Regional economic integration has become a key force in international commercial policy in the 2000s. Europe has traditionally embraced regionalism; the United States became actively involved in preferential trading arrangements only in the 1980s. While Asia has been late in accepting formal regional economic integration accords, all Asian countries are now in the process of creating various free-trade areas and other forms of economic integration programs, and some are already in place. This volume analyzes the regionalism trend from an Asian perspective. It considers the lessons from, and the economic implications of, various economic integration programs in the OECD (mostly the EU but also NAFTA), as well as the proposals for closer economic integration in the region itself. Chapters deal with both real and financial integration issues.
1. East Asian Economic Regionalism : Progress and Challenges
2. Sequencing Regional Integration in Asia
3. ASEAN+3 : Is an Economic Community in their Future?
4. Stock Market Performance in ASEAN : Is Institutional Integration Warranted?
5. The Institution of a Single Currency Area : Lessons for Asia from the European Monetary Union
6. Deep Integration and Its Impacts on Non-Members : EU Enlargement and East Asia
7. Small Change : A Critical Examination of the Economic Relationship between South Asia and the European Union
8. The Effects of Noeth-South Regional Trade Policies : A Comparison of Mediterranean Countries with ASEAN
9. Reconciling the Tensions between Regional Integration and Cohesion
10. Lessons for Asia? Legitimacy and Quasi-Democratic Mechanisms in European and American Market Integration