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題名 Butter versus Guns: Economic Interdependence and the Cross-Strait Relations 作者 Teng, Chung-Chian; Lu, Yeh-Chung
鄧中堅;盧業中貢獻者 政大外交系 日期 2011-09 上傳時間 8-五月-2013 13:53:47 (UTC+8) 摘要 How trade affects the political relations between two rivals has been an intriguing question in IR scholarship. Realists suggest that concerns about relative gains as well as security externalities would hinder trade between two adversaries, as indicative in the India-Pakistan case and between South and North Korea. Liberals, on the other hand, predict that burgeoning trading relationship contribute to the stability between two politically antagonist states, as the Franco-Germany case in the 1950s demonstrated. However, the realist camp cannot explain the growing trade volume between Taiwan and Mainland China since the 1990s, while liberalism cannot explain why significant commerce could not reduce the hostilities between the two political rivals especially in the years of 2000 to 2008. A latest effort employs the signaling and communication theory in explaining the cross-Strait relations, suggesting that various players in Taiwan, such as politicians, officials, and business groups, would signal their preferences and willingness for further cooperation across the Taiwan Strait. This group of scholars contends that by signaling costly commitments, trade becomes irreversible and so does the stability between both sides of the Taiwan Strait.In line with this reasoning, this paper examines how economic interdependence helps to stabilize the cross-Strait relations after President Ma Ying-jeou took office in 2008. The singing of the Economic Cooperation Framework Agreement (ECFA) between Taiwan and Mainland China indicates the preferences of the multiple players in maintaining the stability across the Taiwan Strait. In addition, the subsequent establishment of the Cross-strait Economic Cooperation Committee would further institutionalize the interactions between the two rivals in the future. This paper concludes that institutionalization would help to reduce security externalities and uncertainties in the cross-Strait relations. 關聯 2011 American Political Science Association(APSA) Annual Conference, Seattle, USA
會議日期:2011年8月14日資料類型 conference dc.contributor 政大外交系 en_US dc.creator (作者) Teng, Chung-Chian; Lu, Yeh-Chung en_US dc.creator (作者) 鄧中堅;盧業中 zh_TW dc.date (日期) 2011-09 en_US dc.date.accessioned 8-五月-2013 13:53:47 (UTC+8) - dc.date.available 8-五月-2013 13:53:47 (UTC+8) - dc.date.issued (上傳時間) 8-五月-2013 13:53:47 (UTC+8) - dc.identifier.uri (URI) http://nccur.lib.nccu.edu.tw/handle/140.119/58116 - dc.description.abstract (摘要) How trade affects the political relations between two rivals has been an intriguing question in IR scholarship. Realists suggest that concerns about relative gains as well as security externalities would hinder trade between two adversaries, as indicative in the India-Pakistan case and between South and North Korea. Liberals, on the other hand, predict that burgeoning trading relationship contribute to the stability between two politically antagonist states, as the Franco-Germany case in the 1950s demonstrated. However, the realist camp cannot explain the growing trade volume between Taiwan and Mainland China since the 1990s, while liberalism cannot explain why significant commerce could not reduce the hostilities between the two political rivals especially in the years of 2000 to 2008. A latest effort employs the signaling and communication theory in explaining the cross-Strait relations, suggesting that various players in Taiwan, such as politicians, officials, and business groups, would signal their preferences and willingness for further cooperation across the Taiwan Strait. This group of scholars contends that by signaling costly commitments, trade becomes irreversible and so does the stability between both sides of the Taiwan Strait.In line with this reasoning, this paper examines how economic interdependence helps to stabilize the cross-Strait relations after President Ma Ying-jeou took office in 2008. The singing of the Economic Cooperation Framework Agreement (ECFA) between Taiwan and Mainland China indicates the preferences of the multiple players in maintaining the stability across the Taiwan Strait. In addition, the subsequent establishment of the Cross-strait Economic Cooperation Committee would further institutionalize the interactions between the two rivals in the future. This paper concludes that institutionalization would help to reduce security externalities and uncertainties in the cross-Strait relations. en_US dc.format.extent 338542 bytes - dc.format.mimetype application/pdf - dc.language.iso en_US - dc.relation (關聯) 2011 American Political Science Association(APSA) Annual Conference, Seattle, USA en_US dc.relation (關聯) 會議日期:2011年8月14日 en_US dc.title (題名) Butter versus Guns: Economic Interdependence and the Cross-Strait Relations en_US dc.type (資料類型) conference en