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Industrial Transformation in the Developing World

Michael T. Rock and David P. Angel

Price: £62.00 (hardback)
ISBN-13: 978-0-19-927004-0
Publication date: 6 October 2005
264 pages, 8 figures, 30 tables, 234x156 mm
Series: Oxford Geographical and Environmental Studies Series
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Description
  • An important and timely book by leading experts
'Grow first, clean up later' environmental strategies in the developing economies of East Asia - China, Korea, and Taiwan in Northeast Asia and Indonesia, Malaysia, the Phillippines, Singapore, Thailand and Vietnam in Southeast Asia - pose a critical regional and global sustainability challenge in this area of continuing rapid urban-based industrial growth. It is the most polluted region in the world.

Whilst being at the leading edge of the processes of urbanization, industrialization, and globalization these economies are in the midst, not at the end, of their urban-industrial transformations. During the next 25 years urban populations in the region are expected roughly to double, and most of the industrial capital stock that will be on the ground by 2030 has not yet been built. Given East Asia's growing size in the world's economy and ecology, and its increasingly polluted environment, this looming urban-industrial transformation is both a challenge and an opportunity. Unless steps are taken now to make this transformation more sustainable, East Asia's, and the world's, environmental future is likely to deteriorate seriously.

Using detailed case studies and rigorous empirical analyses Rock and Angel, leading experts in this field, show that East Asian governments have found institutionally unique ways to overcome the sustainability challenge. As a result of these findings, they demonstrate how even low income economies in the rest of the world can use regulatory polices, industrial policies, and an openness to trade and foreign investment that will increase the competitiveness of their firms whilst improving their environmental performance, thus proving an important antidote to those who argue that poor countries cannot afford to clean up their environment whilst their economies remain under-developed.

Readership: Policy makers, professionals, and academics in the fields of development studies, economic geography, industrial economics, international business, human ecology, environmental economics.

Contents
1. East Asia's Sustainability Challenge
2. Late Industrialization and Technological Capabilities Building
3. Policy Integration: From Technology Upgrading to Industrial Environmental Improvement
4. The Role of Environmental Regulatory Agencies in Sustainability: Korea and Indonesia
5. Globalization, Opennes to Trade and Investment, Technology Transfer and Technology and the Environment: The Cement Industry in East Asia
6. Win-Win Environmental Intensity or Technique Effects and Technological Learning: Evidence from Siam City Cement
7. Impact of Multinational Corporations' Firm-Based Environmental Standards on Subsidiaries and their Suppliers: Evidence from Motorola-Penang
8. Global Standards and the Environmental Performance of Industry
9. Implications for other Industrializing Economies
10. Prospects for Policy Integration in Low Income Economies
11. Bibliography

Authors, editors, and contributors


Michael T. Rock, Harvey Wexler Professor of Economics, Bryn Mawr College and
David P. Angel, Provost and Laskoff Professor of Economics, Technology, and Environment, Clark University


Links to web resources and related information
More in the same subject area:
Pollution & threats to the environment
Environmental economics
Development studies
Economic geography
Pollution control
International business

The specification in this catalogue, including without limitation price, format, extent, number of illustrations, and month of publication, was as accurate as possible at the time the catalogue was compiled. Occasionally, due to the nature of some contractual restrictions, we are unable to ship a specific product to a particular territory. Jacket images are provisional and liable to change before publication.

 
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