Connexion
S'inscrire
Réinitialiser le mot de passe
Publier & Distribuer
Solutions d'édition
Solutions de distribution
Thèmes
Architecture et design
Arts
Business et économie
Chimie
Chimie industrielle
Droit
Géosciences
Histoire
Informatique
Ingénierie
Intérêt général
Linguistique et sémiotique
Littérature
Mathématiques
Musique
Médecine
Pharmacie
Philosophie
Physique
Sciences bibliothécaires et de l'information, études du livre
Sciences des matériaux
Sciences du vivant
Sciences sociales
Sport et loisirs
Théologie et religion
Études classiques et du Proche-Orient ancient
Études culturelles
Études juives
Publications
Journaux
Livres
Comptes-rendus
Éditeurs
Blog
Contact
Chercher
EUR
USD
GBP
Français
English
Deutsch
Polski
Español
Français
Italiano
Panier
Home
Journaux
International Journal of Management and Economics
Édition 54 (2018): Edition 4 (December 2018)
Accès libre
Dependent versus state-permeated capitalism: two basic options for emerging markets
Andreas Nölke
Andreas Nölke
| 31 déc. 2018
International Journal of Management and Economics
Édition 54 (2018): Edition 4 (December 2018)
À propos de cet article
Article précédent
Article suivant
Résumé
Article
Figures et tableaux
Références
Auteurs
Articles dans cette édition
Aperçu
PDF
Citez
Partagez
Article Category:
Research Article
Publié en ligne:
31 déc. 2018
Pages:
269 - 282
Reçu:
20 mai 2018
Accepté:
05 déc. 2018
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.2478/ijme-2018-0026
Mots clés
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