Publications

Detailed Information

Miracles of the Day before?: The Great Asian Meltdown and the Changing World-Economy

Cited 0 time in Web of Science Cited 0 time in Scopus
Authors

Palat, Raviarvind

Issue Date
1999-06
Publisher
Institute for Social Development and Policy Research, Center for Social Sciences, Seoul National University
Citation
Development and Society, Vol.28 No.1, pp. 1-47
Abstract
Rather than viewing the spectacular collapse of stock and currency markets in East and Southeast Asia as a financial crisis caused by imprudent banking practices and crony capitalism, this article argues that the meltdown was caused by overproduction. The first section demonstrates that high levels of corporate debt was necessary for regional firms to become competitive in the most exacting markets. Till the early 1980s, the coordination of investment strategies by elite economic bureaucracies under the aegis of Japanese capital ensured the creation of a regional division of labor. The very success of these strategies, however, rendered the regulatory frameworks progressively anachronistic. In a deregulated environment, the continued pursuit of capturing market shares through debt-led industrialization strategies led to chronic overproduction on a world scale and the crisis manifested itself along Asia's Pacific Rim only because it was most rampant there.
ISSN
1598-8074
Language
English
URI
https://hdl.handle.net/10371/86596
Files in This Item:
Appears in Collections:

Altmetrics

Item View & Download Count

  • mendeley

Items in S-Space are protected by copyright, with all rights reserved, unless otherwise indicated.

Share