Globalization is inevitable and inexorable -- but it's also magnifying the chasmbetween rich and poor. At home and abroad, new extremes of wealth anddeprivation are increasingly threatening the stability of the entire global system.The Globalization Gap reveals how globalization is spreading poverty, disease,and the disintegration of traditional cultures. A few "winners" are using theirwealth to buffer themselves against these radical transformations, writes Dr.Robert Isaak. But, in most places, the new wealth generated by globalization isnot trickling down. The result? More misery -- and political upheavals that willendanger us all. It doesn't have to be this way, says Isaak: we can gain thepromised benefits of globalization -- without the withering unfairness. Isaakpresents a realistic blueprint for sharing opportunity and creating sustainableinnovation everywhere, not just amongst the wealthy. Isaak shows how a newglobalization can give the poor a powerful stake, both here and abroad. In sodoing, he takes on the most crucial challenge of the 21st century: makingglobalization work for everyone. Isaak's ideas can lead towards a more stable,peaceful world, in which we can all build our futures -- rich and poor alike.
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  About the Author.Preface.Introduction.1. The Revolt of the Rich.2. Time versus Opportunity.False Promises of Development I. THE RICH: WHO THEY ARE AND HOW THEY WORK AND WHY THEY SPEED THINGS UP.3. Who the Rich Are and How They Live.Big, First, and Well Positioned.Bigger Houses with Fewer People in Them.Education Equals Savings and Investment.The Truly Rich Are Really Thrifty.Harried Leisure and Time Deprivation.4. Pyramids of Opportunity.A Sea Change: Getting Rich on the Job.5. Corporate Wealth and Hedging.6. The Global Speed Trap: Diversifying to Ward off Losses and Old Age.How the Global Economy Is Speeding Up.Attention Deficit Disorder: Metaphor for Cultural Disintegration?The Graying of the Rich: From Baby Boom to Bust.II. THE POOR: WHO THEY ARE, HOW THEY LIVE, AND WHY THEY ARE DEPENDENT.7. Why the Poor Are Where They Are.Income Inequality.Is the World's Middle Class Disappearing?Asset Inequalities.Democratic Deficits versus Too Much Democracy.8. A Passage Through India.Emerging Modernity.Reinforcing Poverty through Religion and Cultural Traditions."Indian Time," Caste, and Aesthetic Design Confront Globalization.High-Tech Bangalore and the Time Warp.9. Poverty Traps.The Institutional Trap.The Trade Trap.The Educational Trap, the Gender Gap, and the Digital Divide.The Debt Trap.Cultural Traps and Governability.Property Laws, Legal Traps, Limited Markets.III. THE RULES.10. Origins of the Rules of Globalization. Protecting Comparative Advantage: Making the Most of What You've Got.The "Fixing" of Exchange Rates.Oil Cartels and Petro-Dollars.Democratizing Investment Banking.Trade Rules.From Scarcity to Ubiquity: Digitization and the Falling Cost of Information.11. How the Rules Rule the Poor.How to Increase Poverty with Trade.How Free Capital Flows Can Create the Poor.The Competitiveness Mantra: Consolidate, Raise Productivity, Downsize, Outsource.IV. CRISIS AND SOLUTIONS.12. Global Crises We Will All Face.Too Many People in the Wrong Places.The Spread of Plagues and Epidemic Diseases.The Rapid Global Spread of Unemployment and Underemployment.The Education Crisis: Elite Hierarchies Confront Desperate Demands for Tools and Open Access.From Corporate Oligarchy to Chaos.The Environmental Crisis.American Unilateralism: Taxation Without Representation?Proliferation of Nuclear, Chemical, and Biological Weapons.13. A Blueprint for Sharing Opportunity.Keeping the Promise of Democratic Capitalism: Open Opportunity.Why It Benefits the Richest of the Rich to Help the Poorest of the Poor. Building High-Tech, Sustainable Communities.Ten Steps for Replicating Sustainable Silicon Valleys.Attracting Venture Capital: A Transparent NGO with a Nonbusiness Service Division. Resistance to Free Market Ideology Due to the Democratic Deficit.The Interface with Governments and International Organizations.Acknowledgments.Index.
