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Economy South and Southeast Asia - summary lecture 1-12

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Economy South and Southeast Asia - summary lecture 1-12

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  • June 12, 2022
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1 MASTER SUMMARY Economy: South and Southeast Asia



Overview
Lecture 1: Introduction – Southeast Asia
1. Perkins, Dwight H. 2013. “Introduction.” In East Asian Development: Foundations and
Strategies, edited by Dwight H. Perkins, 1-13. Cambridge, Massachusetts; London,
England: Harvard University Press.
2. SarDesai, D. R. 2013. “The Land and Its People.” In Southeast Asia: Past and Present,
edited by D.R. SarDesai, 5-20. Boulder, Colorado: Westview Press.
3. Lim, Chong-Yah. 2009. Southeast Asia: The Long Road Ahead. Singapore: World Scientific,
3rd ed. Chapter 2, pp 36-61
4. Daquila, Teo_lo C. 2005. The Economies of Southeast Asia: Indonesia, Malaysia,
Philippines, Singapore, and Thailand. New York: Nova Science Publishers. The Picture, pp 3-
16

Lecture 2: Introduction – South Asia
1. Jha, Raghbendra. 2011. Overview of the South Asian Economy. In Routledge Handbook
of South Asian Economics, edited by Raghbendra Jha, 1-15. New York: Taylor and
Francis Group.
2. Parikh, Kirit S. 2006. “Overview of South Asian Countries: Case Studies.” In
Explaining Growth in South Asia, edited by Kirit S. Parikh, 1-44. New Delhi: Oxford
University Press.
3. Athukorala, Prema-chandra. 2002. Introduction. In The Economic Development of South Asia,
edited by Prema-chandra Athukorala. Edward Elgar Publishing Cheltenham, U.K, 3 v. (xxxi,
597, xi, 543, xi, 637 p.).
4. Ludden, David. 2005. Development Regimes in South Asia: History and the Governance
Conundrum. Economic and Political Weekly 40 (37): pp. 4042-4051.

Lecture 3: Patterns of Economic Growth in SEA
1. Rodrik, Dani. 2003. “Introduction: What Do We Learn from Country Narratives?” In
In Search of Prosperity: Analytic Narratives on Economic Growth, edited by Dani Rodrik,
1-20. New Jersey: Princeton University Press.
2. Perkins, Dwight H. 2013. “Understanding East Asian Growth.” In East Asian
Development: Foundations and Strategies, edited by Dwight H. Perkins, 48-65.
Cambridge, Massachusetts; London, England: Harvard University Press.
3. Hill, Hal and Sam Hill. 2005. Growth Econometrics in the Tropics What Insight for Southeast
Asian Economic Development? The Singapore Economic Review 50 (Special 01):313{343.
4. Read a country case
o Temple, Jonathan. 2003. “Growing into Trouble: Indonesia After 1966.” In In
Search of Prosperity: Analytic Narratives on Economic Growth, edited by Dani
Rodrik, 152-183. New Jersey: Princeton University Press.
o Balisacan, A.M. and H. Hill. 2003. The Philippine Economy: Development, Policies,
and Challenges. Oxford University Press. Chapter 1, pp 3-44
o Hill, Hal. 2012. Malaysian Economic Development: Looking Backward and Forward.
In Malaysia's Development Challenges: Graduating from the Middle, edited by Hal
Hill, Tham Siew Yean, and Ragayah Haji Mat Zin. Routledge. Chapter 1, pp 1-42

Lecture 4: Patterns of Economic Growth in SA
1. Rodrik, Dani and Arvind Subramanian. 2004. “From "Hindu Growth" to Productivity
Surge: The Mystery of the Indian Growth Transition.” IMF Working Paper (May): 1-42.

,2 MASTER SUMMARY Economy: South and Southeast Asia


2. Basu, Kaushik and Annemie Maertens. 2007. “The Pattern and Causes of Economic
Growth in India.” Oxford Review of Economic Policy 23, no. 2: 143-167. Oxford
University Press.
3. Easterly, William. 2003. Political Economy of Growth without Development: A Case Study
of Pakistan. In In Search of Prosperity, Analytic Narratives on Economic Growth, edited by
Dani Rodrik. Princeton University Press.
4. Alauddin, Mohammad. 2004. Recent Development in the Bangladesh Economy. The
Australian National University, Australia South Asia Research Centre

