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This book examines Indonesia's national regulatory framework in comparison to trade regionalism. As a relatively new phenomenon compared to trade regionalism, financial regionalism has successfully shaped cooperative networks among financial authorities in East Asia. In this incisive new book, Eko Saputro explores how new financial alliances and regulatory frameworks will allow Indonesia to rapidly take a new place at the global table, bringing the explosive growth that other Asian countries have seen to the archipelago nation. This book will be of equal value to academics, policy makers, students, and scholars, both in the region and abroad.
Auteur
Eko Saputro, an analyst at Indonesia's Ministry of Finance, combines academic training with real-world insights. Trained at some of the best academic institutions in Indonesia and Australia, Saputro is one of the economic thinkers defining East Asia's future.
Résumé
This book examines Financial regionalism in East Asia has stimulated not only a new architecture for regional governance, but also a transformation in Indonesia's national regulatory framework. As a relatively new phenomenon compared to trade regionalism, financial regionalism has successfully shaped cooperative networks among financial authorities in East Asia. In this incisive new book, Eko Saputro explores how new financial alliances and regulatory frameworks will allow Indonesia to rapidly take a new place at the global table, bringing the explosive growth that other Asian countries have seen to the archipelago nation. This book will be of equal value to academics, policy makers, students, and scholars, both in the region and abroad.
Contenu
Contents ...................................................................................................................... 3List of Figures ............................................................................................................. 5List of Tables .............................................................................................................. 6List of Abbreviations ................................................................................................. 7Introduction .............................................................................................................. 12Indonesia and the Dynamics of Regional Financial Cooperation .......................... 12Why Indonesia matters .......................................................................................... 16Explaining Financial Regionalism in East Asia .................................................... 28Reviewing the research on East Asian financial regionalism ................................ 29Power relations .................................................................................................. 34Domestic factors ................................................................................................ 38Regulatory regionalism .......................................................................................... 44The Progress of East Asian Financial Regionalism .............................................. 54ASEAN .................................................................................................................. 55APEC ..................................................................................................................... 61APT Cooperation ................................................................................................... 62The CMIM ......................................................................................................... 63The ABMI .......................................................................................................... 67ASEAN and APT are more concrete than APEC .................................................. 69Domestic Politics in Indonesia and Financial Regionalism in East Asia ............ 71Political change and varying approaches to regional cooperation ......................... 72The non-democratic era ..................................................................................... 72Habibie's transitional administration ................................................................. 76The democratic era ............................................................................................. 77The impact of democratisation ............................................................................... 82Separation of power under democratic regimes................................................. 83Changes to financial institutions and policy making ......................................... 85Independence and coordination ......................................................................... 90Transparency and economic openness ............................................................... 93Wider participation ............................................................................................ 95Power Relations, Bilateral Ties and Indonesia's Responses ................................ 98Japan, China and the APT: cooperation, competition and compromise ................ 99Indonesia's approach: maintaining Japan and welcoming China ........................ 105Reciprocity with Japan ..................................................................................... 105Ideology, pragmatism and relations with China .............................................. 111An independent stance? ....................................................................................... 119Why perceptions matter ................................................................................... 125Indonesia and the CMIM ...................................................................................... 131<div&...