Richard F. Doner, Gregory W. Noble and John Ravenhill
East Asia is a powerhouse of automobile production. Yet, across the region, national automobile industries have had strikingly different patterns of development. Despite starting from equally low levels of performance and initially similar strategies, countries have experienced vastly different
results. From Thailand's success as an assembly hub for foreign automakers and China's unexpected achievements in building its own car industry, to South Korea's impressive development of an integrated industry, to the Philippines' persistent weakness, these divergent paths offer a fascinating
window into the determinants of economic growth.
The Political Economy of Automotive Industrialization in East Asia provides a political explanation for why development strategies and performance have been so uneven within one of the world's most important regions. Utilizing interviews
and original-language research from multiple nations, this book explains that factors such as market size and neoclassical economic policies alone cannot explain these patterns of development. Richard F. Doner, Gregory W. Noble, and John Ravenhill instead highlight the significance of two sets of
factors: countries' very different capabilities for implementing policies and the political forces that help to explain the emergence of effective institutions. Through cross-national analyses of China, Taiwan, South Korea, Indonesia, Malaysia, the Philippines, and Thailand, the book sets up a clear
structure for understanding industrial development and how it enables or constrains the capabilities of domestic firms. Brief comparisons with Brazil, Mexico, and other developing countries confirm the utility of the analytic framework and demonstrate how it is superior both to accounts in
mainstream economics and much of political science, which fail to give sufficient emphasis to the role of public and public-private institutions, or provide an explanation of the political bases of those institutions.
In a world where auto assemblers and suppliers are facing new
challenges in an ever-evolving industry - such as the transition to electric and autonomous vehicles - this book offers a crucial perspective on the centrality of institutional capacities and political economy. By tracing the divergent trajectories of seven nations, The Political Economy of
Automotive Industrialization in East Asia offers lessons beyond the automobile industry that illustrate the broader importance of institutions to economic growth.
Preface
1. Introduction
2. The Lure and Challenges of the Automobile Industry
3. Institutions, Politics and Developmental Divergence
4. Thailand: Early opening and Export success
5. The Philippines and Indonesia: Extensive Development Arrested and Delayed
6. Korea:
Successful Intensive Industrialization
7. Malaysia: How Intensive Development Strategies Fail in the Absence of Appropriate Institutions
8. China: Revamping socialist institutions for a market economy
9. Taiwan: Balancing independent assembly, MNCs, and parts promotion in a small
market
10. Conclusion
References
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Richard F. Doner is Goodrich C. White Professor Emeritus of Political Science at Emory University, where he taught from 1985 to 2019. He is the author of The Politics of Uneven Development (2009) and From Silicon Valley to Singapore (2000).
Gregory W. Noble is Professor of
Politics and Public Administration in the Institute of Social Science at the University of Tokyo. He is the author of Collective Action in East Asia (1998) and since 2010 has served as Editor-in-Chief of Social Science Japan Journal.
John Ravenhill is Professor in Political Science at
the University of Waterloo, where he is the Department Chair. He was previously the Director of the Balsillie School of International Affairs in Waterloo. He is co-editor of The Oxford Handbook of International Relations of Asia (OUP, 2014) and editor of the sixth edition of Global Political Economy
(OUP, 2020).
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