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Asian Development Outlook 2005
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Asian Development Outlook 2005

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ISBN: 971-561-564-3
ISSN: 0117-0481
Pub. Date: 2005
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The annual Asian Development Outlook provides a comprehensive economic analysis of 42 economies in developing Asia and the Pacific. On the basis of the Asian Development Bank’s unique knowledge of the region, this 17th edition overviews aggregate trends and medium-term prospects by subregion—East Asia, Southeast Asia, South Asia, Central Asia, and the Pacific—in the context of global economic movements.

The region’s developing economies achieved their strongest performance in 2004 since the Asian financial crisis of 1997–98. Aggregate gross domestic product for the region expanded by a remarkable 7.3%. Growth was underpinned by a combination of sustained external demand and generally buoyant domestic demand. Spurred by a robust expansion in major industrial countries, continued strong growth in the People’s Republic of China and deepening regional integration, exports from regional countries surged.

In spite of some moderation of growth among the major industrial countries over the forecast period 2005–2007, the baseline projection is for a continued robust economic performance. But widening growth gaps among these economies cast a shadow on the medium-term sustainability of the current expansion by exacerbating global economic imbalances. A jump in interest rates, instability in currency markets, high oil prices, and the outbreak of epidemics remain significant risks to the region.

This issue of the Asian Development Outlook includes a chapter on promoting competition for long-term development in Asia. Restrictions to competition should be removed to enable markets to deliver the benefits of competition both to consumers and to sustainable economic growth. However, competition must sometimes be accompanied by regulation to inhibit firms' use of anticompetitive practices. In addition, competition complements intellectual property protection as both seek to promote innovation and enhance consumer welfare. The key message is that government policy should promote competition to ensure efficient resource allocation, while preserving incentives for innovation.

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Contents

Foreword, Acknowledgments, Acronyms and Abbreviations, Definitions [ PDF: 286kb | 14 pages ]

Part 1    Developing Asia and the world [ PDF: 882kb | 60 pages ]

Overview of economic highlights and prospects
Export or domestic demand-Led growth in developing Asia?

Part 2    Economic trends and prospects in developing asia

East Asia [ PDF: 335kb | 25 pages ]

People's Republic of China
Hong Kong, China
Republic of Korea
Mongolia
Taipei,China

Southeast Asia [ PDF: 463kb | 36 pages ]

Cambodia
Indonesia
Lao People’s Democratic Republic
Malaysia
Myanmar
Philippines
Singapore
Thailand
Viet Nam

South Asia [ PDF: 456kb | 36 pages ]

Afghanistan
Bangladesh
Bhutan
India
Maldives
Nepal
Pakistan
Sri Lanka

Central Asia [ PDF: 302kb | 21 pages ]

Azerbaijan
Kazakhstan
Kyrgyz Republic
Tajikistan
Turkmenistan
Uzbekistan

The Pacific [ PDF: 638kb | 46 pages ]

Cook Islands
Fiji Islands
Kiribati
Republic of the Marshall Islands
Federated States of Micronesia
Nauru
Republic of Palau
Papua New Guinea
Samoa
Solomon Islands
Democratic Republic of Timor-Leste
Tonga
Tuvalu
Vanuatu

Part 3    Promoting competition for long-term development [ PDF: 637kb | 58 pages ]

Introduction
Benefits of competition
Competition policy regimes
Consistency with other development objectives
Competition policy in the context of regional and global integration
Issues for implementation
Effects on government finances
Toward a competitive future
Summary and conclusions

Statistical appendix [ PDF: 1,176kb | 30 pages ]

Statistical notes and tables [ PDF: 361kb | 23 pages ]


© 2005 Asian Development Bank

All rights reserved. Published 2005.
Printed in Hong Kong, China.

Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data

ISBN: 971-561-564-3
ISSN: 0117-0481
Publication Stock No. 020405

Asian Development Bank


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