Globalization and the race to the bottom in developing countries: who really gets hurt?
Publication details: Cambridge Cambridge University Press 2008Description: xix, 294 pISBN:- 9780521715034
- 303.482
Item type | Current library | Call number | Status | Date due | Barcode | Item holds | |
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Ahmedabad | 303.482 R8G5 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | Available | 167414 |
Includes bibliographical references (p. 255-285) and index
The advance of economic globalization has led many academics, policy-makers, and activists to warn that it leads to a 'race to the bottom'. In a world increasingly free of restrictions on trade and capital flows, developing nations that cut public services are risking detrimental effects to the populace. Conventional wisdom suggests that it is the poorer members of these societies who stand to lose the most from these pressures on welfare protections, but this new study argues for a more complex conceptualization of the subject. Nita Rudra demonstrates how and why domestic institutions in developing nations have historically ignored the social needs of the poor; globalization neither takes away nor advances what never existed in the first place. It has been the lower- and upper-middle classes who have benefited the most from welfare systems and, consequently, it is they who are most vulnerable to globalization's race to the bottom. Source: Publisher
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