Lecture 5: Covid-19 and the economy
1. OECD. 2020. “Economic Outlook for Southeast Asia, China and India 2020: Rethinking
Education for the Digital Era.” OECD Publishing. Paris.
https://doi.org/10.1787/1ba6cde0-en
2. United Nations. 2020. “Policy Brief: The Impact of COVID-19 on South-East Asia.”
3. Sumner, Andy, Eduardo Ortiz-Juarez, and Chris Hoy. 2020. “Precarity and the
Pandemic: COVID-19 and Poverty Incidence, Intensity, and Severity in Developing
Countries.” United Nations University, 1-24. UNU-WIDER.
https://doi.org/10.35188/UNU-WIDER/2020/834-4
4. Pepinsky, Thomas. 2020. “The Political and Economic Impact of Covid-19 in Southeast
Asia.” Interview by Shreeya Agarwal. The National Bureau of Asian Research, June 11,
2020. https://www.nbr.org/publication/the-political-and-economic-impact-of-covid-19-
in-southeast-asia/

Lecture 6: 1997-1998 Economic Crisis in SEA and 1990 Economic
Reform in India
1. Krugman, Paul. 1998. “What Happened to Asia?” Mimeo, MIT.
http://web.mit.edu/krugman/www/DISINTER.html
2. Cerra, Valerie and Sweta Chaman Saxena. 2002. “What Caused the 1991 Currency
Crisis in India?” IMF Staff Papers 49, no. 3: 395-425. International Monetary Fund.
3. Ahluwalia, Montek S. 2002. “Economic Reforms in India Since 1991: Has Gradualism
Worked?” Journal of Economic Perspectives 16, no. 3 (Summer): 67-88.
4. Furman, Jason and Joseph E. Stiglitz. 1998. Economic Crises: Evidence and Insights from
East Asia. Brookings Papers on Economic Activity 29 (2):1-136.
5. Ghosh, Arunabha. 2006. Pathways Through Financial Crisis: India. Global Governance 12
(4):413-429.
6. Kohli, Atul. 2006. Politics of Economic Growth in India, 1980-2005: Part II: The 1990s and
Beyond. Economic and Political Weekly 41 (14): pp. 1361-1370.

[MIDTERMS]

Lecture 7: Political Economy in SEA
1. Pepinsky, Thomas B. 2009. Economic Crises and the Breakdown of Authoritarian
Regimes: Indonesia and Malaysia in Comparative Perspective. Cambridge University
Press. Chapter 1, pp 1-14
2. Perkins, Dwight H. 2013. East Asian Development: Foundations and Strategies.
Cambridge, Massachusetts: Harvard University Press. Chapter 4, pp 100-121
3. Khan, Mushtaq H. 2000. Rents, E_ciency, and Growth. In Rents, Rent-Seeking and Economic
Development: Theory and Evidence in Asia, edited by Mushtaq H. Khan and Jomo Kwame
Sundaram. Cambridge University Press.
Indonesia specific:

,3 MASTER SUMMARY Economy: South and Southeast Asia


• McLeod, Ross H. 2000. Soeharto`s Indonesia: A Better Class of Corruption. Agenda 7 (2):99-
112.
• Sidel, John T. 1998. Macet Total: Logics of Circulation and Accumulation in the Demise of
Indonesia's New Order. Indonesia: 159-195

Philippines specific:
• Nye, John V. 2011. Taking Institutions Seriously: Rethinking the Political Economy of
Development in the Philippines. Asian Development Review 28 (1):1-21.
• Hutchcroft, Paul D. 2008. The Arroyo Imbroglio in the Philippines. Journal of Democracy 19
(1):141.

Lecture 8: Political Economy in SA
1. Frankel, Francine R. 2005. India’s Political Economy 1947-2004: The Gradual Revolution
(2nd edn). New Delhi: Oxford University Press. Introduction and Conclusion chapters.
2. Devarajan, Shantayanan and Ijaz Nabi. 2006. Economic Growth in South Asia:
Promising, Unequalizing, Sustainable? Economic and Political Weekly 41 (33): pp. 3573-
3580.
3. Lewis, David. 2011. Bangladesh: Politics, Economy and Civil Society. Cambdridge:
Cambdridge University Press. Chapter 6
4. Husain, Ishrat. 2009. The Role of Politics in Pakistan's Economy. Journal of International
Affairs 63 (1):1.
5. Abeyratne, Sirimal. 2004. Economic Roots of Political Conflict: The Case of Sri Lanka.
World Economy 27 (8):1295-1314.

