Population Change and Economic Development in East Asia: Challenges Met, Opportunities Seized

Population Change and Economic Development in East Asia: Challenges Met, Opportunities Seized

Population Change and Economic Development in East Asia: Challenges Met, Opportunities Seized

Population Change and Economic Development in East Asia: Challenges Met, Opportunities Seized

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Overview

What role did population change play in East Asia’s rapid economic development? A reliable answer to the question is important because the extraordinary economic record of East Asian countries during their high-growth era (1960-90) is central to current development policy debates. This book argues that previous studies have neglected the fundamental ways in which demographic forces have influenced economic growth and regional economic integration. Consequently, the significance of East Asia’s remarkable decline in childbearing, the diminished rates of population growth, and the accompanying changes in age structure are not fully appreciated by policymakers.

The fifteen essays in this volume address two broad sets of issues. First, did rapid demographic change contribute to East Asian economic development? Specifically, what aspects of the region’s development were influenced by such demographic trends as economic growth, inequality, and the economic status of women? Second, what was the role of population policy in East Asia? What policies and programs were implemented, and which of them achieved their goals? Were demographic outcomes a product only of the region’s rapid economic development, or did population policies accelerate the transition to low fertility and slower population growth?

These questions are addressed through a detailed examination of the experience between 1960 and 1990 of six East Asian economies: Japan, South Korea, Taiwan, Singapore, Thailand, and Indonesia. The essays compare the countries’ distinctive approaches to population policies and examine the important channels through which population change has affected economic development. Among the topics covered are the impact of population on productivity and innovation; economic structure; saving, investment, and international capital flows; international labor migration; human resource development; distribution of income; and the economic status of women.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780804743228
Publisher: Stanford University Press
Publication date: 01/02/2002
Series: Contemporary Issues in Asia and the Pacific
Edition description: 1
Pages: 528
Product dimensions: 6.00(w) x 9.00(h) x 1.10(d)
Lexile: 1420L (what's this?)

About the Author

Andrew Mason is Professor of Economics at the University of Hawaii at Mānoa and Senior Fellow at the East-West Center. His most recent book is Sharing the Wealth (with Georges Tapinos)

Table of Contents

Figuresix
Tablesxiii
Contributorsxix
Prefacexxi
1.Population and Economic Growth in East Asia1
Part IThe Population--Economic Growth Nexus in East Asia
2.Economic Growth and Policy in East Asia33
3.Population in East Asia61
4.Induced Innovation and Agricultural Development in East Asia96
Part IISaving and Investment
5.The Accumulation and Demography Connection in East Asia123
6.Saving, Wealth, and the Demographic Transition in East Asia155
7.Savings, Capital Formation, and Economic Growth in Singapore185
8.Population, Capital, and Labor209
Part IIIHuman Resource Issues
9.Education and the East Asian Miracle231
10.Child Health and Health Care in Indonesia and the Philippines255
11.Education, Earning, and Fertility in Taiwan279
12.Changing Labor Forces and Labor Markets in Asia's Miracle Economies300
13.The Role Played by Labor Migration in the Asian Economic Miracle332
Part IVInequality and the Economic Role of Women
14.Demographic Change, Development, and the Economic Status of Women in East Asia359
15.Population and Inequality in East Asia385
Part VPopulation Policy and Programs
16.Population Policies and Family Planning Programs in Asia's Rapidly Developing Economies413
Notes445
Bibliography455
Index489
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