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Does foreign direct investment contribute to unemployment in home countries?: An empirical survey
In: Kiel working paper 765
European integration: a threat to foreign investment in developing countries?
In: Kieler Diskussionsbeiträge 246
Lit.
World Affairs Online
Impact of "Europe agreements" on FDI in developing countries
In: Kieler Arbeitspapiere 640
Wirkungen der Entwicklungshilfe: Bestandsaufnahme und Überprüfung für die zweite Entwicklungsdekade
In: Forschungsberichte des Bundesministeriums für Wirtschaftliche Zusammenarbeit 50
World Affairs Online
Ölpreisschocks und wirtschaftliche Entwicklung: Anpassungsprobleme in der Dritten Welt
In: Kieler Studien 176
World Affairs Online
Entwicklungspolitische Orientierung des Entwicklungshilfe-Steuergesetzes: ein praktikabler Vorschlag
In: Kieler Diskussionsbeiträge zu aktuellen wirtschaftspolitischen Fragen 22
Das Zahlungsbilanzproblem im Rahmen der indischen Wirtschaftsentwicklung
In: Kieler Studien 114
CARDIOPROTECTIVE EFFECTS OF LIGHT-MODERATE CONSUMPTION OF ALCOHOL: A REVIEW OF PUTATIVE MECHANISMS
In: Alcohol and alcoholism: the international journal of the Medical Council on Alcoholism (MCA) and the journal of the European Society for Biomedical Research on Alcoholism (ESBRA), Band 37, Heft 5, S. 409-415
ISSN: 1464-3502
World Investment Report 1995. Transnational Corporations and Competitiveness - United Nations Conference on Trade and Development
In: Journal of institutional and theoretical economics: JITE, Band 132, Heft 2, S. 404
ISSN: 0932-4569
INTRA‐LDCs FOREIGN DIRECT INVESTMENT: A COMPARATIVE ANALYSIS OF THIRD WORLD MULTINATIONALS
In: The developing economies: the journal of the Institute of Developing Economies, Tokyo, Japan, Band 23, Heft 3, S. 236-253
ISSN: 1746-1049
Factor Proportions in Foreign and Domestic Firms in Indian Manufacturing
In: The Economic Journal, Band 86, Heft 343, S. 589
Reflections on foreign investment in natural recources of developing countries
Both exploitation of Natural resources and activities of multinational corporations in developing countries have independently been subjects of vehement discussions surrounding the oil or in a wider sense raw material crisis emerging from the embargo of OPEC countries in 1973 and those on the New International Economic Order. This paper examines in this background the role of foreign private investments in the natural resources of developing countries in the light of their current policies. But compared with traditional definition of natural resources, they are conceived here more broadly. They include besides (1) minerals., energy sources, forests, etc., also (2) air, rivers, oceans, sun energy, climate and other environmental constituents which determine nature's absorptive capacity for industrial growth and pollution. Natural resources of the first group are called here non-renewable or exhaustive and those of the second group environmental resources. The dividing line between the two groups may, however, be in some cases very thin because all natural resources are subject to exhaustion, albeit to different degrees, and all of them are parts of environment. Nevertheless, a distinction between exhaustive and environmental resources is drawn in this paper in order to account for their varying importance for foreign private investments in developing countries and in this sense our definitions of the two groups of natural resources are purely subjective.
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Some Aspects of Plan Implementation
In: Indian journal of public administration, Band 19, Heft 1, S. 16-25
ISSN: 2457-0222
The Planning Commission
In: Indian journal of public administration, Band 3, Heft 4, S. 333-345
ISSN: 2457-0222