TY - BOOK AU - Otsuka,Keijiro AU - Sugihara,Kaoru TI - Paths to the Emerging State in Asia and Africa T2 - Emerging-Economy State and International Policy Studies SN - 9789811331312 AV - HC PY - 2019/// CY - Singapore PB - Springer Singapore Pte. Limited KW - Electronic books N1 - Intro -- Preface -- Contents -- Contributors -- List of Figures -- List of Tables -- 1 Multiple Paths to Industrialization: A Global Context of the Rise of Emerging States -- 1.1 Introduction -- 1.2 Emergence of a Three-Tier International Division of Labour -- 1.2.1 The Beginning -- 1.2.2 The Western Supremacy and Reorganization of Asian Industries -- 1.3 Intra-regional Trade as an Agent of Economic Development -- 1.3.1 Integration of Asia and Africa into the World Economy -- 1.3.2 Local and Regional Trade in British India -- 1.3.3 Indian Ocean Trade -- 1.3.4 The Wider Contexts -- 1.4 Paths to Industrialization -- 1.4.1 Regional Industrialization -- 1.4.2 The Resource Nexus -- 1.4.3 Structural Transformation in Southeast Asia -- 1.5 Paths to the Emerging State -- 1.5.1 A Summary -- 1.5.2 Intra-regional Trade of Sub-Saharan Africa -- References -- 2 Technology Transfer and Agricultural Development: A Comparative Study of Asia and Africa -- 2.1 Introduction -- 2.2 Prototype Green Revolutions in Prewar Japan, Taiwan, and Korea -- 2.3 Green Revolution in Tropical Asia -- 2.4 Possibility of a Green Revolution in SSA -- 2.5 Agricultural Development and Paths to an Emerging State -- References -- 3 Southeast Asia and International Trade: Continuity and Change in Historical Perspective -- 3.1 Introduction -- 3.2 Southeast Asia Before the European Arrival -- 3.3 Maritime Trade in the Early Modern Period -- 3.3.1 The Case of Batavia -- 3.4 Social Changes in the Early Modern Period -- 3.4.1 Expansion of the Overseas Market -- 3.4.2 A New Pattern of Production -- 3.4.3 Immigration and Multi-ethnic Society -- 3.5 The High Colonial Period and After -- 3.5.1 The New Institutional Framework -- 3.5.2 Increase of Chinese Immigrants -- 3.6 The Contemporary Period and Conclusions -- References; 4 Role of State and Non-state Networks in Early-Modern Southeast Asian Trade -- 4.1 Introduction -- 4.2 Age of Commerce -- 4.2.1 The Rise of the Trade and Its Basic Pattern -- 4.2.2 Southeast Asian Characteristics -- 4.2.3 State Politics and Its Impact on Society -- 4.3 Age of China-Oriented Trade -- 4.3.1 Rise of a New Trade Pattern -- 4.3.2 Shifting Trade Hegemony -- 4.3.3 New Migration Patterns -- 4.3.4 Basic Trade Pattern -- 4.3.5 Commercial-Military Groups and States -- 4.4 Transition to Colonial Trade, c. 1830-1870 -- 4.4.1 End of the Chinese Century? -- 4.4.2 Trade in the Outer Islands -- 4.5 Conclusions -- References -- 5 Growth of Regional Trade in Modern Southeast Asia: The Rise of Singapore, 1819-1913 -- 5.1 Introduction -- 5.2 Rise of Singapore's Regional Trade -- 5.3 Mechanism of Demand Linkage in Southeast Asian Trade After the 1870s -- 5.4 Linkage with Local Trade: Pattern of Sarawak's Trade Development -- 5.5 Conclusions -- References -- 6 Labour-Intensive Industrialization and the Emerging State in Pre-war Japan -- 6.1 Introduction -- 6.2 The Nature of Industrialization in Modern Japan -- 6.3 The Role of Labour-Intensive Sectors in Pre-war Japan -- 6.3.1 The Cotton Industry for Import Substitution -- 6.3.2 Dynamism of Export-Oriented Industries -- 6.3.3 The Development of Japan's Toy Export -- 6.3.4 The Structure of Small-Scale Industries in Interwar Tokyo -- 6.3.5 Prospects to the Post-war Development -- 6.4 Concluding Remarks -- References -- 7 Changing Patterns of Industrialization and Emerging States in Twentieth Century China -- 7.1 Introduction -- 7.1.1 Development Led by the Global Economy, 1880s-1900s -- 7.1.2 Development Led by Private Enterprises Under Protectionist Policy, 1910s-1930s -- 