Regionalism and Rivalry
Japan and the U.S. in Pacific Asia
Cloth $85.00
ISBN: 9780226259994
Published January 1994
Preface Introduction Jeffrey A. Frankel Miles Kahler I. Is Pacific Asia Becoming A Regional Bloc? 1. The East Asian Trading Bloc: An Analytical History, Peter A. Petri Comment: Stephan Haggard 2. Is Japan Creating A Yen Bloc In East Asia And The Pacific?, Jeffrey A. Frankel Comment: Robert Z. Lawrence 3. Pricing Strategies And Trading Blocs In East Asia, Gary R. Saxonhouse Comment: Robert Gilpin 4. Trading Blocs And The Incentives To Protect: Implications For Japan And East Asia, Kenneth A. Froot And David B. Yoffie Comment: Marcus Noland Comment: Jeffry A. Frieden
II. Japanese Foreign Direct Investment In East Asia 5. Japanese Foreign Investment And The Creation Of A Pacific-Asian Region, Richard F. Doner Comment: Robert E. Lipsey 6. Japan As A Regional Power In Asia, Peter J. Katzenstein And Martin Rouse Comment: Wing Thye Woo
III. Does Japan Have The Qualities Of Leadership? 7. How To Succeed Without Really Flying: The Japanese Aircraft Industry And Japan's Technology Ideology, David B. Friedman And Richard J. Samuels Comment: Gregory W. Noble 8. Foreign Aid And Burdensharing: Is Japan Free-Riding To A Co-Prosperity Sphere In Pacific Asia?, Shafiqul Islam Comment: Stephen D. Krasner Comment: Robert Dekle Comment: Takashi Inoguchi 9. U.S. Political Pressure And Economic Liberalization In East Asia, Takatoshi Ito Comment: Frances Rosenbluth 10. Domestic Politics And Regional Cooperation: The United States, Japan, And Pacific Money And Finance, Jeffry A. Frieden Comment: Takeo Hoshi 11. National Security Aspects Of United States—Japan Economic Relations In The Pacific Asian Region, Martin Feldstein
Contributors Author Index Subject Index
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