ABSTRACT

This book answers the recently topical questions of how China’s processed trade affects the trade of Southeast Asia. What is Southeast Asia’s role in Factory Asia, the region’s complex of cross-border supply chains? What is Southeast Asia’s involvement in building or joining production networks in the region? And, most important, how can Southeast Asia increase the value added of its products and improve its competitiveness?

This book provides rigorous analysis of how trade policy affects value added, highly disaggregated at the firm and product level, of the six Southeast Asian countries – Indonesia, Malaysia, the Philippines, Singapore and Viet Nam – and combines this with thorough examinations of their trade, industrial and labour policies.

chapter 1|12 pages

Introduction

chapter 2|27 pages

Global value chain participation in Southeast Asia

Trade and related policy implications 1

chapter 5|23 pages

Trade in value added

The case of Malaysia

chapter 6|30 pages

The Philippines in the electronics global value chain

Upgrading opportunities and challenges

chapter 7|23 pages

Singapore’s participation in global value chains

Perspectives of trade in value added

chapter 8|22 pages

Thai automotive industry

International trade, production networks, and technological capability development

chapter 9|19 pages

Trade in value added

The case of Viet Nam 1

chapter 10|23 pages

‘Policies for industrial progress’, not ‘industry policy’

Lessons from Southeast Asia ∗