TY - BOOK ID - 32071702 TI - Indonesia in a reforming world economy PY - 2009 SN - 9780980623819 9780980623871 0980623871 0980623812 PB - Adelaide The University of Adelaide Press DB - UniCat KW - Agriculture KW - Agricultural industries KW - Agricultural industries. KW - Agriculture. KW - Commerce. KW - Economic history. KW - Agribusiness KW - Industries KW - Farming KW - Husbandry KW - Industrial arts KW - Life sciences KW - Food supply KW - Land use, Rural KW - History, Economic KW - Economics KW - Commerce KW - Trade KW - Traffic (Commerce) KW - Business KW - Merchants KW - Transportation KW - Indonesia KW - Indonesia. KW - Dutch East Indies KW - Dutch East Indies (Territory under Japanese occupation, 1942-1945) KW - Endonèsie KW - Indanezii︠a︡ KW - Indoneshia KW - Indoneshia Kyōwakoku KW - Indonesië KW - Indonesya KW - Indonezia KW - Indonezii︠a︡ KW - Indonezija KW - İndoneziya KW - İndoneziya Respublikası KW - Indūnīsīyā KW - Induonezėjė KW - Jumhūrīyah Indūnīsīyā KW - PDRI KW - Pemerintah Darurat Republik Indonesia KW - R.I. KW - Republic of Indonesia KW - Republic of the United States of Indonesia KW - Republica d'Indonesia KW - Republiek van Indonesië KW - Republik Indonesia KW - Republik Indonesia Serikat KW - Republika Indonezii︠a︡ KW - Republika Indonezija KW - Rėspublika Indanezii︠a︡ KW - RI KW - United States of Indonesia KW - Yinni KW - Economic conditions UR - https://www.unicat.be/uniCat?func=search&query=sysid:32071702 AB - In the mid-1990s a joint research project was established between CASER (Bogor), CIES (Adelaide), CSIS ( Jakarta) and RSPAS (at ANU, Canberra) to examine interactions between agriculture, trade and the environment in Indonesia. Funded by the Australian Centre for International Agricultural Research (ACIAR Project No. 9449), the specific objective of the project was to assess the production, consumption, trade, income distributional, regional, environmental, and welfare eff ects in Indonesia of structural and policy changes at home and abroad. Particular attention was to be paid to those structural and policy changes that could aff ect Indonesia’s agricultural sector over the next 5-10 years. The implications of national and global economic growth, of regional and multilateral trade liberalisation initiatives, and of Indonesia’s ongoing unilateral policy reforms were the initial focus of the study. However, with the onslaught of the financial crisis that began in the latter part of 1997, the project leaders added that issue to the research agenda. ER -