The rise of China and East Asian export performance: is the crowding-out fear warranted?

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Athukorala, Prema-chandra

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Crawford School of Public Policy, The Australian National University

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This paper examines the effects of China's rapid integration into the global economy on export performance of its East Asian neighbours against the backdrop of ongoing changes in patterns of international production. Following a stage-setting overview of trends and patterns of China's export performance since the early 1990s, it probes two key themes central to the current policy debate, namely China competition in third country markets and emerging patterns of East Asian exports to China. The statistical analysis places particular emphasis on the supply-side complementarities between China and its East Asian neighbours resulting from China's rapid integration into regional production networks. The findings suggest that the fear of export crowding-out has been vastly exaggerated in the contemporary policy debate on the implications of China's rise.

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Working papers in trade and development

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