Long-term Prospects for the World EconomyOECD, 1992 - 193 pages |
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Page 78
... firms and countries . It will spur productivity growth and accelerate pressures on mature industries . Thus , high technology is almost certain to be the frontier of friction in international trade . Most governments view technology as ...
... firms and countries . It will spur productivity growth and accelerate pressures on mature industries . Thus , high technology is almost certain to be the frontier of friction in international trade . Most governments view technology as ...
Page 93
... firms . - To utilise labour and technology more fully , the organisation and flow of work throughout firms will have to be revamped . One of the lessons painfully learned from the Japanese is that they gained a competitive edge in many ...
... firms . - To utilise labour and technology more fully , the organisation and flow of work throughout firms will have to be revamped . One of the lessons painfully learned from the Japanese is that they gained a competitive edge in many ...
Page 162
... firms Globalisation of the activities of Japanese firms is likely to continue . In 1990 , overseas production by Japanese firms amounted to only 6 per cent of their domestic production , compared with 25 and 17 per cent for US and German ...
... firms Globalisation of the activities of Japanese firms is likely to continue . In 1990 , overseas production by Japanese firms amounted to only 6 per cent of their domestic production , compared with 25 and 17 per cent for US and German ...
Contents
A Longterm Scenario Study of the World Economy 19902015 | 27 |
Longterm Prospects for the US Economy | 75 |
North American Economic Integration in the 1990s | 101 |
Copyright | |
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agreement American APEC ASEAN Asia-Pacific region Asian NIEs average Balanced Growth billion Canada Canadian capital cent Central Europe challenges China co-operation CO₂ CO2 emissions competition continue costs DAES decade decline Deepening deficit developed countries domestic dynamic East Asia economic development economic growth energy environment environmental European Community European Energy Community expected exports factors favourable Finance firms foreign free trade free-market perspective future Global Shift growth rate impact important improve increase increasingly industrial infrastructure Institute integration issues Japan Japanese Korea labour force labour market labour productivity LDCs liberalisation long-term major Malaysia manufacturing market economy Member countries ment Mexico multilateral NAFTA negotiations North America OECD output political population problems protectionism rapid ratio reduce reforms result savings sectors Single European Market social South Korea Soviet Union structure Taiwan Thailand tion trends United Western Europe world economy