Description
Book SynopsisCuts through the confusion and rhetoric to offer straightforward, incisive analyses of globalisation and its future. The contributors analyse recent trends, immigrations and capital flows.
Trade ReviewThis book offers a cornucopia of relevant facts and a stimulating collection of interpretations; it moves the debate on globalization to a higher level. -- Richard N. Cooper Foreign Affairs This is the most informative and controversial book about globalization to appear so far this year. It is must reading for students, scholars, and serious general readers... Essential. Choice
Table of Contents1. Introduction, by Michael M. Weinstein, Robin Hood Foundation and New York Times Company Foundation 2. Trade and Globalization, by Douglas A. Irwin, Dartmouth College 3. Capital Flows, Financial Crises, and Public Policy, by Charles W. Calomiris, Professor of Economics, Columbia University 4. Globalization and Immigration, by George J. Borjas, Robert W. Scrivner Professor of Economics and Social Policy at Kennedy School of Government, Harvard University 5. Globalization, Poverty, and Inequality, by David Dollar, Development Research Group, World Bank 6. The Environment and Economic Globalization, by Jeffrey A. Frankel, Harpel Professor, Kennedy School of Government, Harvard University 7. The Rich Have Markets, the Poor Have Bureaucrats, by William Easterly, New York University 8. Feasible Globalizations, by Dani Rodrik, Rafiq Hariri Professor of International Political Economy, Kennedy School of Government, Harvard University 9: Globalization and Patterns of Economic Growth, by Jeffrey D. Sachs, Director, Earth Institute, Columbia University 10. The Overselling of Globalization, by Joseph E. Stiglitz, University Professor, Columbia University