Confusion is compounded when he discovers that ideological debate has multiplied even further the analyses of this phenomenon. Articles on why the most successful economies of the region Hong Kong, Korea, Singapore, and Taiwan Province of China have grown, to say the least, robustly invariably refer to the phenomenon as "miraculous." When practitioners of the Dismal Science have recourse to a Higher Power, the reader knows that he is in trouble. The spectacular growth of many economies in East Asia over the past 30 years has amazed the economics profession and has evoked a torrent of books and articles attempting to explain the phenomenon. Readers interested in the original Working Paper may purchase a copy from IMF Publication Services. Driscoll of the Fund's External Relations Department. The following paper draws on material originally contained in IMF Working Paper 95/98, "Growth in East Asia: What We Can and What We Cannot Infer From It," by Michael Sarel, an Economist in the Fund's Southeast Asia and Pacific Department. This material is refined for the general readership by editing and partial redrafting. The raw material of the series is drawn mainly from IMF Working Papers, technical papers produced by Fund staff members and visiting scholars, as well as from policy-related research papers. Its aim is to make accessible to a broad readership of nonspecialists some of the economic research being produced in the International Monetary Fund on topical issues. The Economic Issues series was inaugurated in September 1996. Use the free Adobe Acrobat Reader to view pdf files. September 1996 PDF File (230k) also available. Document image display method and access may also vary depending on institution and documents (for information on respective institutions, click the link labeled “About Usage of Document Images,” which can be found near the text reading “Legend”).Michael Sarel ©1997 International Monetary Fund.Image or screen format may differ depending on institution or document.Through the link, you may open directly the document images from an external webpage.Once you open an image in a selected format, even if you close your browser, images will automatically display in the future in the selected format by default.īrowse :When you click on this button, released document images from an external institution's webpage will open in a new window or tab.You can choose the format of the image to be displayed.Ĭlick to select the format ( PDF JPEG ) you want to display from the upper right-hand corner of the screen.Document files are displayed in PDF and JPEG format.The browse button does not appear for items of unreleased document images.īrowse:When you click on this button, in a new window or tab our released document images will open. The button also appears on the catalog item screen. The browse button appears above search results above Item on the left side of the screen (it is not in the file screen). There are two buttons for browsing, which include Browse and Browse (for specifics please see below). JACAR Dictionary Search Improve results by using keywords (i.e., terms in use when the documents were originally created) when searching the JACAR Dictionary.Cross Search Comprehensively search Asia historical documents of JACAR, NAJ Digital Archive, and databases of other institutions. You can directly access to specific documents you have already identified. Search by Reference Code Search the documents by entering reference code.Click on the alphabetical index to navigate to the keyword pertaining to the search. Alphabetical Index Search This is the dictionary data in which the keyword searched for appears.Click on the place name, personal name, or event category to navigate to the keyword pertaining to the search. Search by Category This is the dictionary data in which the keyword searched for appears.Search by Keyword Search the documents by entering keyword.
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