Fund (1997b: 45) has described globalization as 'the growing economic interdependence of countries worldwide through the increasing volume and variety of cross-border transactions in goods and services and of international capital flows, and also through... Planet Geography - Page 698by Stephen Codrington - 2005 - 761 pagesFull view - About this book
| International Monetary Fund. Research Dept. - 1997 - 228 pages
...1980s. Ill Meeting the Challenges of Globalization in the Advanced Economies Globalization refers to the growing economic interdependence of countries...more rapid and widespread diffusion of technology. lt presents economies and policymakers with both new opportunities and new challenges. On a broad level,... | |
| G. William Dauphinais - 1999 - 324 pages
...of its lifeline. As a report of the International Monetary Fund dryly stated, globalization reflects "the growing economic interdependence of countries...more rapid and widespread diffusion of technology." This hydra-headed growth is more than another macroeconomic trend. It is shaping a new epoch where... | |
| Robert Solomon - 1999 - 232 pages
...1997 World Economic Outlook to globalization, introduced the topic this way: "Globalization refers to the growing economic interdependence of countries...through the more rapid and widespread diffusion of technology."87 We have noted, in chapter 5, that both trade and capital movements were high in the... | |
| Helmut Wagner - 2000 - 412 pages
...Citrin and Stanley Fischer International Monetary Fund, Washington DC, USA Globalization refers to the growing economic interdependence of countries...more rapid and widespread diffusion of technology. On a broad level, the welfare benefits of globalization are essentially similar to those of specialization... | |
| Alexander Karmann - 2000 - 264 pages
...Germany 1 Introduction Globalization is a widely used term, but is in fact rather vague. It refers to the growing economic interdependence of countries...through the more rapid and widespread diffusion of technology2. The main impetus for this globalization process which has been steadily increasing over... | |
| Charles Mitchell - 1999 - 196 pages
...Monetary Fund defines globalization as the growing economic interdependence of countries worldwide through increasing volume and variety of cross-border transactions...more rapid and widespread diffusion of technology. Cr oss-Country, Cross-Border The current era of globalization — the world saw a similar global business... | |
| Michael A. Santoro - 2000 - 274 pages
...According to the International Monetary Fund, "globalization refers to the growing interdependencies of countries worldwide through the increasing volume...international capital flows; and also through the rapid and widespread diffusion of all kinds of technology."5 In a competitive environment in which... | |
| Jeffrey A. McNeely - 2001 - 235 pages
...political trend in the world today is towards globalisation, defined by the International Monetary Fund as "the growing economic interdependence of countries...more rapid and widespread diffusion of technology" (Jones, 1999). Trade in the past was hampered by trade barriers, which acted as ecological barriers... | |
| Barry M. Rubin, Kemal Kirişci - 2001 - 284 pages
...break with earlier global capitalism. The International Monetary Fund in 1997 described globalization as "the growing economic interdependence of countries...more rapid and widespread diffusion of technology." This "market-centered explanation" of globalization also sees increasing international competition... | |
| Paul J.J. Welfens - 2001 - 462 pages
...Competitiveness Tom Jones and Joaquim Oliveira Martins' 1. Introduction Globalization has been defined as “the growing economic interdependence of countries...more rapid and widespread diffusion of technology” (DE JONQUIERES, 1997). Globalisation can be thought of as a process involving two broad components.... | |
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