China's Belt and Road Initiative, the Eurasian Landbridge, and the New Mega-Regionalism / Richard Pomfret
Call number: 382.30951 P786C 2020 Material type: BookPublisher: London : United Kingdom, 2020Description: 200 p. : ill. ; - cmISBN: 9789811208720 :Subject(s): Regional economics -- China -- History -- 21st century | China -- Foreign economic relations -- 21st centuryDDC classification: 382.30951 P786C 2020 Online resources: ดูปกและสารบัญ (see cover and contents) Summary: This contribution to the World Scientific series on the Belt and Road Initiative focuses on the overland connections west from China, the Silk Road Economic Belt component of the BRI. It emphasizes the economic underpinning of the Belt in the market-driven creation of the Eurasian Landbridge and the linking of regional value chains. A fundamental economic driver behind this is the twenty-first century evolution of international value chains, in which China plays a major role, and their transformation by new trade technologies. Finer fragmentation of production and wider scanning for participants in value chains underlie the need for common, preferably global, regulation of new trade technologies and the emergence of mega-regional trade agreements (and China's response to such agreements).Item type | Current library | Collection | Call number | Copy number | Status | Date due | Barcode |
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General Books | สำนักวิทยบริการ (Center) ชั้น 7 หนังสือทั่วไปภาษาอังกฤษ 000-900 | Non-fiction | 382.30951 P786C 2020 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | 1 | Available | 3000027613 |
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This contribution to the World Scientific series on the Belt and Road Initiative focuses on the overland connections west from China, the Silk Road Economic Belt component of the BRI. It emphasizes the economic underpinning of the Belt in the market-driven creation of the Eurasian Landbridge and the linking of regional value chains. A fundamental economic driver behind this is the twenty-first century evolution of international value chains, in which China plays a major role, and their transformation by new trade technologies. Finer fragmentation of production and wider scanning for participants in value chains underlie the need for common, preferably global, regulation of new trade technologies and the emergence of mega-regional trade agreements (and China's response to such agreements).
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