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Globalization Has Triumphed, But Can We Save the Poor?“An impassioned report on the dangerous side of globalization, the book is a much-needed counter to the widespread propensity of economists to spring automatically to its defense. Recognizing that globalization cannot be wished away, the author turns to the proper question: how can we ensure that its potential contribution to welfare is not lost?”     –William Baumol, Emeritus Professor, Princeton University, and co-author of Downsizing in America: Reality, Causes and Consequences “Robert Isaak is unique among critics of Globalization in that he accepts it as inevitable but goes determinedly to propose innovations that can make it work better economically and socially for the rich and the poor.”“Robert Isaak's new book presents fresh ideas on globalization that will enrich a polarized debate between the pessimists and the hyper-optimists. His work brings back Ortega y Gasset classic ideas of the late 1930’s when the "masses" brought down globalization and with it the worst recession and the bloodiest war. I am sure that Isaak's book will guide the readers to look forward after learning from past ideas and experiences.”     –Jorge Pinto, former Ambassador of Mexico and member of the Board of the World Bank. Director of the Center for Global FinanceFor most people except the world’s very richest, globalization is failing–catastrophically. If we don’t act, its failure will lead to a global upheaval worse than any in human history. But there’s another, better path. Isaak shows how a new globalization can give the poor a powerful stake, both here and abroad. Isaak's ideas can lead toward a more stable, peaceful world, in which we can all build our futures–rich and poor alike.
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Globalization is inevitable and inexorable -- but it's also magnifying the chasmbetween rich and poor. At home and abroad, new extremes of wealth anddeprivation are increasingly threatening the stability of the entire global system.The Globalization Gap reveals how globalization is spreading poverty, disease,and the disintegration of traditional cultures. A few "winners" are using theirwealth to buffer themselves against these radical transformations, writes Dr.Robert Isaak. But, in most places, the new wealth generated by globalization isnot trickling down. The result? More misery -- and political upheavals that willendanger us all. It doesn't have to be this way, says Isaak: we can gain thepromised benefits of globalization -- without the withering unfairness. Isaakpresents a realistic blueprint for sharing opportunity and creating sustainableinnovation everywhere, not just amongst the wealthy. Isaak shows how a newglobalization can give the poor a powerful stake, both here and abroad. In sodoing, he takes on the most crucial challenge of the 21st century: makingglobalization work for everyone. Isaak's ideas can lead towards a more stable,peaceful world, in which we can all build our futures -- rich and poor alike.
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Globalization's blowback: disease, revolution, terror, and accelerating economic and political instability. The revolt of the rich: How the world's wealthiest have taken control -- and why globalization is failing for everyone else. Making globalization work for everyone: building sustainable opportunity for the world's poor
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Produktdetaljer

ISBN
9780768682281
Publisert
2007-11-21
Utgiver
Vendor
Financial Times Prentice Hall
Vekt
404 gr
Høyde
229 mm
Bredde
152 mm
Aldersnivå
P, 06
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Heftet
Antall sider
304

Forfatter

Biographical note

Robert A. Isaak is Henry George Professor of International Management at Pace University, New York. He teaches international management, comparative management, and creativity and entrepreneurship across cultures. Dr. Isaak’s nine books include Green Logic, Managing World Economic Change, and Modern Inflation (with WilhelmHankel).

He has consulted for global enterprises including Siemens, Technicon, Prudential Intercultural, and Global Intercultural. He has also taught in many places in the world, including at the University of Heidelberg, Groupe École Superieure de Commerce de Grenoble, CERAM European Graduate School of Management in Sophia Antipolis, Franklin College in Lugano, The Johns Hopkins School of Advanced International Studies in Bologna, and New York University.

Dr. Isaak holds a B.A. from Stanford University and a Ph.D. from New York University.