The world economy towards global disequilibrium : American-Asian indifference and European fears

Bibliographic Information

The world economy towards global disequilibrium : American-Asian indifference and European fears

Mario Baldassarri and Pasquale Capretta

Palgrave Macmillan, 2007

  • : hardback

Available at  / 13 libraries

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Includes index

Description and Table of Contents

Description

The rise of China and India has completely changed the world economy, moving it towards disequilibrium. Several alternative economic policies are tested to seek a way towards high growth in any continent associated with long-run real and financial equilibrium. The authors argue for a new exchange rate system and a new world governance.

Table of Contents

Acknowledgements xviii List of Figures List of Maps xvi List of Tables Introduction and Main Conclusions PART I: WHAT DOES GLOBALIZATION REALLY MEAN? : WORLD, EUROPE, ITALY The World Has Changed: Wake Up, Europe! Fifty Years Ago... Until a Few Years Ago Thirty Years from Now... If Everything Continues as it Has in the Last Five Years PART II: HOW TO PREVENT DISEQUILIBRIUM IN THE WORLD ECONOMY The American Grasshopper, the Chinese Ant, the Russian Eagle and the European Sleeping Beauty How Long Can the European Beauty Keep Sleeping: Maastricht and Lisbon Together or Maastricht Alone... For Ever and Ever. Amen? World Growth, Trade, Real and Financial Imbalances, the International Monetary System and Exchange Rates: A Global Vision Appendix to Chapter Six: Tables of Simulations Does a Positive Sum Game that Makes Everyone Better Off Really Exist? The Risks and Temptations from the Myopic and Egoistic Viewpoints of Individual Continents and Countries Appendix to Chapter Seven: Tables of Simulations PART III: ITALY AS A CASE STUDY FOR EUROPE: GROWTH IS POSSIBLE, GROWING MORE IS A MUST Financial Equilibrium and Higher Growth: An Analysis of Expenditure Items with the Purpose of Appraising Where to Find and Where to Shift Resources A Policy Mix to Re-Launch Growth under Conditions of Structural Equilibrium in Public Finance A Strategy of Structural Policies for Competitiveness and Growth Appendix to Part III: The Italian Plan to Match the Lisbon Strategy

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