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9780521643764

Globalization and Progressive Economic Policy

by
  • ISBN13:

    9780521643764

  • ISBN10:

    0521643767

  • Format: Paperback
  • Copyright: 1998-11-13
  • Publisher: Cambridge University Press

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Summary

The authors of this book challenge mainstream thinking about the nature of globalization. While not hostile to markets per se, they believe that capitalist market processes, left to operate freely, tend to generate injustice, insecurity, instability, and inefficiency. Taking account of the new realities of globalization, this volume explores an unusually wide range of subjects, including trade integration, multinational corporations, labor markets and migration, international capital flows, macroeconomic and environmental policy, and the central roles of the IMF and World Bank. It proposes alternatives to neo-liberal orthodoxy, developing policy measures that counter the destructive features of markets and promote equality as well as efficiency. The approach in this volume is particularly illuminating for understanding the Asian financial collapse of 1997-98 and similar recent crises. The volume also includes comments on each chapter by a wide range of distinguished economists, producing a lively and often controversial set of interchanges.

Table of Contents

List of figures
viii
List of tables
ix
List of contributors
xii
Editors' acknowledgments xiv
Introduction
1(34)
Dean Baker
Gerald Epstein
Robert Pollin
I The IMF, the World Bank, and neo-liberalism 35(60)
The revival of the liberal creed: the IMF, the World Bank, and inequality in a globalized economy
37(30)
UTE Pieper
Lance Taylor
Comment
64(3)
Arthur MacEwan
India: dirigisme, structural adjustment, and the radical alternative
67(28)
Prabhat Patnaik
C.P. Chandrasekhar
Comment
92(3)
Keith Griffin
II Foreign direct investment, globalization, and neo 95(52)
Globalization, transnational corporations, and economic development: can the developing countries pursue strategic industrial policy in a globalizing world economy?
97(20)
Ha-Joon Chang
Comment
114(3)
Tamin Bayoumi
Multinational corporations in the neo-liberal regime
117(30)
James Crotty
Gerald Epstein
Patricia Kelly
Comment
144(3)
Tim Koechlin
III Globalization of finance 147(96)
Implications of globalization for macroeconomic theory and policy in developing countries
149(46)
Amit Bhaduri
Comment
159(4)
Robert Blecker
Asia and the crisis of financial globalization
163(29)
David Felix
Comment
192(3)
Sule Ozler
Globalization and financial systems: policies for the new environment
195(24)
Marc Schaberg
Comment
215(4)
Ilene Grabel
Housing finance in the age of globalization: from social housing to life-cycle risk
219(24)
Gary Dymski
Dorene Isenberg
Comment
240(3)
Jane D'Arista
IV Trade, wages and the environment: North and South 243(80)
Openness and equity: regulating labor market outcomes in a globalized economy
245(28)
Jim Stanford
Comment
271(2)
Jaime Ros
Integration and income distribution under the North American Free Trade Agreement: the experience of Mexico
273(24)
Mehrene Larudee
Comment
293(4)
Thea Lee
Malthus redux? Globalization and the environment
297(26)
Eban Goodstein
Comment
319(4)
Peter Dorman
V Migration of people in a global economy 323(44)
Freedom to move in the age of globalization
325(12)
Bob Sutcliffe
Immigration, inequality, and policy alternatives
337(20)
Gregory Dereitas
Notes on international migration suggested by the Indian experience
357(10)
Prabhat Patnaik
C.P. Chandrasekhar
Comment on chapters 13--15
365(2)
Samir Radwan
VI Globalization and macroeconomic policy 367(98)
The NAIRU: is it a real constraint?
369(22)
Dean Baker
Comment
388(3)
Robert Eisner
Internal and external constraints on egalitarian policies
391(22)
Andrew Glyn
Comment
409(4)
Robert Blecker
The effects of globalization on policy formation in South Africa
413(20)
Laurence Harris
Jonathan Michie
Comment
428(5)
Keith Griffin
Can domestic expansionary policy succeed in a globally integrated environment? And examination of alternatives.
433(32)
Robert Pollin
Comment
461(4)
J. Bradford DeLong
Bibliography 465(36)
Index 501

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