his volume covers various issues in global development and global economic transformation including factors affecting economies and development in the European Union (EU), the Ukraine, select countries in Africa, the Caribbean, the South Pacific as well as India and the United States. The global economy is in transition, from the 1990s' status quo to the 'new normal' with heavy reliance on the internet, rapid communications, sophisticated payment systems, diminishing importance of size and distance and changing notions of the market.
This volume discusses how this process is affecting economies across the globe and why an appreciation of it will help efforts by governmental bodies and the private sector to reassess societal relationships - both economic and political. This volume shows that challenges to policy-making and the achievement of social consensus on development issues are often quite similar in all countries, irrespective of size, geographical location, endowment and developmental status. The chapters speak to concerns that touch on a cross-section of issues which are driving transition and transformation at multiple levels. As a group, they compare economic factors across transnational economic or political associations (OECD, European Union, G20) or make comparisons across or within emerging markets or small states (BRICS, various African countries, the Caribbean, South Pacific). They include the presentation of a new model for transnational agreements, discussions of policies related to labor compensation and corporate governance, comparisons of nations across the world using indices of economic development and governance, an analysis of gender inequality in employment in the European Union, comparisons of tax burdens across the European Union and the USA, discussions of employee representation in corporate governance, and a look at grass-roots development and markets in developing economies. As a whole, in its breadth and cross-national perspective, the volume represents an important scholarly contribution to international economics.
Biographies of Contributors
Acronyms within this volume
Acknowledgements
Chapter 1 Introduction
Linda A. Winkler and Harold Codrington (Editors)
Chapter 2 Does Size Matter in Economic Development?
Harold Codrington
Chapter 3 A Comparison of the Tax Burden on Labor in Poland and the United States
Anna Krajewska
Chapter 4 Women and Men in the Labor Market in Poland and Other EU Countries
Walentyna Kwiatkowska
Chapter 5 The Efficiency of Employee Representation in Corporate Governance in the Selected EU Countries
Stanislaw Rudolf
Chapter 6 The Role and Position of Works Councils in the Polish System of Labor Relations
Stanislaw Rudolf and Katarzyna Skorupinska
Chapter 7 Determinants of Transnational Regulatory Regimes
George Morgan and Mark Thorum
Chapter 8 The Death of the Social Contract and the Misery of XXI Century Interventionism
Miron Wolnicki
Chapter 9 Ukraine in a Transformation Period: An Assessment of Ukraines Investment Climate by Foreign Direct Investors
Ewa Bojar, Andrij Razhyk, and Jakub Bis
Chapter 10 Regional Growth and Poverty in Ukraine
Fyodor I. Kushnirsky and Svitlana V. Maksymenko
Chapter 11 TCB in Indias New ICE Age: Lessons for BRICS
James P. West
Chapter 12 Western Marketing and Economic Principles in the South Pacific and the Decline of Communal Values
Cristanna M. Cook
Chapter 13 Barbados at 50: Lessons for Other Small Developing Countries
Harold Codrington
Chapter 14 Grass-Roots Initiatives Driving Economic Development in Rural Tanzania
Linda Winkler
Index
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