Risk Rules: How Local Politics Threaten the Global Economy

Risk Rules: How Local Politics Threaten the Global Economy

By Marvin Zonis, Dan Lefkovitz, Sam Wilkin, and Joseph Yackley

A comprehensive update to a highly praised title that outlines a framework for understanding how local politics in countries around the world affect globalization.

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Book Information

Publisher: Agate B2
Publish Date: 05/03/2011
Pages: 356
ISBN-13: 9781932841596
ISBN-10: 1932841598
Language: English

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Risk Rules is a comprehensive updating of the authors' critically praised The Kimchi Matters (Agate B2, 2005). The authors, a group of present and former University of Chicago political risk experts, return discussion of globalization and international relations to first principles. Globalization hype has obscured a few basic truths--that political stability and economic growth are usually determined on the local level, and that they're most affected by local institutions, leadership, corruption, and other such factors. Risk Rules shows that globalization (and events like the wars in Afghanistan and Iraq, and the September 11 attacks) makes understanding the political economies of distant countries more important than ever. Time and again, investors and foreign policymakers have been hurt because they haven't understood the unique local dynamics at work in a particular country or region. This truth holds for companies venturing abroad and for policymakers contemplating foreign challenges, and no less for small investors, voters, and others whose lives and finances are increasingly affected by distant world events. Risk Rules lays out an intuitive framework for making sense of international economic and political developments, whether negative (why markets in Argentina collapsed; why Russia stumbled, then rebounded, then stumbled again; why U.S. allies

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