Spillover Effects of China Going Global 1st edition by Joseph Pelzman – Ebook PDF Instant Download/Delivery: 9814603362 , 9789814603362
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ISBN 10: 9814603362
ISBN 13: 9789814603362
Author: Joseph Pelzman
When the People’s Republic of China (PRC) was granted Most Favored Nation (MFN) status by the United States in 1979, no one imagined the massive transformation the Chinese economy would make within a few decades. China’s remarkable transition from merely being a “world factory”, to the source of the world’s new R&D and product design and innovation since the 1980s is the key focus of Spillover Effects of China Going Global. In this insightful and unique book, Joseph Pelzman shows how the second largest world economy triggered off many spillover effects beyond mass-labour production of durable and non-durable goods — such as the provision of foreign aid to African, Latin American and Asian economies, and increasing focus on internal endogenous innovation, research and development. He provides a comprehensive look at these spillover effects and analyzes how they will undoubtedly bring positive opportunities for others within the rest of the world in the 21st Century.
Spillover Effects of China Going Global 1st Table of contents:
Chapter 1. Introduction
Chapter 2. An Overview of China’s Export Growth
2.1 Theoretical Modeling of the Impact of China’s Exports
2.2 Decomposition of China’s Exports
Chapter 3. The Value-Added Chain in China’s International Trade
3.1 The Formal Model of the Value-Added Chain in International Trade
3.2 The Value-Added Chain in China’s International Trade: Upstream Linkages or Looking Backward
3.3 The Value-Added Chain in China’s International Trade: Looking Forward
Chapter 4. China’s International Trade Competitiveness: An Assessment Based on Revealed Comparative Advantage (RCA) and Constant Market Share (CMS) Indexes
4.1 Competitiveness Based on RCA and Herfindahl Indexes
4.2 Competitiveness Based on Constant Market Share Decompositions
Chapter 5. Evolution of China’s International Trade Competitiveness in Textiles and Apparel Exports to the USA — Pre- and Post-MFA
5.1 The Control of Textile and Apparel Trade: The Early Years
5.2 Moving Away from the MFA: The Agreement on Textiles and Clothing
5.3 Review of Transition TMB Decisions: The First 20 Months
5.3.1 Category 352/652 (Cotton and Man-made Fiber Underwear)
5.3.2 Category 351/651 (Cotton and Man-made Fiber Pajamas and Other Nightwear)
5.3.3 Category 434 (Men’s and Boy’s Wool Coats Other Than Suit Type)
5.3.4 Category 435 (Women’s and Girl’s Wool Coats)
5.3.5 Category 440 (Woven Wool Shirts and Blouses)
5.4 The ACT and the PRC
5.5 Estimating the Impact of Quota Removal: Methodological Considerations
5.5.1 Import Demand
5.5.2 Import Supply
5.6 Predicted Estimates of the Post-MFA PRC–India and PRC–Vietnam Competition Outcome
5.7 The Supply Side Response
5.7.1 Cotton Fiber
5.7.2 Textiles
5.7.3 Apparel
Chapter 6. China’s 10-Year WTO Experience: Applying Market Solutions to a Non-Market Player
6.1 The Overall Reliance on AD Measures
6.2 The Sectoral Pattern of AD Measures, CVDs and Safeguards
6.3 US Measures Against the PRC as a Non-Market Economy
Chapter 7. Quantifying and Modeling PRC Foreign Aid — A Search for Markets, Infrastructure and Service Contracts and Resources
7.1 Measuring PRC Foreign Aid
7.2 A Behavioral Model of PRC Foreign Aid
7.3 A Model of PRC Supply of Foreign Aid
7.4 Statistical Results
Chapter 8. China’s Outward Investment Program — A Search for Technology
8.1 A Review of FDI and its Spillover Effects
8.2 Innovation via M&A or Immigration of Skilled S&E Workers?
8.2.1 The Decision to Innovate via Immigration
8.2.2 The Decision to Acquire R&D
8.3 Micro Data on the PRC Path to Acquire Foreign R&D
Bibliography
Index
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Tags: Joseph Pelzman, Spillover Effects, China Going