Lecture 9: Macroeconomic Policies in SEA
1. Hill, H. 2013. Southeast Asian Macroeconomic Management: Pragmatic Orthodoxy.
Masyarakat Indonesia (Indonesian Society) 39 (2) :459-480.
2. Corden, Warner Max. 1996. Pragmatic Orthodoxy: Macroeconomic Policies in Seven East
Asian Economies. International Center for Economic Growth 61:1-46
3. Fane, George. 2005. Post-crisis Monetary and Exchange Rate Policies in Indonesia, Malaysia
and Thailand. Bulletin of Indonesian Economic Studies 41 (2):175-195.

Lecture 10: Macroeconomic Policies in SA
1. Shankar, Acharya. 2009. India's Macroeconomic Performance and Policies Since 2000.
Indian Council for Research on International Economic Relations
2. Reddy, Y.V. 2004. Monetary and Financial Sector Reforms in India: A Practitioner`s
Perspective. In India's Emerging Economy: Performance and Prospects in the 1990s and
Beyond, edited by Kaushik Basu. Cambridge: MIT Press.
3. World-Bank. 2008. Sri Lanka - Development Policy Review. Washington DC: World Bank

Lecture 11: Social Development in SEA
1. Warr, Peter. 2006. Poverty and Growth in Southeast Asia. ASEAN Economic Bulletin
23 (3): pp. 279-302.
2. Tangcharoensathien, Viroj, Walaiporn Patcharanarumol, Por Ir, Syed Mohamed
Aljunid, Ali Ghufron Mukti, Kongsap Akkhavong, Eduardo Banzon, Dang Boi Huong,
Hasbullah Thabrany, and Anne Mills. 2011. Health-_nancing reforms in southeast Asia:
challenges in achieving universal coverage. The Lancet 377 (9768):863-873.
3. Yusuf, Arief Anshory, Andy Sumner, and Irlan Adiyatma Rum. 2014. Twenty Years of
Expenditure Inequality in Indonesia, 19932013. Bulletin of Indonesian Economic Studies 50
(2):243-254.
4. Booth, Anne. 1999. Initial Conditions and Miraculous Growth: Why is South East Asia
Different from Taiwan and South Korea? World Development 27 (2):301-321.

, 4 MASTER SUMMARY Economy: South and Southeast Asia


5. Jones, Gavin W. 2012. The Population of Southeast Asia. Working Paper Series No. 196.
Asia Research Institute, National University of Singapore

Lecture 12: Social Development in SA
1. Ghani, Ejaz. 2010. The Poor Half Billion in South Asia: What Is Holding Back Lagging
Regions? Oxford University Press. Overview and Chapter 1.
2. Dreze, Jean and Amartya Sen. 2013. An Uncertain Glory: India and its Contradictions.
London: Allen Lane. pp 1-16
3. Rama, Martin, Tara Bteille, Yue Li, Pradeep K. Mitra, and John Lincoln Newman. 2015.
Addressing Inequality in South Asi. World Bank Group.
4. van de Walle, Dominique, Martin Ravallion, Puja Dutta, and Rinku Murgai. 2012. Does
India's Employment Guarantee Scheme Guarantee Employment? Economic and Political
Weekly 47 (16).
[FINALS]

Assessment
Tutorial (30%) A1 Summary Perkins & Sunday, September 13
Jha 23:59
500 words
Best 3 out of 4 summary A2 Summary Rodrik Sunday, October 4
assignments included in 500 words 23:59
tutorial grade. (10%) A3 Review Olson Sunday, November 1
500 words 23:59
A4 Review Sen Sunday, November 22
500 words 23:59
Abstract (20%) Three days before the tutorial
200 words session of the chosen theme
Tutorial 2: Economic Growth
Experience
Sunday, October 4
23:59
Tutorial 3: Political Economy
Sunday, November 1
23:59
Tutorial 4: Economic Development
Sunday, November 22
23:59
Essay (20%) Wednesday, November 18
1500 words 23:59
Min. 5 academic articles
Midterms (30%) – short essay questions Friday, October 23
9:00-12:00
Friday, December 18
Finals (40%) 16:00-19:00

Essay: see assessment criteria
1. engages with the relevant concepts and/or theories from the compulsory reading (the required
reading of the tutorial of your chosen topic)
2. synthesizes the different main points found in the academic literatures used in your essay (5
academic articles)

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