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BLOUNT, JEB (3) answer(s).
 
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ID:   097325


Brazil on $300 a year / Blount, Jeb   Journal Article
Blount, Jeb Journal Article
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Publication 2010.
Key Words Brazil  AIDS  Patients  Hospital  Rural Brazil  Public Hospitals 
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2
ID:   106414


New capitols of capital / Galbraith, Andrew; Elder, Miriam; Blount, Jeb   Journal Article
Blount, Jeb Journal Article
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Publication 2011.
Summary/Abstract Since the beginning of the global trade in securities, bonds and currencies, three cities have emerged as the world's preeminent money centers: New York (Wall Street), London (The City) and Tokyo. They exert enormous influence on the world's economic agenda, and their cultures subtly shape the world of finance. But today, with the emergence of dynamic economies and societies in the developing world, there has emerged a host of new potential global financial centers. The list is long: Mumbai, Singapore, Hong Kong, Seoul, Dubai, Lagos, Johannesburg. None yet rivals the current
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3
ID:   106420


Sao Paulo: the best-and worst-of Latin America / Blount, Jeb   Journal Article
Blount, Jeb Journal Article
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Publication 2011.
Summary/Abstract Project MUSE - World Policy Journal - New Capitols of Capital Project MUSE Journals World Policy Journal Volume 28, Number 1, Spring 2011 New Capitols of Capital World Policy Journal Volume 28, Number 1, Spring 2011 E-ISSN: 1936-0924 Print ISSN: 0740-2775 Sub-Article from New Capitols of Capital São Paulo:The Best-and Worst-of Latin America Featuring Jeb Blount on São Paulo Return to Article Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva spent eight years confounding expectations as the president of Brazil. Perhaps no moment better exemplified Lula's ability to defy easy categorization than his appearance last September at the Bovespa, São Paulo's stock exchange. Lula-a gruff, bearded, working-class leader-was there to celebrate history's biggest-ever sale of stock, a $68 billion offer to government and private investors of new shares in the oil company Petroleo Brasileiro SA, usually known as Petrobras. The sale made Lula-critic of capitalism and champion of the poor -the head of the world's fourth-largest company by market value, a corporate titan nearly the size of ExxonMobil. Even Lula, who was three months from leaving office, seemed surprised by the situation. "Ten years ago I came here and people shook with fear to see me, this devourer of capitalism," Lula told the bankers, brokers and government officials gathered on the floor of the exchange. "Well, this devourer of capitalism is leaving office having honorably participated in the most auspicious...
Key Words Economic Conditions  Latin America  Sao Paulo 
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