A readily measurable aspect of globalization is the increasing exchange of capital, products and services across national boundaries, spurred by expanded use of container shipping and other technological improvements as well as falling barrier. The interdependence is most apparent with global supply chains, as manufactured goods like vehicles and electronics are assembled with components produced around the world, and it’s increasingly rare for any country to be the sole source of any one complex product. Countries aim to increase exports but worry about too many imports and trade imbalances, even as their consumers pursue low prices. Disagreements on subsidies, tariffs, quotas or unfair practices are debated by the World Trade Organization.

Brazil Gives China Early X-Mas Present...

Lula opens the floodgates to dumped Chinese products
John Fitzpatrick
November 23, 2004

The EU Loses its Rag

Europe fears Chinese dominance of the global textile industry
December 8, 2004

Schröder Boosts Arms Sales to China

Schröder sees lucrative business in China
Peter Sturm
December 17, 2004

India's Pharma Ache

The upcoming amendment to the Indian Patent Act may lead to increased competition from MNCs
Yogi Aggarwal
November 4, 2004

Trading in Pieties

World trade negotiations should focus on liberalization rather than peripheral policy measures
October 22, 2004