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Vietnam og WTO : noen virkninger ved et WTO-medlemskap /Gunnes, Ragnhild. January 2007 (has links) (PDF)
Masteropgave. / Format: PDF. Bibl.
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Konsten att bygga affärsrelationer i Kina : en fallstudie av två västerländska företags möte med en främmande kultur /Holmqvist, Anna. Lindström, Amanda. January 2008 (has links)
Bachelor's thesis. / Format: PDF. Bibl.
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To lead or to follow? : a case study of an internationalization process /Kaukonen, Ulla. Haapanen, Heta-Liisa. January 2008 (has links)
Bachelor's thesis. / Format: PDF. Bibl.
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Sweden - China's link to the West : Chinese entrepreneurial establishment in Sweden /Lundkvist, Stina. Peterson, Tove. Lögdkvist, Caroline Huss. January 2008 (has links)
Bachelor's thesis. / Format: PDF. Bibl.
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Three essays on openness, international pricing, and optimal monetary policyEvans, Richard William, 1975- 29 August 2008 (has links)
Not available / text
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A constructivist theory of international monetary relations : monetary understandings, state interests in cooperation, and the construction of crises (1929-2001)Widmaier, Wesley William 11 April 2011 (has links)
Not available / text
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The foundation of the global economy : the evolution of the international regime for private trade law from the eleventh through the twentieth centuriesCutler, Athena Claire 11 1900 (has links)
This study analyzes the evolution of the regime
governing private international trade law from its inception
in the eleventh century through to its modern formulation in
the twentieth century. It also seeks to explain its
development by focusing on three theories of international
relations.
The regime is defined in terms of its substantive and
procedural dimensions. The nature and strength of the norms
governing the substantive dimension (prices, liability for
defective goods, allocation of transport costs, insurance,
and financial and credit arrangements) and the procedural
dimension (locus of regulation, methodology of rule
creation, and dispute settlement) are analyzed over three
historical phases. These three periods are the medieval
period, from the eleventh to the sixteenth centuries, the
early modern period, from the seventeenth to the nineteenth
centuries, and the modern period in the twentieth century.
The regime norms are found to exhibit significant continuity
over time, although there has been considerable variation in
the rules. The strength of the regime has also varied over
the three phases.
Three theoretical perspectives (structural realism,
functionalism, and sociological analysis) are evaluated for
their relative ability to explain the origin, evolution,
nature, and strength of the regime. Each perspective is
found to offer important insights, but a synthesis of
approaches is necessary to capture the complexity and
richness of the regime's evolution. Structural realism does
not account for the origin of the regime and is of limited
assistance in explaining the strength of voluntary
standards. It does, however, explain the influence that
states' concerns for political/legal autonomy have had on
the regime and offers a reasonably good account of the roles
that the United States and the United Kingdom have played in
the evolution of the regime. Sociological analysis assists
in accounting for the origin and nature of the regime, but
it does not provide a comprehensive theory of cooperation.
Reference to the other approaches is required as a
supplement to sociological analysis. Functionalism provides
the best explanation of the origin and nature of the regime.
However, it is unable to account for variations in the
strength of the regime over the three historical periods.
Reference to the influence of changing structures of
political authority and to the ideas, knowledge, and values
of the major commercial actors is necessary as a supplement
to functional analysis.
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Economic policies in developing and emerging market economies : three essays in international and development economicsWang, Shengzu, 1978- January 2008 (has links)
This thesis consists of three essays, which focus on different aspects of economic policy issues faced by developing and emerging market economies. The first essay explores the effect of monetary policy credibility on exchange rate volatility in a small open economy, even if the exchange rate is not an explicit target set by the monetary authority. Using an open economy framework modified from Gall and Monacelli (2005) and Walsh (2006), it shows that monetary policy credibility helps to stabilize the exchange rate as supply and demand side shocks hit the domestic economy. The monetary policy credibility can be achieved by the monetary authority's commitment to certain rules aiming for output/price smoothing. In the empirical analysis inflation targeting is used as a proxy variable for monetary credibility. The GARCH model of selected South-East Asian countries indicates that countries with inflation targeting policies have exhibited reduced exchange rate volatility when other factors are controlled. / The second essay looks at FDI inflows into developing economies. Two distinctive differences of FDI inflows between developed and developing economies are entry modes and evidence of government regulations. This essay investigates the incentives of FDI flows in terms of cost-saving merger, fixed cost of entry and the role of government policies. In particular it shows that, if the cost-saving effect is large and the government intervenes, the foreign firm will consider the FDI through either Greenfield or Brownfield, which corresponds to the situation for FDI flows into developing economies. Otherwise, the foreign firm will only consider Brownfield or staying outside, which stands for the developed economy case. Since one remarkable feature of the FDI flows into developing countries is the benefit of cost-saving from low labour costs, this essay takes this effect into account and provides insights for economic "outsourcing". The multi-stage sequential game model presented in this chapter provides comparable results for the pattern of the FDI flows affected by regulation and institutional factors, which are not addressed by existing literature. Finally, it reveals some intuition and feature of a developing economy where the government regulations on FDI flows are more often observed. / The third essay deals with the resource/revenue reallocation within powerful groups in the economy and the impact of the rent-seeking behavior of these groups on the economic growth and the social welfare. In particular, it introduces a dynamic model of resource-grabbing by status-conscious agents, i.e., agents value not only their absolute consumption levels, but also the relative status within his/her reference group. The purpose of this paper is to explore the effect of the "positional externalities" on the urge to seek rent and to connect the "tragedy of the commons" problem with relative consumption. The model shows that the greater is agents' concern about their relative status, the more aggressively they tend to behave. Consequently, the social welfare is lower because the growth rate of the public asset is reduced due to higher extraction rate. After introducing heterogeneity, it shows that the social welfare decreases as the distribution of status-consciousness among agents widens. Finally, it provides some policy suggestions that the government might consider to achieve a second best social outcome.
