Fellows
Fellows
presidential medal of freedom
american academy of arts and sciences
national medal of science
nobel prize
national humanities medal
The Hoover Institution’s library and tower will be closed on Tuesday morning, February 14, 2012, due to electrical work. The Hoover archives will be open during the process. The library and tower will reopen at 11:30 am on February 14, 2012. We apologize for any inconvenience.
Ramon H. Myers
Ramon H. Myers
senior fellow

Expertise: Political and economic development of East Asia, international relations, economic history of East Asia

Click here for bio summary.

rss icon

Recent Commentary

Op-ed archive

Related Publications

Breaking with the Past

Ramon H. Myers is a senior fellow at the Hoover Institution.

He received his Ph.D. in economics from the University of Washington. After joining the Hoover Institution, Myers became a member of the U.S. Wheat Studies Delegation to the People's Republic of China in May–June 1976; served as a consultant to the Food Agricultural Organization, Rome, Italy, from November 1979 to January 1980; and taught as a visiting professor of economics at National Taiwan University, Taipei, Taiwan, in 1990–91.

The author of more than one hundred journal articles and book reviews, he was also the associate editor of the Journal of Asian Studies and edited Ch'ing-shih wen-t'i (Studies in Ch'ing History). In 1980, Garland Publishing issued a forty-four volume series that Myers selected and edited entitled The Modern Chinese Economy.

His scholarship and public policy interests have focused on

  • Japanese colonization and imperialism: coedited The Japanese Colonial Empire (Princeton University Press, 1984), The Japanese Informal Empire, 1895–1931 (Princeton University Press, 1989), and The Japanese Wartime Empire, 1931–1945 (Princeton University Press, 1996).

  • Chinese economic history: authored The Chinese Peasant Economy (Harvard University Press, 1970), The Chinese Economy, Past and Present (Wadsworth Press, 1978), and two essays in The Cambridge History of China (in vol. 9, part 1, and vol. 13, part 2).

  • Taiwanese history: coauthored A Tragic Beginning: The 1947 Rebellion in Taiwan (Stanford University Press, 1992), The First Chinese Democracy: Political Life in the Republic of China on Taiwan (Johns Hopkins University Press, 1997), and The Divided China Problem:An Essay in Conflict Avoidance and Resolution (Hoover Essay in Public Policy, 2000).

  • Asian international affairs: coauthored Some Implications of the Turnover of Political Power in Taiwan (Hoover Essay in Public Policy, 2002), Defending an Economic Superpower: Reassessing the U.S.-Japan Security Alliance (Westview Press, 1989), and Greater China and U.S. Foreign Policy (Hoover Press, 1996). Edited Two Chinese States: U.S. Foreign Policy and Interests (Hoover Press, 1978) and A U.S. Foreign Policy for Asia: The 1980's and Beyond (Hoover Press, 1982).

  • History of the Republic of China: coedited Storm Clouds over China: The Memoir of Ch'en Li-fu, 1900–1993 (Hoover Press, 1994), Last Chance in Manchuria: The Diary of Chang Kia-ngau (Hoover Press, 1989), and Prescription for Saving China: Selected Writing of Sun Yat-Sen (Hoover Press, 1995).

  • International economic relations: coedited Shaping a New Relationship: U.S. and Republic of Korea Economic Relations (Hoover Press, 1993) and The Effect of Japanese Investment on the World Economy (Hoover Press, 1996).

  • China area studies: coedited The New Chinese Leadeship: Challenges and Opportunities after the 16th Party Congress (Cambridge University Press, 2004), Making China Policy: Lessons from the Bush and Clinton Administrations (Rowman and Littlefield, 2001) and Understanding Communist China: Communist China Studies in the United States and the Republic of China, 1949–78 (Hoover Press, 1986). Edited The Wealth of Nations in the Twentieth Century (Hoover Press, 1997).

  • Final project: coedited with Tai-Chun Kuo Taiwan’s Economic Transformation: Leadership, Property Rights, and Institutional Change (Routledge Press, 2011).

His e-mail address is Rhmyers@stanford.edu.

Last updated on December 8, 2010