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Tables of Contents for The Political Economy of the Asian Financial Crisis
Chapter/Section Title
Page #
Page Count
Preface
xi
 
Acknowledgments
xvii
 
Introduction: The Political Economy of the Asian Financial Crisis
1
2
The Debate over Causes: A Brief Intellectual History
3
4
Bringing Politics Back In
7
2
The Arguments in More Detail
9
6
Business-Government Relations and Economic Vulnerability
15
32
The Microeconomics of the Crisis
16
4
Business-Government Relations: The Benefits
20
1
The Concentration of Private Economic Power
21
3
The Politics of Moral Hazard I: The Government and the Financial Sector
24
6
The Politics of Moral Hazard II: Industrial Policy
30
2
The ``Capture'' of Liberalization
32
6
The Politics of Business-Government Relations
38
7
Conclusion
45
2
Incumbent Governments and the Politics of Crisis Management
47
40
Political Sources of Uncertainty
49
2
Thailand
51
4
South Korea
55
4
Malaysia
59
6
Indonesia
65
6
Conclusion
71
16
The Political Economy of Malaysia's Capital Controls
73
14
Crisis, Political Change, and Economic Reform
87
52
Thailand
92
8
South Korea
100
7
Malaysia
107
7
Indonesia
114
10
Conclusion
124
15
Two that Got Away-the Philippines and Taiwan Compared
126
13
The Politics of Financial and Corporate Restructuring
139
44
The Political Economy of Financial Reform
141
5
The Political Economy of Corporate Restructuring
146
32
Liberalizing Foreign Investment
178
2
Conclusion
180
3
The Social Fallout: Safety Nets and Recrafting the Social Contract
183
34
The Economics and Politics of Growth with Equity
185
2
The Limits of the Model in the 1990s
187
3
Who Got Hit?
190
8
The Policy Response: The Political Economy of Social Policy
198
15
Conclusion
213
4
Conclusion: A New Asian Miracle
217
22
The Political Economy of Financial Crises
218
4
Crisis and Political Change
222
2
Looking Forward I: The Reform of Business-Government Relations
224
6
Looking Forward II: Toward a New Social Contract
230
6
A New Asian Miracle
236
3
References
239
16
Index
255