ABSTRACT

Among a vast literature on the Asian economies, the book proposes a distinctive approach, inspired by Régulation Theory, in order to understand the current transformations of the Asian economies. The book follows their transformations after the 1997 Asian crisis until the subprime crisis. During this period, the viability of their growth regime was to coherence of five basic institutional forms: the degree of competition and insertion into the world economy, the nature of labour market organization, the monetary and exchange rate regimes and finally the style for State intervention via legislation, public spending and tax.

The book provides new findings. The degree of financial liberalization and opening to the world economy largely determines the severity of the 2008-2009 recession and the political-economic reactions of each Asian countries to the subprime crisis. Asian capitalisms are distinct from American and European ones, but they are quite diverse among themselves, and this differentiation has been widening during the last decade. This book will help to shed light on a de facto regional economic integration is taking place in Asia, but unsolved past political conflicts do hinder the institutionalisation of these interdependencies.

chapter |12 pages

Introduction

Asia: a social laboratory of contemporary capitalisms?

part I|115 pages

Japanese capitalism: the Companyism eroded by firms' heterogeneity and the lack of new coordinating mechanisms

chapter 1|16 pages

How has the Japanese mode of régulation changed?

The whereabouts of companyism

chapter 3|16 pages

The increasing heterogeneity of firms in Japanese capitalism

Facts, causes, consequences, and implications

chapter 4|18 pages

Labor and financial-market risks and welfare spending

A comparative study with a special emphasis on Japan

chapter 5|17 pages

Increasing wage inequality in Japan since the end of the 1990s

An institutional explanation

chapter 6|22 pages

Institutional changes and the transformations of the growth regime in the Japanese economy

Facing the impact of the world economic crisis and Asian integration

part II|112 pages

Chinese and Korean capitalisms: two contrasted trajectories

part II|77 pages

China: export or investment-led growth regime?

chapter 7|12 pages

Development mode and capability building in the age of modularization and regional integration

Origins of structural adjustments of Chinese economy

chapter 8|22 pages

Chinese international production linkages and Japanese multinationals

Evolving industrial interdependence and coordination

chapter 9|19 pages

Analysis of the linkage effect in Chinese export-led growth

According to the subdivisions of Asian international input–output tables

part |34 pages

Korea: major transformations but uncertain régulation modes

chapter 11|20 pages

The Korean economy between two economic crises

Hybridization or convergence towards a market-led economy?

chapter 12|12 pages

The great transformations in the Korean economy since 1962

Processes and consequences

part III|109 pages

Diversity of Asian capitalisms: from globalization to Asian integration?

chapter 13|21 pages

Asian capitalisms

Institutional configurations and firm heterogeneity 1

chapter 14|21 pages

The consequences of internationalization of trade and financial transactions on growth

Combining an institutional hierarchy hypothesis with a Keynes–Minsky approach

chapter 15|21 pages

Comparative analysis oconditions for monetary integration

Europe and Asia

chapter III|20 pages

Conclusion

The evolving diversity of Asian capitalisms, from the Asian crisis to the subprime crisis