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EXTERNAL THREATS, INTERNAL CHALLENGES, AND STATE BUILDING IN EAST ASIA

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  28 August 2019

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Abstract

This paper empirically tests bellicist theories of state building in the East Asian context, paying attention to the interplay between external threats and internal challenges and their implications for these states’ extractive power. How much variation in state building in the region can be attributed to war and war preparation as a result of both external threats and internal challenges? In particular, it provides more fine-grained analysis on the different types of internal challenges and their impact on state capacity building. The article argues that in the East Asia region, both external threats and internal challenges are crucial to explaining the variation in state capacity across the region. However, we also find that different types of internal challenges have different effects. Particularly, communist insurgencies seem to have both an immediate and long-term positive effect in compelling the state to respond with more extraction to engage in state-building efforts.

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Article
Copyright
Copyright © East Asia Institute 2019 
Figure 0

Figure 1 Variation in the Tax Ratio across East Asia by Country

Figure 1

Table 1 Major Interstate Conflicts in East Asia since end of World War II

Figure 2

Table 2 Internal Insurgency Years in East Asia by Type

Figure 3

Table 3 Descriptive Statistics

Figure 4

Table 4 The Effect of War and Civil War on State Building in East Asia

Figure 5

Table 5 The Contemporaneous Effect of External and Internal Threats on State Building in East Asia

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Table 6 The Five-Year Effect of External and Internal Threats on State Building in East Asia

Figure 7

Table 7 The Ten-Year Effect of External and Internal Threats on State Building in East Asia