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  2. Global imbalances - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Global_imbalances

    The essential requirement to make large global imbalances in world, is the monetary globalisation or, in other words, freeing and opening the financial markets. Without this, it is not able to produce the amount of capital flows between countries. However, not every monetary globalisation should lead to imbalances.

  3. Balance of trade - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Balance_of_trade

    If a country exports a greater value than it imports, it has a trade surplus or positive trade balance, and conversely, if a country imports a greater value than it exports, it has a trade deficit or negative trade balance. As of 2016, about 60 out of 200 countries have a trade surplus. The notion that bilateral trade deficits are per se ...

  4. Current account (balance of payments) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Current_account_(balance...

    The current account is an important indicator of an economy's external sector. It is defined as the sum of the balance of trade (goods and services exports minus imports), net income from abroad, and net current transfers. A positive current account balance indicates the nation is a net lender to the rest of the world, while a negative current ...

  5. How U.S.-China competition is benefiting the world—and ...

    www.aol.com/finance/u-china-competition...

    The global landscape has been transformed by the addition of many complications, including geopolitics, shifts toward nativism in consumer sentiment and politics, climate change, demographic ...

  6. United States balance of trade - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/United_States_balance_of_trade

    U.S. Trade Balance (1895–2015) and Trade Policies. The 1920s marked a decade of economic growth in the United States following a classical supply side policy. [1] U.S. President Warren Harding signed the Emergency Tariff of 1921 and the Fordney–McCumber Tariff of 1922. Harding's policies reduced taxes and protected U.S. business and ...

  7. Unequal exchange - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Unequal_exchange

    Unequal exchange is used primarily in Marxist economics, but also in ecological economics (more specifically also as ecologically unequal exchange), to describe the systemic hidden transfer of labor and ecological value from poor countries in the imperial periphery (mainly in the Global South) to rich countries and monopolistic corporations in the imperial core (mainly in the Global North) due ...

  8. International economics - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/International_economics

    The economic theory of international trade differs from the remainder of economic theory mainly because of the comparatively limited international mobility of the capital and labour. [6] In that respect, it would appear to differ in degree rather than in principle from the trade between remote regions in one country.

  9. List of sovereign states by current account balance - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_sovereign_states...

    World map by current account balance (% of GDP), 2023, according to World Bank [1]. This is the list of countries by current account balance, expressed in current U.S. dollars and as percentage of GDP, based on the data published by World Bank, United Nations Conference on Trade and Development and Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development.