Recent
trends in the international economy suggest
a shift in the nature of imperialist involvement
with the multilateral rules and institutions
governing trade and finance. As WTO negotiations
are becoming more difficult for the main
developed country players to control in
the same manner as before, regional and
bilateral deals have become the preferred
framework for determining patterns of
cross-border trade and investment, and
for enforcing liberalisation and opening
markets in developing countries for multinational
capital based in the industrialised nations.
Such a shift has both negative and positive
implications for the potential for autonomous
trade and industrialisation strategies
of developing countries. This paper discusses
these issues in more detail.
May 5, 2004. |
|
|
|
This Document is in Adobe
Acrobat format and would
need a PDF reader to
view it. |
|
|
View/
Download the
full text in PDF format |
|
if
you have problem
opening the file, right click
on hyperlink and select "SaveTarget
as" to save
the file on your hard drive. |
|
Size:
116Kb
App. Download Time:
01 min @ 28kbps |
|
|
|
|
Click below
to get Adobe
Acrobat Reader, a free software
to view and print Adobe Portable
Document Format (PDF) files. |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|