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dc.contributor.authorHal Hill
dc.date.accessioned2021-10-11T08:06:13Z
dc.date.available2021-10-11T08:06:13Z
dc.date.issued2014
dc.identifier.urihttps://resources.equityinitiative.org/handle/ei/165
dc.description.abstractThe 10 states of Southeast Asia have combined to form the developing world’s most successful and durable regional grouping, the Association of Southeast Asian Na-tions, ASEAN. Economic integration among them is high and increasing. The ambi-tious ASEAN Economic Community is scheduled to take effect from December 2015, and should further accelerate this integration. But the socio-economic and institution-al disparities among them are also very large. This paper therefore asks the ques-tion, does it make sense to contemplate a ‘Southeast Asian development model’? Given this diversity, such a model obviously does not yet exist. But over time, these countries are converging with respect to their openness, their macroeconomic man-agement and some aspects of their social policy. The poorer countries are generally growing faster than the richer ones, suggesting gradual convergence. There are also important spillover and demonstration effects evident from the region’s leaders to its followers. Whether these developments will lead to the adoption of some sort of co-herent regional development strategies remains to be seen.
dc.format.extent26p.
dc.language.isoen
dc.publisherDepartment of International Economic Policy Institute for Economic Research University of Freiburg
dc.rights©Author(s) and Department of International Economic Policy, University of Freiburg
dc.subjectDevelopment models
dc.subjectRegional economic integration
dc.subjectSoutheast Asia
dc.titleIs There a Southeast Asian Development Model?
mods.genrePaper Series


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