New Forces in the World Economy

Portada
Brad Roberts
MIT Press, 1996 - 437 páginas

Two factors have brought the world economy to the center of the international political arena: first, the end of the Cold War and the increasing importance of economic factors relative to strategic ones in the foreign policies of the major powers; and, second, the emergence of a rapidly expanding and genuinely global economy that is defined not only by trade but also by investment and the diffusion of advanced technologies and expertise. This collection of 24 articles from The Washington Quarterly examines the features of the new world economic order, beginning with a review of the changing structure of the world economy (including articles on trade, investment, finance, and competitiveness), then turning to a review of the policy debate (with articles on major international institutions, prominent bilateral relationships, and the role of the private sector).

Contributors
Kenneth Berlin, Richard E. Bissell, Delia M. Boylan, Daniel F. Burton, Hernando de Soto, Thomas J. Duesterberg, Richard E. Feinberg, James R. Golden, Maurice R. Greenberg, Penelope Hartland- Thunberg, Ryuzaburo Kaku, Ethan B. Kapstein, Amy Kaslow, Joseph LaPalombara, Jeffrey M. Lang, Derek Leebaert, Erik R. Peterson, Ernest H. Preeg, Donald R. Sherk, W. R. Smyser, John D. Sullivan, Heizo Takenaka, Raymond Vernon, Murray Weidenbaum, John Yochelson.

A Washington Quarterly Reader

Dentro del libro

Contenido

Looming Collision
3
Erik R Peterson
12
Here to Stay
95
Krugmanian
105
Trade Investment
121
Whos Benefiting
139
Environment
157
Let Them
175
The New Regional
207
and the Southern Cone
239
The Global Power
263
Competitiveness
363
Americas German
375
Promoting Higher
403
International Firms
427
Derechos de autor

Términos y frases comunes

Acerca del autor (1996)

Brad Roberts is a Research Fellow in International Security Studies at the Center for Strategic and International Studies in Washington, D.C.

Información bibliográfica