Stephen Roach on the Next Asia
Description
Acknowledgments ix
Introduction xi
CHAPTER 1 A WORLD IN CRISIS 1
A Subprime Outlook for the Global Economy
Save the Day
Coping with a Different Recession
Davos Diary: 2008
Double Bubble Trouble
Even When the Worst Is Over—Watch Out for Aftershocks
Pitfalls in a Postbubble World
Panic of 2008: Enough Scapegoating
Global Fix for a Global Crisis
Changing the Fed’s Policy Mandate
An Early Leadership Opportunity for Barack Obama
Dying of Consumption
Uncomfortable Truths about Our World after the Bubble
A Postbubble Global Business Cycle
America’s Japan Syndrome
Whither Capitalism?
After the Era of Excess
Same Old, Same Old
Depression Foil
CHAPTER 2 THE GLOBALIZATION DEBATE 89
Open Macro
The Battleground of Globalization
The Global Delta
Beggars Can’t Be Choosers
Perils of a Different Globalization
Bad Advice and a New Global Architecture
Doha Doesn’t Matter
Global Speed Trap
Hitting a BRIC Wall?
Global Comeback—First Japan, Now Germany
Labor versus Capital
Global Lessons
From Globalization to Localization
Unprepared for Globalization
The Currency Foil
The Shifting Mix of Global Saving
CHAPTER 3 CHINESE REBALANCING 169
China’s Rebalancing Challenge
A Commodity-Lite China
Scale and the Chinese Policy Challenge
China’s Great Contradiction
Soft Landing Made in China?
The Great Chinese Profi ts Debate
China Goes for Quality
Heavy Lifting
Two Birds with One Stone
Unstable, Unbalanced, Uncoordinated, and Unsustainable
China’s Global Challenge
Consumer-Led Growth for China
China’s Macro Imperatives
Manchurian Paradox
CHAPTER 4 PAN-ASIAN CHALLENGES 261
The Next Asia
Rebalancing Made in Japan?
From Beijing to Dubai
A Tale of Two Asias
Kim’s Boost to Globalization
Japan’s Missing Link
India on the Move
The Cranes of Dubai
Asian Decoupling Unlikely
The Korea Test
Asia’s Policy Trap
Complacency Asian Style
The End of the Beginning
Another Asian Wake-Up Call
India’s Virtuous Cycle
Risks of an Asian Relapse
CHAPTER 5 U.S.-CHINA TENSIONS 327
A Slippery Slope
Past the Point of No Return
Debating U.S.-China Trade Policy
Who’s Subsidizing Whom?
Protectionist Threats—Then and Now
The Ghost of Reed Smoot
China’s Pace, America’s Angst
The Politics of Trade Frictions
A Wake-Up Call for the United States and China:
Stress Testing a Symbiotic Relationship
Afterword 395
Sources 403
About the Author 407
Index 409
"As Chairman of Morgan Stanley Asia and a renowned economist, Stephen Roach has a solid macroeconomics background, in-depth understanding of the region, rich knowledge of various industries, and an open mind. In this book, Steve vividly describes the changes of Asia -- and the driving forces behind those changes。Furthermore, he brilliantly points out the challenges Asia is facing, as well as its impacts on the global economy. Asia is reshaping the global economy in this post-crisis world, and I believe this book provides us with unique insights as to how this reshaping is playing out."—Dr. Zhu Min, Group Executive Vice President, Bank of China
"Stephen Roach has for many years been a uniquely independent voice among international economic commentators. He was one of the few who warned that the debt-fuelled 'casino' economy was unsustainable. His prophetic warnings came to pass in 2008. In his latest book he issues another warning. Asia's explosive growth has been based on a 'bet' upon deep integration with the global economy. Stephen Roach argues that this growth is unsustainable in the face of the global recession. The region needs comprehensively to re-balance its economic model if it is to maintain its remarkable growth. He warns that this will not be easy. Stephen Roach's book is essential reading for those who hold the comfortable belief that Asia has 'de-coupled' from the world economy."
—Prof Peter Nolan, CBE, Sinyi Professor, Judge Business School, and Chair, Development Studies, University of Cambridge, UK
Welt am Sonntag, 11.10.2009
Stephen S. Roach has been a thought leader on Wall Street for over thirty years. Currently the Hong Kong based Chairman of Morgan Stanley Asia, for the bulk of his career he served as the firm's chief economist, heading up a highly regarded team of economists around the world. His recent research on globalization, the emergence of China and India, and the capital market implications of global imbalances has appeared widely in the international media and in testimony before the U.S. Congress. Prior to joining Morgan Stanley in 1982, he worked in senior capacities at Morgan Guaranty Trust Company and the Federal Reserve Board in Washington D.C. He holds a PhD in economics from New York University and was a research fellow at the Brookings Institution. He is a jet-lagged resident of multiple time zones, splitting his time between eight Asian countries and his family home in Connecticut.