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Essays in policy analysis and strategy : entrepreneurship, joint venturing, and tradeArend, Richard James 11 1900 (has links)
Separate essays on entrepreneurship, joint venturing, and trade comprise this thesis.
The emergence of entrepreneurship is common in the real world but relatively less so in classical
economic models. If industry incumbents are attributed with full rationality and perfect foresight,
then there are few, if any, profitable opportunities left for new entrants (entrepreneurs) to
exploit. This essay explains how entrepreneurs can emerge in a dynamic world when firms must
choose between a technology strategy that is either statically or dynamically efficient. A model
is developed which shows how such opportunities for new entry can occur when incumbents are
caught in a Prisoners’ Dilemma game involving technology strategy. A relevance measure and
policy implications are then explored.
Joint ventures, especially of the R&D type, are becoming increasingly important as a way to
gain needed technological and market competencies. Unfortunately, many joint ventures have
the characteristics of a Prisoners’ Dilemma. Firms may cooperate or defect in the venture. If
contracts, side-payments, and third-party verification of the venture outcome are unavailable,
then the dominant solution to the Prisoners’ Dilemma (mutual defection) results. This paper
proposes the use of an ex-ante auction to obtain a Pareto-improvement for these ventures. A
Pareto-improvement is assured when non-transferable costs and benefits of firms are not
conditional on joint venture strategies. When this condition is not met restrictions are required
to obtain the Pareto-improvement.
The problem of trade between countries that share an international open access resource is
becoming significant as the world reaches the limits of critical shared resource stocks. It is
modelled as a world with one primary factor, two intermediate goods, one final good (harvested
from the open access resource), and two nations where it is assumed that either the trading takes
place over one stage (nations are price-takers), or two stages (nations have market power).
Imperfect competition and open access generated externalities affect the trading efficiency. To
maximize world welfare this essay recommends subsidizing R&D where comparative advantage
exists, and creating international agreements to ensure the one-stage game structure is used when
trading.
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Essays in policy analysis and strategy: entrepreneurship, joint venturing, and tradeArend, Richard James 11 1900 (has links)
Separate essays on entrepreneurship, joint venturing, and trade comprise this thesis.
The emergence of entrepreneurship is common in the real world but relatively less so in classical
economic models. If industry incumbents are attributed with full rationality and perfect foresight,
then there are few, if any, profitable opportunities left for new entrants (entrepreneurs) to
exploit. This essay explains how entrepreneurs can emerge in a dynamic world when firms must
choose between a technology strategy that is either statically or dynamically efficient. A model
is developed which shows how such opportunities for new entry can occur when incumbents are
caught in a Prisoners’ Dilemma game involving technology strategy. A relevance measure and
policy implications are then explored.
Joint ventures, especially of the R&D type, are becoming increasingly important as a way to
gain needed technological and market competencies. Unfortunately, many joint ventures have
the characteristics of a Prisoners’ Dilemma. Firms may cooperate or defect in the venture. If
contracts, side-payments, and third-party verification of the venture outcome are unavailable,
then the dominant solution to the Prisoners’ Dilemma (mutual defection) results. This paper
proposes the use of an ex-ante auction to obtain a Pareto-improvement for these ventures. A
Pareto-improvement is assured when non-transferable costs and benefits of firms are not
conditional on joint venture strategies. When this condition is not met restrictions are required
to obtain the Pareto-improvement.
The problem of trade between countries that share an international open access resource is
becoming significant as the world reaches the limits of critical shared resource stocks. It is
modelled as a world with one primary factor, two intermediate goods, one final good (harvested
from the open access resource), and two nations where it is assumed that either the trading takes
place over one stage (nations are price-takers), or two stages (nations have market power).
Imperfect competition and open access generated externalities affect the trading efficiency. To
maximize world welfare this essay recommends subsidizing R&D where comparative advantage
exists, and creating international agreements to ensure the one-stage game structure is used when
trading.
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