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Globalization
Michel Henry Bouchet
 

Globalization is described by The Economist as “the death of distance”. Martin Wolf describes it as the integration of economic activities, across borders, through markets”. And Anne Krueger adds that its main consequence is that economic agents, in any given part of the world, are much more affected by events elsewhere than before.
It is a broad concept that comprises an underlying combination of economics, finance, geopolitics, sociology, and history dimensions. As the new global economy raises the level of uncertainty and complexity for the international firm’s cross-border strategy, global risk analysis has become today an essential component of strategy decisions regarding export, investment, partnership, mergers, as well as takeovers. Since 09/11, global terrorism shows there is no safe sanctuary, even in the world’s largest economy. The seminar aims at providing students with a solid understanding of the concepts, historical perspectives, theoretical debates and methodologies surrounding the global economic system.


Globalisation (US) - Syllabus

# 0. Introduction
# 1.0 Globalization : 7 deadly sins?
# 2.1 Global competition for attracting capital flows
# 2.2 Offshoring & Competitiveness
# 3.1. A polarized debate
# 3.2 Comparative advantage and the new theory of international trade
# 4.0 The Euromarkets I: evolution, structure, instruments
# 4.1. The International Monetary Fund
# 4.2. Global banking regulations
# 4.3. The Euromarkets: evolution, structure, instruments
# 4.4. The Global Financial System
# 5.0 Global Finance and the role of the World Bank
# 5.1. Global Risk Analysis
# 5.2. Country Risk and Globalization
# 5.3. France in the Global Economy
# A brief assessment of strengths and challenges  




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