As the most dynamic and rapidly growing region in the world over the past decade, Asia has attained a new level of prosperity. Yet Developing Asia's newfound economic ascendancy remains precarious. As 2008 came to an end, every economy in the region had either slowed sharply or tumbled into outright recession. Far from having the autonomous capacity to "decouple" from weakness elsewhere in the world, export-led Developing Asia had become even more tightly tied to foreign markets than was the case a decade earlier. The once-bright future is now uncertain. Investors, business managers, policymakers, and political leaders all need to dig more deeply to uncover the challenges, opportunities, and risks that lurk in this critical region.
In Stephen Roach on the Next Asia, Morgan Stanley's Asia Chairman offers his views on where the Asian economy has been and where it is going. This collection of essays, written by Roach over the past three years—three of the most tumultuous years in modern economic history—tells how the Asia story has played out to this point and what that saga portends for the future. Roach looks at the global economic crisis and the debate over globalization. He details China's challenges in rebalancing its economy and examines U.S.-China tensions over trade policy. And he analyzes the additional challenges facing Japan, India, and Korea. Drawing insight from what went right and wrong, the author attempts, in a concluding chapter, to paint a picture of what it may take to realize the hopes and dreams of the Asia Century. Macro risk assessment, he reveals, is critical to understanding the forces that will shape the Next Asia.
And the Next Asia is already coming into focus. Consistent with the region's penchant for change, it looks to be very different from the Asia of the past thirty years. The transition from old to new will need to be driven by a major rebalancing of its economy—with export- and investment-led growth giving way to a more balanced macro structure, increasingly supported by internal private consumption. For all those who want to deepen their understanding and capitalize on these changes, Stephen Roach on the Next Asia provides an invaluable guide.
Praise For Stephen Roach On The Next Asia"Stephen Roach's penetrating insights into the linkages between Asia and globalization—past, present, and future—should be required reading for policymakers, economists, and anyone else who has an interest in the future of the world economy."
—Jeffrey E. Garten, Professor and former dean, Yale School of Management, former Undersecretary of Commerce for International Trade, Clinton Administration
"Stephen Roach warned us about the global financial crisis years before it exploded in 2007. Now, based on decades of experience, he offers a book full of penetrating insights about the mistakes we've made and the opportunities that await us in the New Asia. If policymakers from the United States and China heed his words, the world will be a safer, more prosperous place."
—Bill Bradley, former United States Senator
"This book presents a fresh Asian perspective in understanding the root cause of the global financial crisis. Its panoramic and penetrating analyses are adding value to the existing debate on the future of Asia."
—Liu Mingkang, Chairman, China Banking Regulatory Commission
"Stephen Roach's articles on Asia give the reader an authoritative and highly readable overview of the many fascinating aspects of Asia's new emergence on the global scene. Based as he is in Asia, he has produced a must-read volume for anyone wanting to get a flavour of a mega trend that is already evident and one that is expected to continue."
—Montek Ahluwalia, Deputy Chairman, Planning Commission, Government of India
"Debate rages over whether Asia has become the new engine of growth in a post-crisis global economy. Stephen Roach challenges this presumption and provides timely insight as to what China and the rest of Asia need to accomplish in order to step into thisimportant role."
—Laura D'Andrea Tyson, Professor, Haas School of Business, UC Berkeley and former chair, White House National Economic Council, Clinton Administration
"Roach has enjoyed a ringside seat in Asia through the crisis. The combination of economic and business analysis gives him a unique perspective. His warning that globalization is fragile and that we run the risk of a retreat to localization deserves to be taken veryseriously indeed by policymakers and business people alike."
—Howard Davies, Director, London School of Economics, former executive chairman, UK Financial Services Authority
—Henry A. Kissinger
PUBLISHER:
Wiley
ISBN-13:
9780470446997
BINDING:
Hardback
BISAC:
BUSINESS & ECONOMICS
BOOK DIMENSIONS:
Dimensions: 157.70(W) x Dimensions: 236.20(H) x Dimensions: 33.50(D)
AUDIENCE TYPE:
General/Adult
LANGUAGE:
English