In an increasingly globalized world, issues from a part of the system quickly reverberate elsewhere, and the way globalization has been managed raises high risks with little benefits. We need a coordinated global response, but each country thinks of its own good. The world has a major problem: it thinks freedom in space limits and waiving the limits is a hard thing to accomplish, as benchmarks and familiarities are doing the subject of current human consciousness. There is a battle of ideas that led to the failed policies, which have precipitated the crisis. Economic, ideological and relative fights have appeared to the distribution of wealth. Flawed perspectives led to crisis, both economic and moral, and the main factors of economic and p...
The world feels itself to be in transition, but to what is unclear. Will the liberal market model re...
During the crisis, it became evident that the kind of capitalism that was becoming dominant in the d...
The distinguished contributors to this issue of the Oxford Review of Economics were asked to addres...
In an increasingly globalized world, issues from a part of the system quickly reverberate elsewhere,...
Given the utterly painful short-run chock of COVID-19 as well as the looming long-run threat of clim...
Today, the world is in an evident disarray; many things seem to have gone wrong at once. Various top...
The period from 2008 into the third decade of the twenty-first century has been one long protracted ...
Current globalization has its predecessor in the global market of the 19th century. In that time, th...
Globalization is a highly complex phenomenon, the effects of which are difficult to predict and even...
Never before has finance been regarded with the suspicion of these past three years. Yet money and c...
Markets have been treating money as another commodity, trading it, speculating on its value and find...
The 2008 global financial crisis was the most traumatic global economic event in three quarters of a...
After the collapse of USSR, Communism came to an end in 1990 and Capitalism emerged alone as the onl...
It is now evident that this is an unprecedented phase in the history of global capitalism. The still...
The representative democracy has become weak and fragmented, and under control of international mark...
The world feels itself to be in transition, but to what is unclear. Will the liberal market model re...
During the crisis, it became evident that the kind of capitalism that was becoming dominant in the d...
The distinguished contributors to this issue of the Oxford Review of Economics were asked to addres...
In an increasingly globalized world, issues from a part of the system quickly reverberate elsewhere,...
Given the utterly painful short-run chock of COVID-19 as well as the looming long-run threat of clim...
Today, the world is in an evident disarray; many things seem to have gone wrong at once. Various top...
The period from 2008 into the third decade of the twenty-first century has been one long protracted ...
Current globalization has its predecessor in the global market of the 19th century. In that time, th...
Globalization is a highly complex phenomenon, the effects of which are difficult to predict and even...
Never before has finance been regarded with the suspicion of these past three years. Yet money and c...
Markets have been treating money as another commodity, trading it, speculating on its value and find...
The 2008 global financial crisis was the most traumatic global economic event in three quarters of a...
After the collapse of USSR, Communism came to an end in 1990 and Capitalism emerged alone as the onl...
It is now evident that this is an unprecedented phase in the history of global capitalism. The still...
The representative democracy has become weak and fragmented, and under control of international mark...
The world feels itself to be in transition, but to what is unclear. Will the liberal market model re...
During the crisis, it became evident that the kind of capitalism that was becoming dominant in the d...
The distinguished contributors to this issue of the Oxford Review of Economics were asked to addres...