7.1.3 Development Under a Controlled and Planned Economy, 1940s-1970s -- 7.1.4 Further Development with the Global Economy, 1980s-2010s; 7.2 Industrialization in China -- 7.2.1 Development of Machine-Made Cotton Yarn Industry in Big Mills as an Example of Capital-Intensive Industrialization in China -- 7.2.2 Development of the Iron and Steel Industries Before 1949 as a Second Example of Capital-Intensive Industrialization in China -- 7.2.3 Development of the Small-Mill Cotton Industry as an Example of Labor-Intensive Industrialization in China -- 7.3 Wartime Controlled Economy Under the Nationalist Government: The Controlled and Planned Economy Before Mao's Era -- 7.3.1 Economic Construction by the Nationalist Government on the Eve of War -- 7.3.2 Wartime Economy Under the Nationalist Government -- 7.3.3 Other Phases of the Wartime Economy -- 7.4 Concluding Remarks -- References -- 8 Historical Roots of Industrialisation and the Emerging State in Colonial India -- 8.1 Introduction -- 8.2 Stagnated Industrialisation in Colonial India -- 8.3 Factor Endowment Hypothesis -- 8.3.1 Overview -- 8.3.2 Statistical Analysis -- 8.4 Laissez-Faire Economic Policy Hypothesis -- 8.4.1 Overview -- 8.4.2 Statistical Analysis -- 8.5 Sluggish Technical Transfer Hypothesis -- 8.6 Conclusions -- References -- 9 Industrial Policy, Industrial Development, and Structural Transformation in Asia and Africa -- 9.1 Introduction -- 9.2 Conceptual Framework -- 9.3 Empirical Analyses -- 9.3.1 Sectoral GDP Per Capita -- 9.3.2 Sectoral Employment -- 9.3.3 Finer Sectoral Classification -- 9.3.4 Decomposition Analysis -- 9.4 What Is Missing? -- 9.5 Conclusion -- Appendix -- References -- 10 Transformation of Rural Economies in Asia and Africa -- 10.1 Introduction -- 10.2 Economic Transformation -- 10.2.1 Characteristic Features -- 10.2.2 Consequences -- 10.3 Drivers of Economic Transformation -- 10.3.1 Population Pressure -- 10.3.2 Modern Agricultural Technology -- 10.3.3 Human Capital; 10.3.4 "Push" and "Pull" Forces -- 10.4 Economic Transformation in Rural Villages -- 10.4.1 Changes in Household Income and Their Sources in Asia -- 10.4.2 Changes in Household Income and Their Sources in Africa -- 10.4.3 Conditions for "Take-off:" A Retrospective View from Central Luzon in the Philippines -- 10.5 Summary and Conclusions -- References -- 11 Agricultural Market Intervention and Emerging States in Africa -- 11.1 Introduction -- 11.2 Distortion of Agricultural Markets in Africa -- 11.3 The Relationship Between Economic Development and Agricultural Protection Policy -- 11.4 Determinants of the Agricultural Protection Level -- 11.5 Regression Analysis of Agricultural Protection Level -- 11.6 Conclusion -- References -- 12 Role of Community and Government in Irrigation Management in Emerging States: Lessons from Japan, China, and India -- 12.1 Introduction -- 12.2 Changes in Labor Endowment -- 12.3 Key Concepts -- 12.4 Case Studies -- 12.4.1 Japan's Irrigation Policies Since the Late 19th Century -- 12.4.2 The Case of a Surface Gravity Irrigation Scheme in Hubei, China -- 12.4.3 The Case of Tank Irrigation Systems in Tamil Nadu, India -- 12.5 Concluding Remarks -- References -- Correction to: Paths to the Emerging State in Asia and Africa -- Correction to: K. Otsuka and K. Sugihara (eds.), Paths to the Emerging State in Asia and Africa, Emerging-Economy State and International Policy Studies, https://doi.org/10.1007/978-981-13-3131-2 -- Correction to: Paths to the Emerging State in Asia and Africa -- Correction to: K. Otsuka and K. Sugihara (eds.), Paths to the Emerging State in Asia and Africa, Emerging-Economy State and International Policy Studies, https://doi.org/10.1007/978-981-13-3131-2 UR - https://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/bacm-ebooks/detail.action?docID=5637235 ER -