6E
enCurzon97807007119183900The changing Asian environment of China's economic development: The perspective from Japan, with particular reference to Foreign Direct Investment and Industrial RestructuringHowe, ChristopherAsh, Robert2002Book chapterNA
oai:eprints.soas.ac.uk:1998
2022-12-12T15:35:33Z
7374617475733D707562
7375626A656374733D58:46:33393030
74797065733D626F6F6B
This book presents a collection and analysis of original policy documents, newly translated into English, from a key period of Chinese development, providing both a current and a retrospective analysis of China's economic reform efforts. Topics dealt with include the evolution of Chinese economic strategy; economic planning and the spread of market mechanisms; technology transfer in industry; evolution of an agricultural system; the development of population policy; and foreign economic relations. The collection will be of great interest not only to scholars and students of Chinese studies, but also to professionals and social scientists concerned with China but unable to read source documents in Chinese.enRoutledge97807007135543900China's Economic Reform. A Study with DocumentsHowe, ChristopherKueh, Y. Y.Ash, Robert2003BookNAhttp://doi.org/10.4324/9781315888491
oai:eprints.soas.ac.uk:1999
2022-07-25T07:50:27Z
7374617475733D756E707562
7375626A656374733D58:46:33393030
74797065733D636F6E666572656E63655F6974656D
en3900Free Trade Agreements in the Asia-Pacific. Implications for Australia - Free Trade Areas: The view from ChinaHowe, Christopher2004Conference Paper/Proceeding/AbstractNA
oai:eprints.soas.ac.uk:2000
2022-07-25T07:30:37Z
7374617475733D756E707562
7375626A656374733D58:46:33393030
74797065733D636F6E666572656E63655F6974656D
en3900The High Tide of Socialism of 1955. An historical perspectiveHowe, Christopher2005Conference Paper/Proceeding/AbstractNA
oai:eprints.soas.ac.uk:2001
2024-03-28T02:35:36Z
7374617475733D707562
7375626A656374733D58:46:33393030
74797065733D61727469636C65
application/pdfhttps://eprints.soas.ac.uk/2001/1/TaiwanInThe20thCentury_Howe.pdfenCambridge University Press030574103900Taiwan in the 20th Century: Model or Victim? Development Problems in a Small Asian EconomyHowe, Christopher2002Journal Article/ReviewVoRhttp://doi.org/10.1017/S0009443901000031
oai:eprints.soas.ac.uk:2002
2022-05-06T21:16:36Z
7374617475733D707562
7375626A656374733D53:38353230
7375626A656374733D58:46:33393030
74797065733D626F6F6B5F73656374696F6E
enRoutledge978041536822385203900Managing Female Textile Workers: an industry in transition, 1945-1975Macnaughtan, HelenHunter, JanetStorz, Cornelia2005Book chapterNA
oai:eprints.soas.ac.uk:2003
2018-06-22T15:52:52Z
oai:eprints.soas.ac.uk:2004
2018-06-22T15:52:52Z
oai:eprints.soas.ac.uk:2005
2022-05-09T13:19:03Z
7374617475733D707562
7375626A656374733D58:46:33393030
74797065733D61727469636C65
enSOAS University of LondonCEFIMS discussion papers, no DP 02/00/023900Endogenous Growth and Social SecurityScaramozzino, PasqualeMarini, Giancarlo2000Journal Article/ReviewNA
oai:eprints.soas.ac.uk:2006
2022-09-05T10:48:35Z
7374617475733D707562
7375626A656374733D58:46:33393030
74797065733D61727469636C65
enSOAS University of LondonDiscussion Paper No. 02/00/033900Noisy Implementation Cycles and the Informational Role of PolicyScaramozzino, PasqualeVulkan, Nir2000Journal Article/ReviewNA
oai:eprints.soas.ac.uk:2007
2024-02-09T13:51:27Z
7374617475733D707562
7375626A656374733D58:46:33393030
74797065733D6D6F6E6F6772617068
application/pdfhttps://eprints.soas.ac.uk/2007/1/dalmasca.pdfenCeFiMS, SOAS, University of London3900It Takes Two to Tango: Process Integration and WagesScaramozzino, PasqualeDalmazzo, A.2000-06MonographAO
oai:eprints.soas.ac.uk:2008
2023-03-16T12:07:14Z
7374617475733D707562
7375626A656374733D58:46:33393030
74797065733D61727469636C65
enSpringer Nature143214753900Social Time PreferenceScaramozzino, PasqualeMarini, Giancarlo2000Journal Article/ReviewNAhttp://doi.org/10.1007/s001480050155
oai:eprints.soas.ac.uk:2009
2018-06-22T15:52:52Z
oai:eprints.soas.ac.uk:2010
2022-07-03T20:46:38Z
7374617475733D707562
7375626A656374733D58:46:33393030
74797065733D61727469636C65
enElsevier014759673900Will East Germany Become a New Mezzogiorno?Scaramozzino, PasqualeBoltho, AndreaCarlin, Wendy1997Journal Article/ReviewNAhttp://doi.org/10.1006/jcec.1997.1431
oai:eprints.soas.ac.uk:2011
2022-09-03T18:00:55Z
7374617475733D707562
7375626A656374733D58:46:33393030
74797065733D61727469636C65
enCentre for Economic Policy Research204565733900Implementation Cycles in the New EconomyScaramozzino, PasqualeTemple, JonathanVulkan, Nir2005Journal Article/ReviewNA
oai:eprints.soas.ac.uk:2012
2018-06-22T15:52:52Z
oai:eprints.soas.ac.uk:2013
2018-06-22T15:52:52Z
7374617475733D707562
7375626A656374733D58:46:33393030
74797065733D626F6F6B5F73656374696F6E
enPalgrave Macmillan97803337327863900Intergenerational Transfers and GrowthScaramozzino, PasqualeMarini, GiancarloPaganetto, LuigiPhelps, Edmund S.2003Book chapterNA
oai:eprints.soas.ac.uk:2014
2022-09-04T07:33:44Z
7374617475733D707562
7375626A656374733D58:46:33393030
74797065733D61727469636C65
enTor Vergata University2610931X3900Unknown Talents and the Brain DrainScaramozzino, PasqualeKhwaja, Yasmeen2003Journal Article/ReviewNA
oai:eprints.soas.ac.uk:2015
2022-05-09T13:17:57Z
7374617475733D707562
7375626A656374733D58:46:33393030
74797065733D61727469636C65
enBanco di Roma003467993900The Changeover to the Euro and the Behaviour of InflationScaramozzino, PasqualeMarini, GiancarloPeirgallini, A2004Journal Article/ReviewNA
oai:eprints.soas.ac.uk:2016
2018-06-22T15:52:52Z
oai:eprints.soas.ac.uk:2017
2022-06-02T07:44:23Z
7374617475733D707562
7375626A656374733D58:46:33393030
74797065733D61727469636C65
enWiley146764513900Do other Firms Matter in Oligopolies?Scaramozzino, PasqualeHaskel, Jonathan1997Journal Article/ReviewNAhttp://doi.org/10.1111/1467-6451.00033
metadataPrefix%3Drioxx%26offset%3D2018%26set%3D7375626A656374733D58%253A46