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The India-Korea CEPA


The India-Korea CEPA

An Analysis of Industrial Competitiveness and Environmental and Resource Implications
SpringerBriefs in Economics

von: Sudhakar Yedla, Choongjae Cho

CHF 59.00

Verlag: Springer
Format: PDF
Veröffentl.: 30.12.2018
ISBN/EAN: 9789811329289
Sprache: englisch

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Beschreibungen

<p>This book assesses the changes that the Comprehensive Economic Partnership Agreement (CEPA) could produce by boosting the competitiveness of firms in India and Korea. It evaluates the CEPA in terms of its effects on the environment and natural resources of the importing and exporting countries alike. Further, it employs the revealed comparative advantage (RCA) and relative trade advantage (RTA) methods of analysis to gauge the influence of the CEPA on industrial competitiveness in both host and receiving countries. While the CEPA would increase trade between India and Korea in their respective strong domains, the book argues that, given the nature of the exported and imported goods and products, India would be more susceptible to serious environmental impacts than would Korea. The book subsequently presents these impacts in a qualitative framework and stresses the need for a comprehensive valuation of not only environmental impacts, but also the losses due to tariff cuts and the gains due to increased trade between the two countries.</p><br>
Chapter 1.&nbsp;Introduction.- Chapter 2.&nbsp;Pattern of Trade between India and the Korean Republic.- Chapter 3.&nbsp;Comprehensive Economic Partnership Agreement (CEPA) – Basic Constructs and Key&nbsp;Features.- Chapter 4.&nbsp;Impacts of CEPA on trade between India and Korea.- Chapter 5.&nbsp;Qualitative analysis of CEPA’s impact on the Environment and Natural Resources Base in&nbsp;India and Korea.- Chapter 6.&nbsp;Concluding Remarks.
<p>Prof. Sudhakar Yedla is a Professor of Environmental Policy at Indira Gandhi Institute of Development Research (IGIDR) and has been associated with the institutions since 1999. He graduated with a degree in Civil and Environmental Engineering from the Indian Institute of Technology (IIT), Kharagpur. He was a Post Doc at the Asian Institute of Technology (AIT), Thailand and received a diploma in International Environmental Law from the United Nations Institute for Training and Research (UNITAR), Switzerland. He has also completed a course in Environmental Economics and Development Policy at the World Bank Institute, Washington, D.C. USA. He has held visiting fellow positions in international institutions such as New Jersey Institute of Technology (Newark, USA), Korean Institute for International Economic Policy (Seoul, South Korea), AIT (Thailand), and National Institute for Environmental Studies (Tsukuba, Ibaraki, Japan) to name some. He has more than 6 books to his credit includingtwo published by Springer “Urban Transportation and the Environment: Issues, Alternatives and Policy Analysis” (authored) and “Cities and Sustainability – Issues and Strategic Pathways” (co-edited); about 40 papers in international journals, and many more in national journals and conference proceedings. He has worked with many international development organizations such as UNDP, UN-FAO, UNEP, ADB, and World Bank.</p>

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<p>Dr. Choongjae Cho is Senior Director General of Research Planning & Coordination Department at Korea Institute for International Economic Policy(KIEP), Seoul, Korea. Before this he was Head of the South Asian Team at the same institution. He is also an adjunct professor at the Graduate School of International Studies at Hankuk University of Foreign Studies(HUFS), Seoul, South Korea. He is a member of the board in the Korean Association of Indian Social Science Research and the Institute of Indian Studies Korea. He is an expert on Indian economy and the economic cooperation between Korea and India. He graduated from Pusan National University (Busan, South Korea) in Economics and obtained his Ph.D. from HUFS. He was a visiting scholar of Claremont Graduate University in USA.</p><br>
Presents a comprehensive analysis of India–Korea CEPA Discloses, while assessing CEPA, many possible implications on resources and the environment both on importing and exporting countries Assesses the competitive advantage of CEPA in bilateral trade agreements on a comprehensive framework involving all externalities, both positive and negative

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