Iniciar sesión
Registrarse
Restablecer contraseña
Publicar y Distribuir
Soluciones de Publicación
Soluciones de Distribución
Temas
Arquitectura y diseño
Artes
Ciencias Sociales
Ciencias de la Información y Bibliotecas, Estudios del Libro
Ciencias de la vida
Ciencias de los materiales
Deporte y tiempo libre
Estudios clásicos y del Cercano Oriente antiguo
Estudios culturales
Estudios judíos
Farmacia
Filosofía
Física
Geociencias
Historia
Informática
Ingeniería
Interés general
Ley
Lingüística y semiótica
Literatura
Matemáticas
Medicina
Música
Negocios y Economía
Química
Química industrial
Teología y religión
Publicaciones
Revistas
Libros
Actas
Editoriales
Blog
Contacto
Buscar
EUR
USD
GBP
Español
English
Deutsch
Polski
Español
Français
Italiano
Carrito
Home
Revistas
International Journal of Management and Economics
Volumen 54 (2018): Edición 4 (December 2018)
Acceso abierto
Dependent versus state-permeated capitalism: two basic options for emerging markets
Andreas Nölke
Andreas Nölke
| 31 dic 2018
International Journal of Management and Economics
Volumen 54 (2018): Edición 4 (December 2018)
Acerca de este artículo
Artículo anterior
Artículo siguiente
Resumen
Artículo
Figuras y tablas
Referencias
Autores
Artículos en este número
Vista previa
PDF
Cite
Compartir
Article Category:
Research Article
Publicado en línea:
31 dic 2018
Páginas:
269 - 282
Recibido:
20 may 2018
Aceptado:
05 dic 2018
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.2478/ijme-2018-0026
Palabras clave
emerging markets
,
comparative capitalism
,
dependent market economies
,
state-permeated market economies
© 2018 Andreas Nölke, published by Sciendo
This work is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 License.
Figure 1
Corporate governance: foreign direct investment stock as share of gross domestic product [2016]. Source: UNCTAD World Investment Report 2016, Annex table 07.
Figure 2
Corporate governance: levels of state control [2013]. Source: OECD, Product Market Regulation Database
Figure 3
Corporate finance: state ownership of banks in percent (1999–2010). Source: Bertay, C.A. et. al. (2015): Bank ownership and credit ower the business cylce: Is lending by state less procyclical? In: Journal of Banking & Finance 50 (2015) 326-339.
Figure 4
Industrial relations: nominal monthly average wages in US$ (2016). Source: International Labour Organization/Statistics and Database, ILO- Global Wage Report
Figure 5
Industrial relations: levels of public social expenditure as percentage of GDP (2016). Source: OECD Social Expenditure database, UN Database on Social Investment in Latin America and the Caribbean, National Institution for Transforming India (NITI Aayog)
Figure 6
Innovation and training: public expenditures on research and development as a percentage of GDP. Source: World Bank Database
Figure 7
Domestic demand: regulation levels of national product markets (2013). Source: OECD Product Market Regulation Database
Figure 8
International economic integration: FDI regulatory restrictiveness index 2017. Source: OECD FDI Regulatory Restrictiveness Database
Figure 9
International economic integration: international reserves minus gold in months of imports. Source: World Bank Database