Multinational Corporations, Capital Mobility and the Global Neo-Liberal Regime: Effects on Northern Workers and on Growth Prospects in the Developing World
- 서울대학교 경제연구소
- Seoul Journal of Economics
- Globalization, Deregulation, and Thier Consequences
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1997.06297 - 340 (43 pages)
- 10
In this paper we analyze two related aspects of the current globalization process. The first is the relation between the activities of multinational corporations(MNCs) and the economic well being of workers in the North. In particular, we ask whether the increase in capital mobility associated with the world-wide movement of liberalization, deregulation, and privatization has contributed to the problems of high unemployment, wage stagnation and rising inequality. The second concern of the paper is the impact of the evolution of the Neo-liberal global regime(NLR) itself on economic well-being in the North and South. Here we make two basic arguments. First, Neo-liberal institute and practices tend to generate inadequate global aggregate demand growth and thus high global unemployment, unleash destructive competitive processes, and weaken government's ability to regulate business in the interest of the public. Second, the force of global Neo-liberalism is so powerful that it has become difficult if not impossible for countries to maintain non-Neo- liberal economic structure.
Abstract
Ⅰ. Introduction
Ⅱ. Five Views on the Effect of Capital Mobility on Economic Performance
Ⅲ. How Mobile Are the MNCs?
Ⅳ. The Effects of FDI and MNCs: Theory and Evidence
Ⅴ. An Alternative Framework for Analyzing the Effects of Foreign Direct Investment and Multinational Corporations in the Neo-liberal Regime
Ⅵ. National Institutions Matter
Ⅶ. The Neo-liberal Regime, FDI and the Destruction of the Swedish Economic Model
Ⅷ. The Neo-liberal Regime and Development in the South: The End of the East Asian Model?
Ⅸ. Conclusion
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