Joe Studwell

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Joe Studwell


Born
The United Kingdom
Website

Genre


Average rating: 4.24 · 4,933 ratings · 504 reviews · 13 distinct worksSimilar authors
How Asia Works: Success and...

4.26 avg rating — 4,563 ratings — published 2013 — 26 editions
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The China Dream : The Elusi...

3.84 avg rating — 75 ratings — published 2001 — 18 editions
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The Case For Chinese Equities

4.60 avg rating — 5 ratings
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Asya Nasıl Başardı?

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liked it 3.00 avg rating — 1 rating — published 2013
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Unlocking China: a Key to I...

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チャイナ・ドリーム〈下〉

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チャイナ・ドリーム〈上〉

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The Nettle in Nepal: A Cott...

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Is Chinese hot (Chinese edi...

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The China Dream: The Quest ...

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More books by Joe Studwell…
Quotes by Joe Studwell  (?)
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“The easiest way to run developmentally efficient finance continues to be through a banking system, because it is banks that can most easily be pointed by governments at the projects necessary to agricultural and industrial development. Most obviously, banks respond to central bank guidance. They can be controlled via rediscounting loans for exports and for industrial upgrading, with the system policed through requirements for export letters of credit from the ultimate borrowers. The simplicity and bluntness of this mechanism makes it highly effective. Bond markets, and particularly stock markets, are harder for policymakers to control. The main reason is that it is difficult to oversee the way in which funds from bond and stock issues are used. It is, tellingly, the capacity of bank-based systems for enforcing development policies that makes entrepreneurs in developing countries lobby so hard for bond, and especially stock, markets to be expanded. These markets are their means to escape government control. It is the job of governments to resist entrepreneurs’ lobbying until basic developmental objectives have been achieved. Equally, independent central banks are not appropriate to developing countries until considerable economic progress has been made.”
Joe Studwell, How Asia Works: Success and Failure in the World's Most Dynamic Region

“What created the Canons, the Samsungs, the Acers and so on in Japan, Korea and Taiwan was the marriage of infant industry protection and market forces, involving (initially) subsidised exports and competition between manufacturers that vied for state support.”
Joe Studwell, How Asia Works: Success and Failure in the World's Most Dynamic Region

“The Philippines has no indigenous, value-added manufacturing capacity. At the end of the Second World War only Japan and Malaysia had higher incomes per capita in Asia. Then Korea and Taiwan overtook the Philippines in the 1950s. The country slid down past Thailand in the 1980s, and Indonesia more recently. From having been in a position near the top of the Asian pile, the Philippines today is an authentic, technology-less Third World state with poverty rates to match.”
Joe Studwell, How Asia Works: Success and Failure in the World's Most Dynamic Region



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