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FINANCIAL DIPLOMACY (4) answer(s).
 
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1
ID:   163952


Dollar diplomacy / Smart, Christopher   Journal Article
Christopher Smart Journal Article
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Summary/Abstract If the military strength and economic wealth of the United States underpin the dollar’s central role, then America’s global influence is enhanced because its currency dominates trade, finance and sovereign reserves.
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2
ID:   094726


Faulty basel: why more diplomacy won't keep the financial system safe / Levinson, Marc   Journal Article
Levinson, Marc Journal Article
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Publication 2010.
Summary/Abstract Attempting to prevent future financial crises by drafting new global regulations will do more harm than good. If governments adopt the same regulations, they will make the same mistakes. Instead, financial regulation must be the task of individual governments and not multilateral committees.
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3
ID:   125409


Financial diplomacy: the internationalization of the Chinese Yuan / Petkova, Ivanka   Journal Article
Petkova, Ivanka Journal Article
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Publication 2013.
Summary/Abstract China is the world's biggest exporter since 2009 and the second largest economy since 2010.after achieving these high levels of inclusion into the global economy and trade in could be expected for the national currency (the Chinese Yuan) to find international demand. However, the still developing financial system and the currency control regime are key obstacles for this demand to evolve.
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4
ID:   112625


Japan's new economic diplomacy: changing tactics or strategy? / Okano-Heijmans, Maaike   Journal Article
Okano-Heijmans, Maaike Journal Article
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Publication 2012.
Summary/Abstract Japan's economic diplomacy has evolved significantly since the 1990s in response to the reconfiguration of regional and global power. This article places developments along a conceptual continuum and finds that, slowly but steadily, Japanese policies shift from an emphasis on commercial goals of economic diplomacy to include also a more outspoken element of power play. While tourism promotion may be considered a new part of economic diplomacy, long-time practices of trade and investment promotion, business advocacy, and development cooperation are revamped with a focus on the environmental and energy fields. The negotiation of trade agreements, which for long was highjacked by domestic politics, was given new impetus in 2010, while financial diplomacy-which seemed promising in the early 2000s-stalled. Finally, negative sanctioning is no longer a taboo, particularly in the relationship with North Korea. The appetite of the government and private sector to conform with Western countries remains limited, however, and the ambiguity between the old and the new suggests that we are witnessing a change in Japanese tactics rather than in strategy.
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