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Geo-economic Relation Dataset between US and Northeast Asia Nations (2000-2016)


MA Teng1,2LI Yijie1GE Yuejing3,4
1 School of Economics and Management,Hangzhou Normal University,Hangzhou 311121,China2 Institute for Global Innovation and Development,East China Normal University,Shanghai 200062,China3 Faculty of Geographical Science,Beijing Normal University,Beijing 100875,China4 Academy of Plateau Science and Sustainability,Xining 810008,China

DOI:10.3974/geodb.2021.03.02.V1

Published:Mar. 2021

Visitors:10020       Data Files Downloaded:65      
Data Downloaded:2.91 MB      Citations:

Key Words:

Geo-economic relations tightness,Geo-economic streaming potential,Northeast Asia

Abstract:

The geo-economic relation dataset between US and Northeast Asia nations (2000-2016) is consisted of five computational data tables: (1) the trade tightness between Northeast Asian nations (2000-2016); (2) the investment tightness between Northeast Asian nations (2004-2016); (3) trade streaming potentials of US and Northeast Asian nations (2004-2016); (4) investment streaming potentials of US and Northeast Asian nations (2004-2016); (5) the geo-economic streaming potentials of US and Northeast Asian nations (2004-2016). This dataset was archived in .xlsx data format, with data size of 45.8 KB in one data file. The data paper of the dataset is published at Journal of Global Change Data & Discovery. Vol. 5, No. 1, 2021, part of analysis paper based on the dataset was published at Acta Geographica Sinica, Vol. 75, No. 10, 2020.Browse

Foundation Item:

National Natural Science Foundation of China (41871128, 41661033, 41701133); National Social Science Foundation of China (16ZDA041); Chinese Academy of Sciences (XDA20100311)

Data Citation:

MA Teng, LI Yijie, GE Yuejing. Geo-economic Relation Dataset between US and Northeast Asia Nations (2000-2016)[J/DB/OL]. Digital Journal of Global Change Data Repository, 2021. https://doi.org/10.3974/geodb.2021.03.02.V1.

MA Teng, LI Yijie, GE Yuejing. Dataset of geo-economic relations between the United States and Northeast Asian nations based on flow data (2000-2016) [J]. Journal of Global Change Data & Discovery, 2021, 5(2): 189-196. https://doi.org/10.3974/geodp.2021.02.11.

References:

[1] Wang, L. M., Mou, C. F., Lu, D. D., Changes in driving forces of geopolitical evolution and the new trends in geopolitics studies [J]. Geographical Research, 2016, 35(1): 3-13.
     [2] Ni, S. X. China's Geopolitics and Its Strategic Studies [M]. Beijing: Economic Science Press, 2015: 23-25.
     [3] Luttwak, E. N. From geopolitics to geo-economics: logic of conflict, grammar of commerce [J]. National Interest, 1990, 20(20): 17-23.
     [4] Luttwak, E. N., Chu, L. Y. trans. Turbo Capitalism, Winners and Losers in the Global Economy [M]. Beijing: Guangming Daily Publishing House, 2000.
     [5] Li, D. R. Theoretical schools and development trend of geo-economics [J]. Journal of Zhongnan University of Economics&Law, 2009(1): 26-29, 111, 142-143.
     [6] Geoffrey, P., Liu, C. D. trans. Geopolitics: Past, Present and Future [M]. Beijing: Xinhua Press, 2003.
     [7] Keohane, R. O., Nye, J. S. Power and Interdependence [M]. Boston: Little Brown, 1977.
     [8] Mead, W. R. America's Sticky Power [J]. Foreign Policy, 2004(141): 46-53.
     [9] Xi, G. L., Zhen, F., Zhang, M., et al. Spatio-temporal evolution and regional connection of online consumption: a case study on Jingdong Mall [J]. Scientia Geographica Sinica, 2015, 35(11): 1372-1380.
     [10] Sun, L. J., Sun, L. X. Market openness and economic fluctuation: the case of East Asia and China [J]. Economic Research Journal, 2005(6): 69-81.
     [11] Zilibotti, F. Growing and slowing down like China [J]. Journal of the European Economic Association, 2017, 15(5): 943-988.
     

Data Product:

ID Data Name Data Size Operation
0Datapaper_Geo-economic_US_NE_Asia.pdf4033.00kbDownLoad
1 Geo-economic_US_NE_Asia.xlsx 45.80KB
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