Competing for Integration: Japan, Europe, Latin America and Their Strategic PartnersM.E. Sharpe, 2002 - 271 páginas This study demonstrates why the global economy and global policies can only be understood by assigning equal importance to actors from different continents and international institutions. The contributors begin by examining the effects of reducing trade barriers through the WTO processes, and the implications for our understanding of market forces, the diminishing capacity of governments, consumer power, and the role of international agreements. They provide fascinating details on how the European Union and Japan develop their own strategies toward emerging Asian and Latin American states, quite separately from the United States. The focus then shifts toward integration processes in Latin America. The book concludes by attempting to make sense of the political principles underlying the complex economic policies of the main actors in today's global economy, focusing on development strategies offered by the World Bank. |
Contenido
INTRODUCTION AND OVERVIEW | 1 |
DEEPENING OF MULTILATERAL INTEGRATION | 51 |
THE EUS NEW STRATEGIES TOWARDS EMERGING | 73 |
Derechos de autor | |
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Competing for Integration: Japan, Europe, Latin America and Their Strategic ... Kurt Werner Radtke,Marianne Wiesebron Vista previa limitada - 2002 |
Términos y frases comunes
agenda agricultural APEC Argentina ASEAN Plus Three Asia and Latin bilateral billion bloc Brazil Brazilian capital Chile China Chinese competition context crisis dekasegi developing countries Dijck direct investment dispute settlement domestic East Asian Economist establishment Europe European Union external economic Faber FDI trade framework Free Trade Agreement Free Trade Area FTAA GATT global governance global institutions groups growth rate harmonization Havana Charter impact important increased industrial initiatives integration process interest international trade issues Japan Japanese labor Latin America Latin American countries Mercosur Mercosur/l Mexican Mexico NAFTA negotiations neoliberal participation partners political President PTAs regime regional and global regional cooperation regional integration regulations relations result role rules SAFTA sector social South American standards strategy strengthen subregional tariffs trade liberalization trade policies U.S. government United Vizentini Wiesebron World Bank world economy world market World Trade World Trade Organization
Referencias a este libro
The Political Economy of European Integration: Theory and Analysis Erik Jones,Amy Verdun Vista previa limitada - 2005 |