ABSTRACT

In Asia the 1950s were dominated by political decolonization and the emergence of the Cold War system, and newly independent countries were able to utilize the transformed balance of power for their own economic development through economic and strategic aid programmes. This book examines the interconnections between the transfer of power and state governance in Asia, the emergence of the Cold War, and the transfer of hegemony from the UK to the US, by focusing specifically on the historical roles of international economic aid and the autonomous response from Asian nation states in the immediate post-war context.

The Transformation of the International Order of Asia offers closely interwoven perspectives on international economic and political relations from the 1950s to the 1960s, with specific focus on the Colombo Plan and related aid policies of the time. It shows how the plan served different purposes: Britain’s aim to reduce India’s wartime sterling balances in London; the quest for India’s economic independence under Jawaharlal Nehru; Japan’s regional economic assertion and its endeavour to improve its international status; Britain’s publicity policy during the reorganization of British aid policies at a time of economic crisis; and more broadly, the West’s desire to counter Soviet influence in Asia. In doing so, the chapters explore how international economic aid relations became reorganized in relation to the independent development of states in Asia during the period, and crucially, the role this transformation played in the emergence of a new international order in Asia.

Drawing on a wide range of international contemporary and archival source materials, this book will be welcomed by students and scholars interested in Asian, international, and economic history, politics and development studies.

chapter |12 pages

Introduction

The Colombo Plan, aid relations, and the international order of Asia, 1950–65

part |96 pages

The Colombo Plan and economic development

chapter |16 pages

‘The weapons of the weakened'

British power, sterling balances, and the origins of the Colombo Plan

chapter |22 pages

The Colombo Plan and industrialization in India

Technical cooperation for the Indian Institutes of Technology

chapter |19 pages

‘A waste of time and money'?

The Colombo Plan in Malaya, Singapore, and the Borneo territories during the 1950s

part |65 pages

Changing aid relations and the Colombo Plan

part |70 pages

The Cold War, aid policies, and the international order

chapter |22 pages

US Cold War policy and the Colombo Plan

A continuing search for regional cooperation in Asia in the 1950s

chapter |16 pages

A peace offensive between the two wars

Khrushchev's policy towards Asia, 1953–64

chapter |14 pages

Development assistance as a Cold War tool

The United States, international institutions, and the political economy of Asian development, 1947–65

chapter |16 pages

The changing international order in Asia and Anglo-Japanese relations

From the mid-1950s to the early 1960s