The Intangible Economy: How Services Shape Global Production and Consumption

The Intangible Economy: How Services Shape Global Production and Consumption

ISBN-10:
1108416152
ISBN-13:
9781108416153
Pub. Date:
07/04/2017
Publisher:
Cambridge University Press
The Intangible Economy: How Services Shape Global Production and Consumption

The Intangible Economy: How Services Shape Global Production and Consumption

$116.0
Current price is , Original price is $116.0. You
$116.00 
  • SHIP THIS ITEM
    Qualifies for Free Shipping
  • PICK UP IN STORE
    Check Availability at Nearby Stores

Overview

The Intangible Economy: How Services Shape Global Production and Consumption studies aspects of the role of services in development as well as on particular sectoral issues, always with policy considerations lurking not far from the analysis. The volume highlights the evolution and significance of services in the global economy, including as a vehicle for development. It discusses the major pillars that hold the services infrastructure together, namely, its governance and financing mechanisms. Other chapters adopt more specific geographical or sectoral perspectives, including a regional study of the impact of services in economic integration in ASEAN; a country-level analysis of the role of services in economic and social upgrading in India; a look at industry-specific dynamics through the business process outsourcing model; and finally, a value chain view to understand how services are impacted on a granular or micro level by policies.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781108416153
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Publication date: 07/04/2017
Series: Development Trajectories in Global Value Chains
Pages: 206
Product dimensions: 6.14(w) x 9.41(h) x 0.71(d)

About the Author

Deborah K. Elms is Founder and Executive Director of the Asian Trade Centre, Singapore. She is also a senior fellow in the Singapore Ministry of Trade and Industry's Trade Academy. Her research interests are negotiations and decision making, and her current research involves the Trans-Pacific Partnership (TPP), Regional Comprehensive Economic Partnership (RCEP), ASEAN Economic Community (AEC) negotiations and global value chains.

Arian Hassani is currently based in Hong Kong where she covers J. P. Morgan's philanthropic activities across ASEAN and Australia, focusing on job creation and poverty alleviation. She has over fourteen years of experience as an international development professional. Before joining J. P. Morgan, Arian managed Fung Global Institute's (FGI) research on Asian finance, supply chains, governance, and sustainability.

Patrick Low is Visiting Professor and Director of the Asia Global Institute's Asia Global Fellows Programme at Hong Kong University. From 1997 to 2013, he was Chief Economist at the World Trade Organization and a senior research economist at the World Bank from 1990 to 1994, where he worked on trade issues, trade and environment, fiscal policy and governance in customs administrations.

Table of Contents

List of figures, Tables and boxes; Acknowledgments; 1. Introduction Deborah K. Elms, Arian Hassani and Patrick Low; 2. Contextualizing services in the world economy Patrick Low and Arian Hassani; 3. Services and development: priorities for reform Christopher Findlay; 4. Gainfully linking into global value chains: a middle-income country's perspective Maria Joy V. Abrenica; 5. Who governs global value chains? Sherry Stephenson and Anne-Katrin Pfister; 6. Supply chain finance Gloria O. Pasadilla; 7. Services and economic integration in ASEAN Julia Puspadewi Tijaja; 8. Indian IT firms: the push for innovation Dev Nathan, Sandip Sarkar and Balwant Singh Mehta; 9. Leveraging business process outsourcing for growth Pradeep Mukherji and Chirag Rawat; 10. Services in global value chains and the impact of policy Denise Cheung and David Sit; Index.
From the B&N Reads Blog

Customer Reviews