World Economic Issues at the United Nations

World Economic Issues at the United Nations
Author: Mahfuzur Rahman
Publisher: Springer Science & Business Media
Total Pages: 322
Release: 2002
Genre: Business & Economics
ISBN: 9780792374756

Rahman (a former economist with the United Nations) examines the economic policy debates in the UN as they evolved and were sometimes resolved in the central forums of the General Assembly and the Economic and Social Council over the past 50 years. He avoids judgments on the outcomes of those debates, preferring to simply present the ideas as they were raised and debated. He organizes the chapters thematically, with separate treatments of stability and growth in industrial economies, economic development in the non- industrial economies, food needs, poverty, international development strategies, international trade, transnational countries and developing countries, commodity problems, the external debt crisis, and the international monetary system. c. Book News Inc.

Planning in Cold War Europe

Planning in Cold War Europe
Author: Michel Christian
Publisher: Walter de Gruyter GmbH & Co KG
Total Pages: 582
Release: 2018-10-08
Genre: History
ISBN: 3110532409

The idea of planning economy and engineering social life has often been linked with Communist regimes’ will of control. However, the persuasion that social and economic processes could and should be regulated was by no means limited to them. Intense debates on these issues developed already during the First World War in Europe and became globalized during the World Economic crisis. During the Cold War, such discussions fuelled competition between two models of economic and social organisation but they also revealed the convergences and complementarities between them. This ambiguity, so often overlooked in histories of the Cold War, represents the central issue of the book organized around three axes. First, it highlights how know-how on planning circulated globally and were exchanged by looking at international platforms and organizations. The volume then closely examines specificities of planning ideas and projects in the Communist and Capitalist World. Finally, it explores East-West channels generated by exchanges around issues of planning which functioned irrespective of the Iron Curtain and were exported in developing countries. The volume thus contributes to two fields undergoing a process of profound reassessment: the history of modernisation and of the Cold War.