ABSTRACT

Huang examines a recurring pattern of rapid economic growth in East Asia from 1951 to the present and explores how far a single East Asian Growth model can be said to exist. Assessing the various theories put forward to explain the phenomenon and supported by the most comprehensive data, the book finds that methods of institutional enhancement were at the core of the growth. This institutional enhancement affected state structure and functions, economic policy, corporate arrangements, social structure and relations, individual behaviour, and domestic and international interaction.  Each of these elements was a critical aspect of the growth system that defined and propelled the rapid growth.

chapter |5 pages

Introduction

chapter 1|42 pages

Making sense of the 50-year growth

Theories and evidence

chapter 2|32 pages

Initial conditions

Growth imperatives and alternative scenarios

chapter 4|16 pages

Cultural and social setting

chapter 5|50 pages

Crafting the national growth system

chapter 7|18 pages

Conclusion

Institutional competitiveness and East Asian Growth