This book examines the challenges that ASEAN (Association of Southeast Asian Nations) members need to overcome in order to sustain and intensify economic growth. The ASEAN market is widely regarded as a new hub of growth, not least in light of increasing protectionism and declining economic growth of the three largest countries in Northeast Asia (China, Japan, and South Korea). Contributors address a range of issues with a concentrated focus on evidence from Indonesia, including globalisation, increasing populism, trade, FDI, the benefits of the production network, and related issues such as spill-over, crises, innovation and technology, and selected sectoral commodity and policy analysis of Indonesia. This book analyses and explains the relationship between trade and foreign direct investment, and technical changes, with regard to improving ‘productivity’ in the supply-side economic growth model using, in particular, Indonesia as the de facto leader of ASEAN.
This book will be of interest to academics and students specialising in international economics and international development.
1. Global Production Networks: Participation and Structural Break- Agus Miftahul Ilmi and Fithra Faisal Hastiadi.
2. Does Democracy Cause Regional Disintegration? The Effect of Democracy on ASEAN Intra-Regional and Extra-Regional Trade- Faris Maulana and Fithra Faisal Hastiadi
3. Overcoming the Middle-Income Trap: The Role of Innovation on Switching onto a Higher Income Group for ASEAN Member States- Sarah Nadhila Hardiana and Fithra Faisal Hastiadi
4. The Role of Technology as a Trade Facilitator in Upgrading Export Performance of ASEAN Countries in 2008-2014- Amalia Wardhani, Fithra Faisal Hastiadi and M. Rifki Shihab
5. Impact Analysis of Normalized Revealed Comparative Advantage on ASEAN’s Non-Oil and Gas Export Pattern Using Gravity-Model Approach- Umar Fakhrudin, Fithra Faisal Hastiadi and Banu Muhammad Haidir
6. Trade Creation and Trade Diversion Effects of the ASEAN-China FTA, ASEAN-Korea FTA, and ASEAN-India FTA Implementation on the export of Indonesia's Food and Beverages Industry Products- Wahyudi Setia Darma and Fithra Faisal Hastiadi
7. Analysis of the Imposition of Export Tax on Indonesian Cocoa Beans: Impact on the Processed Cocoa Export Indonesia and Malaysia- Hendy Yudyanto and Fithra Faisal Hastiadi
8. Importers Responses to the Anti-Dumping Duty of Steel in Indonesia- Dony Febriyanto and Fithra Faisal Hastiadi
9. The Impact of Temporary Tariff Protection (Safeguard) on the Heterogeneity of Productivity of Firms that Are Listed as Taxpayers in Indonesia- Mufita Danang Adrianto and Fithra Faisal Hastiadi
10. Import Tariffs and Productivity of Manufacturing Firms in Indonesia- Bayu Sulistiantoro and Fithra Faisal Hastiadi
Fithra Faisal Hastiadi is a full time researcher and lecturer at the University of Indonesia. Before this he was assigned as Research and Community Engagement Manager at the University of Indonesia, Head of the Research Dissemination Unit, and Special Adviser to the Dean of Faculty of Economics and Business at the University of Indonesia. He also served as Senior Researcher at the National Economic Council where he advised the President of Indonesia from 2012 to 2013. Prior to this, Hastiadi worked as a research associate at the Asian Development Bank Institute in Tokyo, Japan.
This book examines the challenges that the ASEAN (Association of Southeast Asian Nations) members need to overcome in order to sustain and intensify economic growth. The ASEAN market is widely regarded as a new hub of growth, not least in light of increasing protectionism and declining economic growth of the three large countries in Northeast Asia (China, Japan, and South Korea). The contributors address a range of issues with a concentrated focus on evidence from Indonesia, including globalisation, increasing populism, trade, FDI, the benefits of the production network, and related issues such as spill-over, crises, innovation and technology, and selected sectoral commodity and policy analysis of Indonesia. This book analyses and explains the relationship between trade and foreign direct investment, and technical changes, with regard to improving ‘productivity’ in the supply-side economic growth model using, in particular, Indonesia as the de facto leader of ASEAN.
This book will be of interest to academics and students specialising in international economics and international development.