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Economic globalization
Includes economic networks that are growing more interconnected, a worldwide market with actors unconstrained by political borders and a reduction in state control over economies
Multinational corporations (MNCs)
Businesses with a significant presence in countries in different regions of the world. MNCs increasing dominate global markets and pose challenges to, and sometimes conflict with, domestic economic policies regarding labor the environment, land rights, taxation, and the budet
Special economic zones
Areas in China (particularly along China’s east coast) designated by the government as regions where private businesses could attract foreign direct investment
Privatization
Government-owned industries to businesses run with free-market forces that are owned and operated by private investors.
Nationalization
Government-owned industries run without free-market forces
Foreign direct investment
Money invested in private businesses by individuals or a corporation outside of the a country that can challenge a government’s foundational economic and political ideas and principles.
International organizations
Organizations joined by member states with a common interest, such as the International Monetary Fund (IMF), the World Bank, and the United Nations
International Monetary Fund (IMF)
Exerts significant influence through preconditions for financial assistance; countries that receive IMF assistance often must agree to structural adjustment programs requiring privatization of state-owned companies, reduced tariffs, and reduced governmental subsidies for domestic industries.
Supranational organizations
Organizations in which member states grant the governing organization sovereignty over polices typically related to trade, such as the Economic Community of West African States (ECOWAS), the European Union (EU) and the World Trade Organization (WTO)
Structural adjustment programs
Neoliberal reforms often required by international organizations granting emergency loans to countries that require privatization of state-owned companies, reduced tariffs, and reduced governmental subsidies of domestic industries.
Tariffs
Taxes imposed by a government against imported goods
Subsidies
Government funding made to support domestic industries against foreign competition or to shape economic behaviors
Import substitution industrialization (ISI)
Policies aimed at reducing foreign dependency by raising tariffs and encouraging local production of industrialized products
Austerity measures
Funding cuts to state programs and tax increased intended to decrease budget deficits and national debt; often required for IMF emergency loans.
Gender equity
Civil rights ideal for women to be protected with equal treatment and to secure equal power as men in governing a country
Maquiladora zones
Areas of Mexico’s manufacturing industry primarily located in Northern Mexico; factories established to assemble parts imported from the United States for assembly in Mexico were made more possible due to NAFTA. Contributed to more significant economic development in the north than in the south, and other regional dispartiies
Rentier states
Countries that obtain a sizable percentage of total government revenue from the export of oil and gas or from leasing the resource to foreign countries, and have been able to raise standards of living and fund governmental programs based on their vast reserves.
Economic diversification
When a country can obtain an economic balance between agriculture, manufacturing and service without over dependence on one commodity or financial sector