Most of the established theories of economics, particularly of international trade, became obsolete in the new world trade and production architecture. How, in these new circumstances, will host nations organize their economic resources? This book analyzes some prominent countries in the world to examine the issue.
Table of Content
Introduction
1. Structural Reforms in International Business and Production
2. Tariff Policy and Employment Structure in the UK
3. Structural Reforms in China
4. Structural Reforms in India
5. Structural Reforms in Nigeria
6. Structural Reforms in Egypt
Conclusion
About the author
Dipak Basu is Professor in International Economics in Nagasaki University, Japan. Previously he was lecturer in the Institute of Agricultural Economics at Oxford University, Research Officer in the Department of Applied Economics at Cambridge University, Senior Economist in Charge of the Middle East & Africa division of Standard & Poor, and Senior Economist in the Ministry of Foreign Affairs of Saudi Arabia. He is a member of the editorial board of International Journal of Decision Sciences, Risk and Management and was the editor of the Middle East & Africa Review. He has received his Ph D from the University of Birmingham, UK.
Victoria W. Miroshnik is Associate Professor in Management, Tsukuba University Graduate School of Management, Tokyo, Japan. She was awarded the Adam Smith Research Fellowship from the University of Glasgow, UK and was previously Associate Professor in Management at Keimyung University, South Korea; American University Dubai; Ritsumeikan Asia-Pacific University, Japan; and a psychologist in the Military Academy of USSR in Tbilisi, Georgia.