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“If You Want to Get Somewhere Else, You Must Run at Least Twice as Fast as That!”: The Roots of the East Asian Crisis

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posted on 2024-09-06, 06:22 authored by Raphael Kaplinsky
Summary Most East Asian economies have been following growth trajectories which involve ever?intensifying competition in external product markets. The financial crisis of 1997–98, whilst clearly having roots in the operations of both global and national financial systems, is in large part a reflection of these long?run growth trajectories. This is because the concentration by these economies in commodity sectors with low barriers to entry has resulted in macroeconomic policies that depend for their success on depreciations in real exchange rates. The crisis in 1997–98 reflects a return to these growth paths after the divergent appreciation of real exchange rates in the early 1990s. Not all Asian economies have followed this path, with Japan, Singapore, Taiwan and perhaps Korea being the exceptions.

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Institute of Development Studies

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Kaplinsky, R. (1999) “If You Want to Get Somewhere Else, You Must Run at Least Twice as Fast as That!”: The Roots of the East Asian Crisis. IDS Bulletin 30(1): 74-85

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IDS Bulletin Vol. 30 Nos. 1

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© 1999 Institue of Development Studies

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    Volume 30, Issue 1: East Asia: What Happened to the Development Miracle?

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