The Puzzle of Twenty-First-Century Globalization

An International Economics Primer

By (author) Patrice Franko, Stephen C. Stamos Jr.

Not available to order

Publication date:

02 March 2017

Length of book:

282 pages

Publisher

Rowman & Littlefield Publishers

ISBN-13: 9781538100264

The Puzzle of Twenty-First-Century Globalization explores the opportunities and challenges of our international economic system. Patrice Franko and Stephen Stamos clearly trace how the ways we produce, finance, and trade goods and services are profoundly shaped by technologies of communication, transportation, and trade. Globalization encourages hyper-specialization—lavishly rewarding those with the skill sets to serve the global marketplace and punishing those poorly positioned to compete. Globalized systems have created great prosperity—along with instability, vulnerability, and backlash.

Few genuinely understand the complex underpinnings of our international economic system—and these specialists tend to operate in isolated silos of finance, trade, and production. But without appreciating how systems come together, we cannot explain political reactions against the costs of globalization such as the Brexit vote or the rise of Donald Trump. We don’t value the changing geo-economic importance of the developing world nor the deep threat to ecosystems.
This book is the first to emphasize the interrelated
economic aspects of globalization from an interdisciplinary perspective. By placing an introduction to trade, finance, and multinational production in the same text that discusses the changing role of developing countries and the challenges to the environment, the authors provide the novice with the basics to understand the global economy while also challenging advanced students to appreciate global connectivity.
Closing the knowledge gap in international economics, the authors present the historical context, interdisciplinary grounding, and competing political perspectives
needed to encourage sound critical thinking around contemporary globalization. They provide the essential global economic tools to equip all readers to make decisions that may foster a fairer, more sustainable global system.
This innovative and ambitious book analyses ideas usually taught in separate courses on trade, international finance, economic development, and multinational production, and embeds them in an integrated theory of the processes and outcomes of economic globalization. It also develops policy recommendations for governments who seek an economically sustainable and equitable globalization process. The book presents its ideas in language that is easily understood by most college students. I highly recommend it.