Canada, Asia, and the Pacific Century

By geography, population, and public policy, Canada is a Pacific Rim country. Despite grandiose plans and rhetoric, however, Canada's economy is in retreat, dominated by the southern direction of investment and trade ties with the United States and reinforced by the huge levels of foreign inves...

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Veröffentlicht in:The Annals of the American Academy of Political and Social Science 1995-03, Vol.538 (1), p.96-114
1. Verfasser: McMillan, Charles J.
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description By geography, population, and public policy, Canada is a Pacific Rim country. Despite grandiose plans and rhetoric, however, Canada's economy is in retreat, dominated by the southern direction of investment and trade ties with the United States and reinforced by the huge levels of foreign investment that are increasingly rationalized along North American triad lines. The western Canadian provinces are the most Asian oriented, but Canada's business elites, scoring ever lower on measures of international competitiveness, are withdrawing to a regional base. Canada's capacity to diversify the industrial base and build new trade alliances is deeply constrained by the country's deficit and debt problems, as well as business and political elites who remain wedded to an Atlantic Rim focus.
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source SAGE Complete A-Z List; Worldwide Political Science Abstracts; HeinOnline Law Journal Library; Sociological Abstracts; Periodicals Index Online
subjects Asia
ASIA AND THE PACIFIC
Business structures
CANADA
Countries
Economic conditions
Economic decline
Economic development
Economic resources
ECONOMIC SYSTEM IN DEVELOPED COUNTRIES
Financial investments
Free trade
History
Industrial development
International economics
International Relations
INTERNATIONAL TRADE
Investment strategies
Looking East or Looking West? Europe versus Asia
Pacific Area
Pacific Region
Trade blocs
Trade policy
Trade regionalization
title Canada, Asia, and the Pacific Century
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