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15.223 Global Markets, National Policies, and the Competitive Advantages of Firms, Fall 2007

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Title: 15.223 Global Markets, National Policies, and the Competitive Advantages of Firms, Fall 2007
Author: Locke, Richard
Issue Date: 2007-12
Abstract: The world is changing in two fundamental ways. First, the development of a truly global market in products, services, capital, and even certain types of labor is changing the basic terms of competition for an array of different firms and industries. Second, the rules and institutions governing the new international economic order are still in flux. National regulations are no longer adequate yet international accords over trade, intellectual property, labor standards, and a host of other issues are fiercely and frequently contested by competing interests. The final results of these debates will determine who wins and who loses in the new global economy. Understanding the interaction between environment and business around the world is the key to understanding both the possibilities for and constraints on either managing an existing or starting a new business in today's fast-changing economy.
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/1721.1/75287
Other Identifiers: 15.223-Fall2007
Other Identifiers: 15.223
IMSCP-MD5-7e101ce635c7ca32437aaae858417b8b
Keywords: globalization, market economies, liberal market economies, state-driven development, emerging markets, intellectual property, ngo, sustainability, trade policy, international trade, labor standards, environmental standards, 450605, International Economics, 521101, International Business/Trade/Commerce

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