tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4413935813892441553.post6078620963679582843..comments2024-03-29T00:30:39.262-05:00Comments on real economics: What happened to John Kerry?Jonathan Larsonhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/05217670446743983955noreply@blogger.comBlogger2125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4413935813892441553.post-66215704688092519402014-12-03T16:50:24.399-06:002014-12-03T16:50:24.399-06:00http://economicsuggestion.blogspot.com
: A bit mor...http://economicsuggestion.blogspot.com<br />: A bit more than two thousand years ago both China and Europe were both large-scale empires, but five centuries later both were fragmented. Over the next five centuries there were several long episodes of fragmentation in China and repeated attempts to put the Roman Empire back together in Europe. Given this more complicated history, we seek in this chapter to explain how it came to be that by 1300 the European political equilibrium involved spatial fragmentation while the Chinese political equilibrium featured spatial integration. Understanding this basic contrast is critical for our subsequent analysis of the political economies of growth at both ends of Eurasia.::: >> http://economicsuggestion.blogspot.com/2014/12/basic-political-between-china-and-europe.htmlAnonymoushttps://www.blogger.com/profile/02653689074196974539noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4413935813892441553.post-80508302022490425062014-04-16T14:55:57.236-05:002014-04-16T14:55:57.236-05:00http://economicsuggestion.blogspot.com/
Foreign Ca...http://economicsuggestion.blogspot.com/<br />Foreign Capital and Economic Performance<br />This paper reviews the trends of two types of foreign capital inflows, namely foreign aid and foreign private investment, to Pakistan. Like other developing countries, the volume of foreign aid to Pakistan has been decreasing. Meanwhile foreign private investment to Pakistan has increased, though not as sharply as that to other developing Asian countries. The study finds that the impacts of foreign capital, aid and private investment on the economic performance of Pakistan have been insignificant. This paper suggests that these consequences are due to the inadequate development of domestic institutional structure, human capital, and indigenous entrepreneurshipAnonymoushttps://www.blogger.com/profile/02653689074196974539noreply@blogger.com