Publications

Register

2005-Future of APEC-Borthwick-MacDuff-Eleck-Parsons-Findlay-Soesastro-Garnaut-WooThe Future of APEC and Regionalism in Asia Pacific - Perspectives from the Second Track

Edited by Mark Borthwick, David MacDuff, Andrew Elek, David Parsons, Christopher Findlay, Hadi Soesastro, Ross Garnaut and Yuen Pau Woo 

Sponsored by the Centre for Strategic and International Studies Jakarta, Indonesia 

and Pacific Economic Cooperation Council

Published in 2005 by Centre for Strategic and International Studies (CSIS)

 

 

 

This volume is a collection of recent essays on Asia Pacific economic cooperation and confronts some of the most pressing issues in trans-Pacific cooperation today. The phenomenal economic growth and development achieved during this current era of globalization has been accompanied by the contradictory forces of fragmentation and integration. Links between individuals are unprecedented adn information can be shared at the click of a button. These trends pose serious challenges as well as opportunities for policy makers. The opportunity is that policy makers can adopt successful policies form around the world to hasten economic development. The challenge is that the inefficiency of the global economy is insensitive to domestic political and societal needs. International and regional institutions can help build the individual and collective confidence to engage in the global economy as well as softening often painful change. 

The contributors tackle isuuses such as the possibility of binding commitments within the APEC process, the restructuring of the APEC Secretariat into an OECD-type institution, US attitudes towards greater East Asian integration, and rethinking what open regionalism means today. 

Contents:

1. Re-writing APEC's Approach?

2. APEC as a Pacific OECD

3. The Mid-term Review of the Bogor Goals: Strategic Issues and Options

4. A Review of the APEC Individual Action Plan Peer Review Process

5. The Challenges of Good Governance: The Role of APEC

6. The United States in an Asia Pacific Community

7. A New Open Regionalism in the Asia Pacific

 

You can also log in with your social media account by clicking the icons below

 

Pacific Currents

Global value chains: From fruitful discussions to meaningful actions
Juan Navarro, Associate Faculty, Royal Roads University


Climate change in SOTR
Christopher Findlay, Tilak Doshi and Eduardo Pedrosa


Digital Technologies, Services and the Fourth Industrial Revolutions
Submitted by Jane Drake-Brockman, Christopher Findlay, Yose Rizal Damuri and Sherry Stephenson 


COVID-19 has Exposed Major Gaps in our Social Safety Nets: In a Post-COVID World Will these Gaps be Closed?
Hugh Stephens
Vice Chair, CANCPEC; Distinguished Fellow, Asia Pacific Foundation of Canada; Executive Fellow, School of Public Policy at the University of Calgary


 Multilateral Cooperation is a Safeguard against Pandemics
Rebecca Fatima Sta Maria
Executive Director, APEC Secretariat


International cooperation during COVID-19
Sungbae An
Senior Research Fellow, Department of International Macroeconomics and Finance, Korea Institute for International Economic Policy (KIEP)


Drastic measures to stop spread of COVID-19 are necessary
Charles E. Morrison
Adjunct Fellow and Former President of the East-West Center; Former Co-Chair, PECC


ASEAN-China cooperation in time of COVID-19 pandemic
Jusuf Wanandi
Vice Chair, Board of Trustees, CSIS Foundation; Former Co-Chair of PECC