In the face of the financial crisis of East Asia in 1997, Japan
successfully pressed forth the Miyazawa Plan and other efficient rescue
packages while the International Monetary Fund (IMF) and the World Bank
failed to present effective programs. With its presence established,
Japan kept playing a leading role in formulating the Chiang Mai
Initiative which facilitated bilateral and regional economic cooperation
in the area. Based on the analysis of the process, this book examines
the ways in which East Asia has grappled with the regional integration
of the economies of the area. The study focuses upon competing
developmental models, the effects of the Free Trade Agreement and the
Economic Partnership Agreement, the initiatives of the Association of
Southeast Asian Nations, investments, and trades in the region. The
contributors to the book then inquire what can be done in financial and
monetary domains, with special attention paid to the effects of the
depreciation of currencies and the consequences of the IMF emergency
policies. The study also addresses the issues of productivity, problems
of agrarian small states, and difficulties of the socially weak in the
region.