Geopolitical Risk, Sustainability and “Cross-Border Spillovers” in Emerging Markets, Volume II
Michael I. C. Nwogugu
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Springer International Publishing
Sozialwissenschaften, Recht, Wirtschaft / Management
Beschreibung
Many emerging market countries are bank-based economies and are increasingly affected by geopolitical risks, U.S. dollar dynamics, regulations, preferential trade agreements (PTAs), MNCs (that often function like international organizations), social networks, labor dynamics, cross-border spillovers and the inefficient expansion of formal/informal microfinance. Country risks, informal economies (that account for 20-50 percent of the national economy of many emerging market countries), investor protection, enforcement commitment, compliance costs, sustainability (environmental, social, economic and political sustainability), economic growth, political stability, financial stability, geopolitical risk, social networks, household economics, inequality and international trade outcomes can vary dramatically across many DECs and LDECs due to these phenomena. The COVID-19 pandemic has illustrated the many problems inherent in political systems, economic policy and governments’ emergency powers during pandemics/epidemics and economic/financial crisis.
Kundenbewertungen
Global Financial Crisis, market volatility, risk management, European sovereign debt crisis, global sustainable growth, economic models, environmental sustainability, financial markets, bubbles and crashes, financial regulation, risk regulation, Dodd Frank Act, constitutional economics