Tag Archives: Globalization

US Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas – Global Growth Outlook Reflects Sustained Recovery

Global growth accelerated in 2017, supported by strengthening labor markets and external demand. Although inflation concerns among advanced countries abated, risks remain and are mostly tilted to the downside. Concerns are centered on trade policy changes and entrenched protectionist attitudes, uncertainty about shifting U.S. policy and its global spillovers, and the consequences of tighter global financial conditions and asset volatility.

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Entrepreneurial Capitalism Helps Lift People From Extreme Poverty – FEE.org

The World’s Poorest People Are Getting Richer Faster than Anyone Else The new age of globalization, which started around 1980, saw the developing world enter the global economy and resulted in the largest escape from poverty ever recorded. The speed of poverty alleviation in the last 25 years has been historically unprecedented. Not only is the proportion of people in

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Digital Globalization and the New Era of Global Flows – McKinsey Global Institute

Digital Globalization: The New Era of Global Flows – McKinsey Global Institute Remarkably, digital flows, which were practically nonexistent just 15 years ago, now exert a larger impact on GDP growth than the centuries-old trade in goods, according to a new McKinsey Global Institute (MGI) report, Digital globalization: The new era of global flows. And although this shift makes it

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US Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas – International Migration Remains the Last Frontier of Globalization

The cross-border flow of people, or international migration, is by far the most politically charged aspect of globalization and the one with seemingly the least progress in recent decades. Migration is a truly global phenomenon, and the cross-border movement of people today is arguably on the same scale as during the great migrations at the turn of the 20th century. By

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