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International Economic Institutions
- Globalism vs. Nationalism
- Narrated by: Ramon P. DeGennaro
- Length: 12 hrs and 20 mins
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Summary
Since the end of World War II, groups such as the World Trade Organization, International Monetary Fund, World Bank, European Union, and G-20 have sprung up with a variety of missions, including promoting trade, ensuring financial stability, eradicating poverty, and advancing sustainable economic growth. Behind these worthy goals is the ultimate aim: preventing the kind of global economic instability that can easily lead to war.
But while such organizations are trying to knit the world more tightly together, in many countries the voices of populism and nationalism are objecting that the price of lost sovereignty is too high and that traditions and customs are being lost. Furthermore, such organizations have the failings common to all human institutions. Do they really work? Have some saved us from disaster? Are we better off without others? What is the best route to prosperity, and do these groups help smooth the way or obstruct it?
International Economic Institutions: Globalism vs. Nationalism uses these influential bodies as a lens to study today's globalized economy. In 24 eye-opening half-hour lectures, award-winning teacher and economist Professor Ramon P. DeGennaro of the University of Tennessee, Knoxville, conducts you through the dizzying array of institutions, their backgrounds, their goals, and the important roles they play in the economic life of the entire world.
PLEASE NOTE: When you purchase this title, the accompanying reference material will be available in your Library section along with the audio.
What listeners say about International Economic Institutions
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- Lopsey
- 18-05-17
Content is great, but too many references
Was this a book you wanted to listen to all in one sitting?
possible but unlikely
Any additional comments?
The course covers the range of institutions well, but Professor DeGennaro references far too many of his points, which is unhelpful in a lecture series like this. Overall though recommended for anyone with an interest in the subject.
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4 people found this helpful
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- Daniel A.
- 18-09-22
Surprisingly interesting
I did not expect. a course about international economic institutions to be so enjoyable. The course doesn't try to take sides or pretend that the institutions currently in place serve their role well, but provides a good overall picture of them.
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- Michael Kosmides
- 13-06-17
Informative but biased
If you could sum up International Economic Institutions in three words, what would they be?
Informative, biased, neo-liberal
Was this a book you wanted to listen to all in one sitting?
Pretty much so. The story of the international financial institutions is fascinating
Any additional comments?
The lecture is very informative but has a clear neo-liberal bias, which should be added as a 'health warning'.
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2 people found this helpful
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- S. Taylor
- 25-02-21
Fascinating
Very thorough and engaging on a subject that could have been so dry. I wish it had been longer!
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- James
- 24-07-17
Very well-informed and crystal-clear presentation
I heartily recommend this book, even if I don't share his confidence in markets and his disdain for government.
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- BrianP
- 05-06-17
Neoliberal nonsense
It is amazing that after thirty years of the failed neoliberal experiment, with inequality soaring, growth stalling, innovation freewheeling on the research of the Bretton Woods era and ordinary people being drawn by their total neglect by the elite to causes such as Trump and Brexit that a supposed respected academic can bear to utter the words in this book. The author early on makes the quite correct point that correlation does not equate to causality, but then throughout the lectures proceeds to use correlation to support his ideology whenever it suits him. Instead of listening to this nonsense, get an evidence-based picture of the true state of our modern society from books like "The Spirit Level", "The Great Divide", "23 Things They Don't Tell You About Capitalism" and "Capitalism's Toxic Assumptions" (also available from Audible)
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8 people found this helpful