Global Economic Prospects 2003

Front Cover
World Bank Publications, 2003 - 219 pages
Uncertainties in the global financial markets may have slowed the momentum of the modest recovery that started in late 2001 according to a new report, Global Economic Prospects and the Developing Countries 2003: Investing to Unlock Global Opportunities. The report predicts that a sluggish global economic outlook, along with slower than anticipated growth in the next 12 to 18 months, will undermine progress in reducing poverty in developing countries. Global Economic Prospects 2003 details what actions need to be taken by rich countries and developing countries to increase growth rates and accelerate poverty reduction in developing countries.Productivity increases and effective investment are fundamental conditions for poverty reduction and for rapid growth. Establishment of these conditions requires improvement of the investment climate that is, the policy and institutional environment that fosters entrepreneurship and productive investment. Global Economic Prospects 2003 analyzes both global and national dimensions of investment climate for developing countries. The report: Explores the current state of the world economy and how it impacts the access to capital, exports, and growth prospects of developing countries; Examines recent changes in the organization of global business, notably the proliferation of multinational companies and associated production networks; Argues that sound national policies, particularly to encourage competition, are needed for countries to reap the benefits of globalization; Discusses ways in which the international community can help developing countries establish competitive investment environments; and Considers the potential for a new World Trade Organization agreement on investment and competition, and concludes that the probable development impacts of any new accords are clearly secondary in importance to progress in reducing trade barriers facing developing countries.
 

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Page 219 - Austria, Belgium, Denmark, Finland, France, Germany, Greece, Iceland, Ireland, Italy, Luxembourg, Netherlands, Norway, Portugal, Spain, Sweden, Switzerland, Turkey, United Kingdom.
Page 219 - This table classifies all World Bank member economies, and all other economies with populations of more than 30,000. Economies are divided among income groups according to 2001 GNI per capita, calculated using the World Bank Atlas method.
Page xxiv - UNCITRAL United Nations Commission on International Trade law UNCTAD United Nations Conference on Trade and Development UNDP United Nations Development Programme...
Page 109 - ... complementarity of FDI and domestic investment is explained by their complementarity in production and by positive technology spillovers. The second growth effect of FDI stems from the embodied transfer of technology and efficiency, provided the host country has a minimum threshold stock of human capital; FDI can increase the growth rate of the host economy only by interacting with that country's absorptive capacity.
Page 149 - Birdsall, Nancy and Robert Z. Lawrence (1999) 'Deep integration and trade agreements: good for developing countries?', in Inge Kaul, Isabelle Grunberg and Marc A.
Page 151 - Report of the Working Group on the Interaction Between Trade and Competition Policy to the General Council
Page 74 - Foreign Investment, Outsourcing, and Relative Wages." In Robert C. Feenstra, Gene M. Grossman, and Douglas A Irwin, eds., The Political Economy of Trade Policy: Papers in Honor ofjagdish Bhagwati. Cambridge, Mass.: MIT Press.
Page 148 - An indicator of the annual monetary value of gross transfers from consumers and taxpayers to support agricultural producers, measured at farm gate level, arising from policy measures, regardless of their nature, objectives or impacts on farm production or income.
Page 175 - May 2004 are the Czech Republic, Estonia, Hungary, Latvia, Lithuania, Poland, the Slovak Republic and Slovenia.

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