Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item:
https://hdl.handle.net/10316.2/25142
Title: | Les capitalism es vers le XXième Siècle: des transformations majeures en quête de théories (II) | Authors: | Boyer, Robert | Issue Date: | 1994 | Publisher: | Faculdade de Economia da Universidade de Coimbra | Abstract: | Completa-se aqui a publicação iniciada no
ns 3 de Notas Económicas deste trabalho
sobre a investigação macroeconómica
contemporânea e as transformações da
economia mundial. Nesta segunda parte,
privilegia-se a prospectiva, ensaiando-se
uma interpretação das grandes tendências
que marcam a evolução dos principais
espaços da economia mundial (os EUA, o
Japão, a União Europeia, as economias do
leste europeu e as do sudeste asiático).
Entre as hipóteses de fundo que conduzem
a análise, conta-se a do declínio
americano, a da crise do modelo japonês e
a do ressurgimento dos nacionalismos no
quadro da globalização. On complète ici la publication commencée dans le nQ3 de Notas Economicas de l’étude sur la recherche macroéconomique contemporaine et les transformations de l’économie mondiale. Dans cette seconde partie on privilégie la prospective en s’essayant à une interprétation des grandes tendances qui ont marqué l’évolution des principaux espaces de l’économie mondiale (les Etats-Unis, le Japon, l’Union Européenne, les économies de l’Europe de l’Est et celles du Sud-Est asiatique). Parmi les hypothèses de fond qui président à l’analyse on trouve le déclin américain, la crise du modèle japonais et la montée des nationalismes dans le cadre de la globalisation. This text corresponds to the last part — the first one was published in the previous issue of Notas Economicas — of an article on contemporary macroeconomic research and changes underwent by the world economy. In the last sections presented here, the author privileges a prospective analysis and tries to define the major tendencies characterizing the main economic spaces in the world economy (USA, Japan, EC, western Europe economies and south-eastern Asia). Among the leading assumptions underlying this analysis are the American decline, the crisis of the Japanese model and the reemergence of nationalisms in the face of globalization. |
URI: | https://hdl.handle.net/10316.2/25142 | ISSN: | 2183-203X |
Appears in Collections: | Notas Económicas |
Files in This Item:
File | Description | Size | Format | |
---|---|---|---|---|
notaseconomicas4_artigo1.pdf | 3.83 MB | Adobe PDF | ![]() |
Items in DSpace are protected by copyright, with all rights reserved, unless otherwise indicated.