Public Disclosure Authorized by the World Bank - 47242 Reshaping Economic Geography in East Asia - 2009
Edited by Yukon Huang and Alessandro Magnoli Bocchi,
a companion volume to the World
Development Report 2009, brings together noted scholars to address the
spatial distribution of economic growth in Asia. It reveals how the new economic
geography is reshaping development objectives: from initiatives to foster growth
via enhanced agglomeration and connectivity to the world economy, to programs
that channel resources to lagging regions. Key themes include how East Asian
governments have dealt with agglomeration economies, urbanization, and regional
disparities; improving connectivity with infrastructure investments; and
eliminating barriers both inside and outside borders to favor the movement of
labor, goods, and services.
This volume will be of great interest to readers working in the areas of
economic policy, poverty reduction and urban-rural development strategies, and
transport-led infrastructure policy.
Table of Contents
Front
cover - Contents, Boxes, Figures, Tables and Foreword
Preface by Yukon Huang and Alessandro Magnoli Bocchi
Acknowledgments, Contributors, Abbreviations
SECTION I. CONTEXT AND CONCEPTS: DENSITY, DISTANCE, AND DIVISION
1.
Regional integration, agglomeration, and income distribution in East Asia
Nobuaki Hamaguchi
Production networks in East Asia
Regional income inequality
Discussion
2.
Geography of cluster-based industrial development
Keijiro Otsuka and Tetsushi Sonobe
A theory of cluster-based industrial development
Evidence from case studies
Evidence of changing industrial locations
Policy implications
3. Rural clustering at incipient stages of economic development:
hand-weaving clusters in Lao PDR
Akihiko Ohno
Market segregation at an incipient stage of development
Hypotheses on the emergence of traders
Profile of the Lao PDR hand-loom industry
Marketing and contractual arrangements
Weaving clusters and traders
Decline of trust
Retailers as urban-based traders
Conclusions
4. Spatial networks, incentives, and the dynamics of village economies:
evidence from Indonesia
Futoshi Yamauchi, Megumi Muto, Reno Dewina, and Sony Sumaryanto
Data
Descriptive analyses
Empirical framework
Empirical results
Policy discussion
Conclusions
5. The Iskandar Development Region and Singapore
Manu Bhaskaran
Background
Key factors driving the relationship between the two regions
Potential synergies between Singapore and the IDR
The way forward
Conclusion: can these obstacles be overcome?
6. Spatial integration and human transformations in the Great Mekong
subregion (GMS)
Jonathan Rigg and Chusak Wittayapak
The GMS: and idea becomes a subregion
Openness, progress, and inequality in the GMS
Scales and sites: the empirics of spatial transformations in the GMS
Agents, agency, and impacts of spatial transformations in the GMS
Policies and politics of spatial transformation
SECTION II. SOUTHEAST ASIA: VIETNAM, THE PHILIPPINES, INDONESIA, AND
THAILAND
7. Rural development and issues in Vietnam: spatial disparities and some
recommendations
Dang Kim Son
Current spatial disparities and policy issues
Disparities between rural and urban areas
Regional disparities
Causes of disparities
Recommendations
8. Economic geography of Indonesia: location, connectivity, and resources
Hall Hill, Budy P. Resosudarmo, and Yogi Vidyattama
Economic geography
Regional economic growth and change
Regional inequality and convergence
Conclusions
9. Spatial considerations on decentralization and economies of
concentration in Indonesia
Francisco Javier Arze del Granado
Decentralization of expenditures, urban-to-rural migration, and urban density in
congested regions
Agglomeration economies
Room for further decentralization and policy implications
Conclusions
10. Spatial agglomeration, firm productivity, and government policies in
Indonesia: concentration and deconcentration in the manufacturing sector
Ari Kuncoro
Evolution of the manufacturing industry's spatial configuration in Java
Choice of firm location
Empirical methodology: externalities and firm decentralization
Results
Conclusions
11. Spatial disparities and development policy in the Philippines
Arsenio M. Balisacan, Hall Hill, and Sharon Faye Piza
Regional development patters
Determinants of local growth and poverty reduction
Conclusions
12. Spatial disparities in Thailand: does government policy aggravate or
alleviate the problem?
Nitinant Wisaweisuan
Growth and spatial disparities
Explaining spatial disparities
Attempts to alleviate the problem
Conclusions
SECTION III. NORTHEAST ASIA: CHINA AND THE REPUBLIC OF KOREA
13. Reshaping economic geography in China
Yukon Huang and Xubei Luo
China's historic and geographic legacy
Accelerating growth: coordinating structural, incentive, and fiscal policies
Spatial factors and government policies: growth and equity implications
Looking to the future
14. The political economy of government policies toward regional
inequality in China
Yang Yao
Regional disparities in China
The path to the uneven development model
Preferential government policies and economic geography
Recent government initiatives to reduce regional disparities
Alternative ways to address regional disparities
Conclusions
15. Is China sacrificing growth when balancing interregional and
urban-rural development?
Zhao Chen and Ming Lu
Industrial agglomeration and city development
China's urban-rural and interregional development: is there a tradeoff between
efficiency and equality?
Interregional and urban-rural economic development: policy adjustment and fiscal
transfer
Conclusions and policy implications
16. Industrial agglomeration and economic performance in transitional
China
Canfei He
Theoretical understanding of industrial agglomeration in China
Industrial agglomeration and industrial specialization in China
Industrial agglomeration and labor productivity in China
Industrial clusters in China: a county-level analysis
Conclusions
17. Capital allocation, regional specialization, and spillover effects in
China
Chong-En Bai and Xu Lin
Returns to capital across provinces
Regional specialization
Spatial factors behind productivity growth
Conclusions
18.
Coastal China's urban-rural spatial restructuring under globalization
Yue-man Yueng and Jianfa Shen
Guangdong and the Pearl River delta
Shanghai and the Yangtze River delta
The Bohai Bay region
Conclusions
19.
A history of the Republic of Korea's industrial structural transformation and
spatial development
Sam Ock Park
Industrial policies, structural changes of industry, and spatial transformation
Spatial development and change
Policy implications
SECTION IV. CONCLUSION: LESSONS FROM EXPERIENCE
20.
Lessons from experience: reshaping economic geography in East Asia
Yukon Huang and Alessandro Magnoli Bocchi
Context: the rise of regionalism and the role of production-sharing networks
Accompanied by increasing disparities
The new economic geography
Vietnam and Lao PDR: emerging spatial patterns at low income levels
Indonesia, the Philippines, and Thailand: diverse settings and varied outcomes
in three middle-income ASEAN countries
China: agglomeration, rapid growth, and major spatial consequences
Korea: from developing to developed status and eventual equalization
Lessons learned
|