National Competitiveness in a Global Economy /
National Competitiveness in a Global Economy / 
ed. by William P. Avery, David P. Rapkin. 
 - 1 online resource (285 p.) 
 - International Political Economy Yearbook ;  8 .
Frontmatter -- Contents -- The Contributors -- Acknowledgments -- 1 Competitiveness: Useful Concept, Political Slogan, or Dangerous Obsession? -- 2 Does the United States Have an International Competitiveness Problem? -- 3 Sources of Competitive Asymmetries Between the United States and Japan -- 4 Ideology and Competitiveness: The Basis for U.S. and Japanese Economic Policies -- 5 The Pursuit of Competitiveness in East Asia: Regionalization of Production and Its Consequences -- 6 The Limits on Hegemonic Predation as a Response to Competitiveness Problems: The United States and Taiwan -- 7 Fairness, Efficiency, and Opportunism in U.S. Trade and Investment Policy -- 8 Alternative Paths to Competitiveness: U.S. Trade Policies in International Air Transport Services and Commercial Class Aircraft Manufacturing -- 9 Ideas and Foreign Policy: The Emergence of Techno- Nationalism in U.S. Policies Toward Japan -- 10 Cooperating to Compete: The European Experiment -- References -- Index -- About the Book and the Editors
restricted access http://purl.org/coar/access_right/c_16ec
The authors examine the causes and consequences across time and differing countries of changes in national economic competitiveness and look at US and European responses to the perceived competitive challenge posed by East Asian capitalism.
Mode of access: Internet via World Wide Web.
In English.
9780585149844
10.1515/9780585149844 doi
Competition--United States.
Competition--United States.
Competition, International.
International economic relations.
POLITICAL SCIENCEĀ / Political Economy.
HF1410
337.73
                        Frontmatter -- Contents -- The Contributors -- Acknowledgments -- 1 Competitiveness: Useful Concept, Political Slogan, or Dangerous Obsession? -- 2 Does the United States Have an International Competitiveness Problem? -- 3 Sources of Competitive Asymmetries Between the United States and Japan -- 4 Ideology and Competitiveness: The Basis for U.S. and Japanese Economic Policies -- 5 The Pursuit of Competitiveness in East Asia: Regionalization of Production and Its Consequences -- 6 The Limits on Hegemonic Predation as a Response to Competitiveness Problems: The United States and Taiwan -- 7 Fairness, Efficiency, and Opportunism in U.S. Trade and Investment Policy -- 8 Alternative Paths to Competitiveness: U.S. Trade Policies in International Air Transport Services and Commercial Class Aircraft Manufacturing -- 9 Ideas and Foreign Policy: The Emergence of Techno- Nationalism in U.S. Policies Toward Japan -- 10 Cooperating to Compete: The European Experiment -- References -- Index -- About the Book and the Editors
restricted access http://purl.org/coar/access_right/c_16ec
The authors examine the causes and consequences across time and differing countries of changes in national economic competitiveness and look at US and European responses to the perceived competitive challenge posed by East Asian capitalism.
Mode of access: Internet via World Wide Web.
In English.
9780585149844
10.1515/9780585149844 doi
Competition--United States.
Competition--United States.
Competition, International.
International economic relations.
POLITICAL SCIENCEĀ / Political Economy.
HF1410
337.73

