Search
Searching with a thematic focus on Finance policy, Foreign Direct Investment, International capital flows, International capital flows FDI
Showing 221-230 of 394 results
Pages
- Document
Make trade fair for the Americas: agriculture, investment and intellectual property: three reasons to say no to the FTAA
Oxfam, 2003This paper focuses on the plan to integrate Latin America and the Caribbean into the Free Trade Area of the Americas and stresses that some areas of the plan go further than the most worrisome WTO rules - as in the case of investment and intellectual property.DocumentGlobal Development Finance 2003: striving for stability in development finance
World Bank, 2003Annual review of recent trends in and prospects for financial flows to developing countries.DocumentThe composition of foreign direct investment and protection of intellectual property rights
World Bank, 2002Looks at the impact of intellectual property protection on the composition of FDI inflows, using a unique firm-level data set from Eastern Europe and the former Soviet Union. The report finds that weak protection deters foreign investors in technology-intensive sectors that rely heavily on intellectual property rights.The results also indicate that a weak intellectual property regime encourDocumentSupermarkets and farming in Latin America: pointing directions for elsewhere?
Natural Resource Perspectives, ODI, 2002This paper identifies why supermarkets have grown so rapidly in Latin America, what the impacts on producers have been, and whether the pattern might be repeated in other regions.The policy conclusions are:Supermarkets occupy roughly 60% of the national retail sectors in Latin America, and around half this level of fresh fruit and vegetable productsFactors underpinning their growthDocumentIntellectual property rights, technology and economic development: experiences of Asian countries
Research and Information System for Developing Countries, 2003This paper critically reviews the literature on the role of intellectual property protection (IPP) regimes in economic development.DocumentNEPAD and the African ‘resource gap’: a critical examination
Namibian Economic Policy Research Unit, 2002The ‘New Partnership for Africa’s Development’ (NEPAD) is the latest attempt by African leaders to formulate an initiative to boost development on the continent, but is it a feasible approach for the continent?DocumentThe Emperor’s new clothes: why rich countries want a WTO investment agreement
Oxfam, 2003This paper argues that despite EU members and other rich countries failing to fulfil their obligations from previous WTO negotiations, they are nonetheless pressuring developing countries to accept new investment rules in the next Round that they do not need and cannot afford.DocumentRanking the rich: the first annual CGD/FP commitment to development index
Center for Global Development, USA, 2003Foreign Policy and the Center for Global Development have developed a new ranking system that grades the efforts of the 21 richest nations to assist the development of poorer nations.DocumentEconomic insecurity and the globalization of production
National Bureau of Economic Research, USA, 2002This paper presents a theoretical framework clarifying a critical mechanism through which globalization can increase individual economic insecurity.DocumentThe employment impact of globalisation in developing countries
Queen Elizabeth House Library, University of Oxford, 2002This paper discusses the analytical framework of the globalisation-employment relationship in developing countries, focusing on the manufacturing sector.The authors argue that the neo-liberal conclusion that simply opening up economies to global market forces is a good - perhaps the only - way to promote employment and growth today is unwarranted.Pages
