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The Philippines and the International Monetary Fund Negotiations on Petroleum and Imports: Toward a Theory of Negotiation (Hardcover)

The Philippines and the International Monetary Fund Negotiations on Petroleum and Imports: Toward a Theory of Negotiation Cover Image
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Description


In their negotiations with the International Monetary Fund, Philippine chief negotiators attempt to build coalitions to implement reform. Deference and "External-Internal" sequencing tactics are quite common, but the theoretical literature has not examined the conditions under which they are effective or marginalized. This study uses a "Within-Case Study Method of Causal Inference" to examine twenty-four observations from the years 1984-1994 that examine the interaction of the Philippine chief economic negotiators with the IMF, the Chief of Governments, international and domestic, and cabinet and societal veto players on the issues of petroleum price and import reforms. Through this approach, the study rules out alternative deductive system level theories to explain economic outcomes; refines the two-level game framework, generates a midrange typology on the pattern of successes and failures of the negotiations, and provides recommendations on manipulable variables for policy makers. The study suggests that these tactics are constrained by the leverage and signal provided by international veto players and the interaction between formal and informal domestic institutions.

About the Author


Kenneth Faulve-Montojo is a lecturer at Santa Clara University.

Product Details
ISBN: 9781498532693
ISBN-10: 1498532691
Publisher: Lexington Books
Publication Date: October 31st, 2018
Pages: 324
Language: English