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International Political Economy

Research under International Political Economy (IPE) is coordinated by Dr Deborah Elms. It comprises three programmes: financial integration, trade negotiations and economic development. Staff members have been working on an integrated research agenda, collaborative teaching, and increased international networking.

Important research projects for 2006 have included an in-depth examination of the Bank of Indonesia from 1945-2003, an examination of the East Asian automobile industry, a focus on regional and bilateral trade agreements, behavioral foundations of trade negotiations, and the development of different forms of capitalism in OECD states.

IPE faculty worked collaboratively with staff members from the Multilateralism and Regionalism Programme on the 2006 Sentosa Roundtable. The working paper for the December conference was drawn up by IPE to serve as a springboard for discussions.

IPE staff members participated in the IMF/World Bank annual meetings, held in Singapore in September 2006. IDSS was also represented at a conference held in Amsterdam in September 2006 as part of the European collaborative GARNET research programme. The second leg of a three-part series on “Globalisation and Economic Success: Policy Options for Africa,” was held in November 2005 in Cairo, Egypt. The conference was co-hosted with the Brenthurst Foundation of South Africa, the Konrad Adenauer Foundation of Germany and Egypt’s Information and Decision Support Centre. IDSS was also represented at the Emerging Dynamic Global Economies (EDGE) Network Conference in Canada in November 2006.

Topics in the IPE monthly seminar series have included China’s management of risk, the perils of regional or bilateral trade agreements, and an assessment of the World Trade Organisation’s Doha development round’s failure.

Upcoming projects in IPE include the following:

Two separate conference projects on the 10th anniversary of the 1997 Asian Financial Crisis. The first brings together central bank and finance ministers from the time period for a retrospective review of events. The second is an academic project intended to consider policy changes in the decade since the crisis.

Another two-track conference series to be held in late 2007 and early 2008 will bring together policy makers and academics to consider the Uruguay Round negotiations under the General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade (GATT). The primary focus will be on the process of reaching agreements in agriculture, services, intellectual property rights, and dispute settlement.

Finally, the last installment of the conference series on “Globalisation and Economic Success: Policy Options for Africa” funded by the Brenthurst Foundation will be held in late 2007 in South Africa. The series will present findings to policymakers drawn from across Africa.

 

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