- citati u SCIndeksu: 0
- citati u CrossRef-u:0
- citati u Google Scholaru:[
]
- posete u poslednjih 30 dana:32
- preuzimanja u poslednjih 30 dana:19
|
|
2022, vol. 11, br. 21, str. 77-88
|
Globalizacija i ekonomska politika
Globalization and economic policy
Sažetak
Ekonomska globalizacija se odnosi na sve veću međuzavisnost svetskih ekonomija kao rezultat rastućeg obima prekogranične trgovine robom i uslugama, protoka međunarodnog kapitala i širokog i brzog širenja tehnologija. To odražava kontinuirano širenje i međusobnu integraciju tržišnih granica, i predstavlja nepovratan trend za ekonomski razvoj celog sveta na prelazu milenijuma. Brzi rast značaja informacija u svim vrstama proizvodnih aktivnosti i marketinga su dve glavne pokretačke snage ekonomske globalizacije. Drugim rečima, brza globalizacija svetskih ekonomija poslednjih godina je u velikoj meri zasnovana na brzom razvoju nauke i tehnologija, nastala je iz okruženja u kome se tržišni ekonomski sistem brzo širio svetom, a razvijao se na osnovu sve veće prekogranične podele rada koja prodire do nivoa proizvodnih lanaca unutar preduzeća različitih zemalja.
Abstract
Economic globalization refers to the growing interdependence of world economies as a result of the growing volume of cross-border trade in goods and services, the flow of international capital and the wide and rapid spread of technology. This reflects the continuous expansion and mutual integration of market borders, and represents an irreversible trend for the economic development of the whole world at the turn of the millennium. The rapid growth of the importance of information in all types of production activities and marketing are the two main driving forces of economic globalization. In other words, the rapid globalization of world economies in recent years has been largely based on the rapid development of science and technology, arising from an environment in which the market economic system has spread rapidly around the world, and evolving through a growing cross-border division of labor. chains within companies of different countries.
|
|
|
Reference
|
|
Adsera, A. (2004) Changing fertility rates in developed countries: The impact of labor market institutions. Journal of Population Economics, 17(1): 17-43
|
2
|
Alesina, A., Rodrik, D. (1994) Distributive politics and economic growth. Quarterly Journal of Economics, 109: 465-490
|
|
Aslanbeigui, N., Summerfield, G. (2000) The Asian Crisis, Gender, and the International Financial Architecture. Feminist Economics, 6(3): 81-103
|
|
Ball, L. (1993) What Determines the Sacrifice Ratio?. u: NBER Working Paper, Cambridge, MA: National Bureau of Economic Research, No. 4306
|
|
Belser, P., Rama, M. (2001) State ownership and labor redundancy: estimates based on enterprise-level data from Vietnam. u: Policy Research Working Paper, Washington, DC: World Bank, No. 2599
|
|
Beneria, L. (2003) Gender, Development, and Globalization: Economics as if All People Mattered. London: Routledge
|
|
Beneria, L. (2001) Shifting the risk: New employment patterns, informalization, and women's work. International Journal of Politics, Culture, and Society, 15(1): 27-53
|
|
Beneria, L., Feldman, S., eds. (1992) Unequal Burden: Economic Crises, Persistent Poverty, and Women's Work. Westview Press
|
|
Benería, L., Floro, M.S. (2006) Labor Market Informalization, Gender, and Social Protection: Reflections on Poor Urban Households in Bolivia and Ecuador. u: Razavi S.; Hassim S. [ur.] Gender and Social Policy in a Global Context, London: Palgrave Macmillan, 193-216
|
|
Blau, F.D., Ferber, M.A., Winkler, A.E. (2002) The Economics of Women, Men, and Work. Upper Saddle River, NJ: Prentice Hall, 4th edition
|
|
Blau, F.D., Kahn, L.M. (2001) Understanding International Differences in the Gender Pay Gap. u: NBER Working Paper, Cambridge, MA: National Bureau of Economic Research, Series No. 8200
|
|
Chen, S., Ravallion, M. (2004) How have the world's poorest fared since the early 1980s?. u: World Bank Policy Research Working Paper, Washington, DC: World Bank, No. 3341
|
|
Cline, W. (1997) Trade and Income Distribution. Washington, DC: Institute for International Economics
|
|
Currie, J., Harrison, A. (1997) Sharing the Costs: The Impact of Trade Reform on Capital and Labor in Morocco. Journal of Labor Economics, 15(S3): S44-S71
|
|
Deaton, A., Drèze, J. (2005) Poverty and Inequality in India: A Re-Examination. Economic and Political Weekly, (September): 3729-48
|
|
Deere, C.D. (2005) The feminization of agriculture?: Economic restructuring in rural Latin America. u: UNRISD Occasional Paper, Geneva: United Nations Research Institute for Social Development, 1
|
2
|
Easterly, W., Rebelo, S. (1993) Fiscal Policy and Economic Growth: An Empirical Investigation. Journal of Monetary Economics, 32(3): 417-58
|
|
Edwards, L. (2004) A firm-level analysis of trade, technology, and employment in South Africa. Journal of International Development, 15:1-17
|
|
Edwards, L. (2001) Globalisation and the skill bias of occupational employment in SA. South African Journal of Economics, 69(1): 40-71
|
1
|
Epstein, G., Grabel, I., Jomo, K.S. (2003) Capital Management Techniques in Developing Countries: An Assessment of Experiences from the 1990's and Lessons for the Future. u: PERI Working Paper, Amherst, MA: Political Economy Research Institute, No. 56
|
|
Fallon, P., Lucas, R. (2002) The Impact of Financial Crises on Labor Markets, Household Incomes, and Poverty: A Review of Evidence. World Bank Research Observer, 17(1): 21-45
|
|
Günseli, B. (2000) Mature export-led growth and gender wage inequality in Taiwan. Feminist Economics, 6(3): 1-26
|
|
|
|