Middle Eastern Geopolitics has been evolving with its contemporary counterparts for last five to eight hundred years of world history while its substantial impacts have been practically dominant on global trade and bu...Middle Eastern Geopolitics has been evolving with its contemporary counterparts for last five to eight hundred years of world history while its substantial impacts have been practically dominant on global trade and business since World War II.The descriptive article however narrates the neo-engagement rule via which international businesses have been being dictated by the mighty geo-politician players across the globe for last seven decades or so.The study conducted exclusive research and gathered evidences about the influences of geopolitics on international business,especially the fluctuating dynamics of oil and arms tradeoff between the allies of United Kingdom(UK)and United States(US)across the international business fraternity through various disrupting periods of recent history,which ultimately transformed the patterns of world trade and the connotation of“Islamophobia”across continents.The study further emphasized the trade mindsets for selling war in the name of keeping peace across the most vulnerable corners of the Mediterranean.The result of the study unearthed the truths and realities behind the lately designed deceptive label of“world peace”,in the name of profit-generating business goals through war-games among key imperialists of the post Nazi German era.展开更多
This paper discusses the possibility of China falling into the so-called middle income trap in terms of three checkpoints: innovation capability, world-class big businesses, and inequality. Based on these criteria, o...This paper discusses the possibility of China falling into the so-called middle income trap in terms of three checkpoints: innovation capability, world-class big businesses, and inequality. Based on these criteria, our conclusions are as follows: First, China has increasingly become innovative and thus differs from other middle income countries. Second, China has many successful big businesses, a number disproportionate to its size. Thus, China differs from other middle income countries with few world-class big businesses, and the only qualification is that those big businesses are mostly non- manufacturing firms focused on such areas as finance, energy, and trading. Third, China faces great uncertainty in terms of inequality. Although several signs show that the Kuznets curve will come to represent China, as noted by the gradual reduction of surplus labor and rising wage rates starting in the coastal provinces, the Chinese are now facing new sources of inequality in China, such as wealth (including financial and real estate assets) and non-economic factors (including corruption).展开更多
文摘Middle Eastern Geopolitics has been evolving with its contemporary counterparts for last five to eight hundred years of world history while its substantial impacts have been practically dominant on global trade and business since World War II.The descriptive article however narrates the neo-engagement rule via which international businesses have been being dictated by the mighty geo-politician players across the globe for last seven decades or so.The study conducted exclusive research and gathered evidences about the influences of geopolitics on international business,especially the fluctuating dynamics of oil and arms tradeoff between the allies of United Kingdom(UK)and United States(US)across the international business fraternity through various disrupting periods of recent history,which ultimately transformed the patterns of world trade and the connotation of“Islamophobia”across continents.The study further emphasized the trade mindsets for selling war in the name of keeping peace across the most vulnerable corners of the Mediterranean.The result of the study unearthed the truths and realities behind the lately designed deceptive label of“world peace”,in the name of profit-generating business goals through war-games among key imperialists of the post Nazi German era.
文摘This paper discusses the possibility of China falling into the so-called middle income trap in terms of three checkpoints: innovation capability, world-class big businesses, and inequality. Based on these criteria, our conclusions are as follows: First, China has increasingly become innovative and thus differs from other middle income countries. Second, China has many successful big businesses, a number disproportionate to its size. Thus, China differs from other middle income countries with few world-class big businesses, and the only qualification is that those big businesses are mostly non- manufacturing firms focused on such areas as finance, energy, and trading. Third, China faces great uncertainty in terms of inequality. Although several signs show that the Kuznets curve will come to represent China, as noted by the gradual reduction of surplus labor and rising wage rates starting in the coastal provinces, the Chinese are now facing new sources of inequality in China, such as wealth (including financial and real estate assets) and non-economic factors (including corruption).