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Adjustment or delinking / Azzam Mahjoub
Titre : Adjustment or delinking : the african experience Type de document : texte imprimé Auteurs : Azzam Mahjoub, Auteur Editeur : United Nations University Press Année de publication : 1990 Autre Editeur : London : ZED Books Collection : Studies in African political economy Importance : 176 p Langues : Anglais (eng) Catégories : Afrique Tags : Afrique Politique d'ajustement structurel Politique économique Index. décimale : 09.02 Afrique Adjustment or delinking : the african experience [texte imprimé] / Azzam Mahjoub, Auteur . - [S.l.] : United Nations University Press : London : ZED Books, 1990 . - 176 p. - (Studies in African political economy) .
Langues : Anglais (eng)
Catégories : Afrique Tags : Afrique Politique d'ajustement structurel Politique économique Index. décimale : 09.02 Afrique The new globalism and developing countries / John H. Dunning
Titre : The new globalism and developing countries Type de document : texte imprimé Auteurs : John H. Dunning, Auteur ; Khalil A. Hamdani, Auteur Editeur : United Nations University Press Année de publication : 1997 Importance : 336 p Langues : Anglais (eng) Catégories : Commerce
MondialisationTags : Mondialisation Capitalisme Commerce mondial Pays en développement Investissements Compétitivité Economie mondiale Technologie Index. décimale : 03 Commerce-Mondialisation Résumé : The global economy of the 1990s is being driven by cross-border direct investments and cooperative business ventures on a unprecedented scale. Not only is international investment growing faster than world output and trade, but an increasing share of the markets for goods and services, capital and technology, is being intermediated by transnational firms, large and small.
The impact of this globalization of business on developing countries is the focus of this book. Who are the probable winners and losers? How are governments responding, in terms of national policies and regional approaches, and how does it translate in the signals they set for companies? Are there any winning strategies in the more competitive global economic environment of the 1990s? And how can the international community best support these strategies.
The early signs of globalization warned of a marginalization of developing countries but, as the contributions in this book show, an increasing number of developing countries from all regions are actively participating in the globalization of production and markets. Their success suggests that there is much that countries can do to create or acquire the human competencies and physical capital necessary to benefit from the new globalism.The new globalism and developing countries [texte imprimé] / John H. Dunning, Auteur ; Khalil A. Hamdani, Auteur . - [S.l.] : United Nations University Press, 1997 . - 336 p.
Langues : Anglais (eng)
Catégories : Commerce
MondialisationTags : Mondialisation Capitalisme Commerce mondial Pays en développement Investissements Compétitivité Economie mondiale Technologie Index. décimale : 03 Commerce-Mondialisation Résumé : The global economy of the 1990s is being driven by cross-border direct investments and cooperative business ventures on a unprecedented scale. Not only is international investment growing faster than world output and trade, but an increasing share of the markets for goods and services, capital and technology, is being intermediated by transnational firms, large and small.
The impact of this globalization of business on developing countries is the focus of this book. Who are the probable winners and losers? How are governments responding, in terms of national policies and regional approaches, and how does it translate in the signals they set for companies? Are there any winning strategies in the more competitive global economic environment of the 1990s? And how can the international community best support these strategies.
The early signs of globalization warned of a marginalization of developing countries but, as the contributions in this book show, an increasing number of developing countries from all regions are actively participating in the globalization of production and markets. Their success suggests that there is much that countries can do to create or acquire the human competencies and physical capital necessary to benefit from the new globalism.