معرفی کتاب «A Handbook of Primary Commodities in the Global Economy» نوشتهٔ Marian Radetzki، منتشرشده توسط نشر Cambridge University Press (Virtual Publishing) در سال 2008. این کتاب در فرمت pdf، زبان انگلیسی ارائه شده است.
Книга A Handbook of Primary Commodities in the Global Economy A Handbook of Primary Commodities in the Global EconomyКниги Экономика Автор: Marian Radetzki Год издания: 2008 Формат: pdf Издат.:Economy" Cambridge University Press Страниц: 244 Размер: 1,2 ISBN: 0521880203 Язык: Английский 34 (голосов: 1) Оценка:The world is going through an exceptional commodity boom triggered by a global demand shock largely caused by the sudden emergence of China and India as sizeable raw material importers. Prices of numerous commodities tripled between 2003 and 2006, resulting in huge windfalls for producers and a financial squeeze on consumers. A Handbook of Primary Commodities in the Global Economy is a guide to the ins and outs of this increasingly crucial part of the world economy. Assuming nothing more from readers than a basic understanding of economics, Marian Radetzki introduces and explains pertinent issues surrounding international commodity markets such as the global geography of raw materials, price formation, price trends, the role of commodity exchanges, the threat of depletion, cartel action, state ownership and the new commodity nationalism. Cover......Page 1 Half-title......Page 3 Title......Page 5 Copyright......Page 6 Contents......Page 7 Figures......Page 8 Tables......Page 9 Acknowledgments......Page 11 Background......Page 13 An opportune time to publish......Page 15 The readership......Page 17 1.1 Primary commodities in the economic development process......Page 19 1.2 Declining transport costs and the emergence of global commodity markets......Page 24 1.3 The fifty-year wave of public intervention and control inthe primary commodity markets......Page 27 1.4 Conclusion......Page 32 2.1 Commodity groups and their characteristics......Page 34 2.2 The importance of commodities in the international economy......Page 38 2.3 The provenance and destination of traded commodity supply......Page 43 2.4 The expansion of the rich world's dependence on commodity imports, and the recent emergence of China as a globally dominant importer of commodities......Page 49 2.5 The main findings summarized......Page 55 3.1 Protectionism in raw materials: of great significance but mainly limited to agriculture......Page 59 3.2 What policies, by whom, and for what reasons?......Page 60 3.3 Measuring the extent of trade restrictions in international commodity trade......Page 63 3.4 Commodity processing: tariff escalation......Page 65 4.1 Factors determining price levels in the short and long run......Page 69 4.2 The blurred nature and instability of the short-run supply schedule......Page 73 Short-run instability......Page 76 Commodity booms......Page 78 The long-run price trends......Page 84 Commodity exchanges......Page 88 Bilateral contracts......Page 89 Producer-dictated prices......Page 91 Transfer prices......Page 92 4.5 The actual price quotations......Page 93 4.6 Exchange rates and commodity prices......Page 95 5.1 The commodity exchanges and the commodities traded there......Page 98 5.2 Instruments and functions......Page 102 Futures contracts......Page 103 Options......Page 106 Price formation......Page 107 5.3 The actors and their objectives......Page 109 Hedging......Page 110 Speculation in commodity markets......Page 112 Commodity investments......Page 114 5.4 Impact on price formation and other influences......Page 117 Impact on prices......Page 118 Other impacts......Page 122 6 The economics of exhaustible resource depletion......Page 123 6.1 The availability of reserves......Page 124 6.2 The evolution of long-run prices......Page 126 6.3 Evolution of the unit price of unexploited resources......Page 128 6.4 The cost evidence......Page 129 6.4 The evidence of depletion summarized......Page 133 6.5 Satisfying human needs......Page 134 7 Fears of, and measures to assure, supply security......Page 138 7.1 When will supply disruptions be particularly serious to the importing economy?......Page 139 7.2 The nature and severity of the problems caused by disrupted commodity supply......Page 142 7.3 Measures to alleviate the consequences of supply disruption......Page 144 Choice of suppliers......Page 147 Tighter relations with suppliers......Page 148 Promotion of domestic output......Page 150 Stockpiling of strategic metals in the USA and other countries......Page 151 The IEA emergency stockpile of oil......Page 153 7.4 A summary of findings......Page 154 8.1 The formal preconditions for successful cartel action......Page 156 8.2 Other preconditions for successful cartel action......Page 160 8.3 Actual experiences of commodity cartels in the 1970s......Page 165 Bauxite......Page 166 Uranium......Page 168 Copper and iron ore......Page 170 OPEC......Page 171 8.4 Conclusions......Page 176 9.1 Introduction......Page 178 9.2 How to define and quantify the state enterprise sector......Page 180 9.3 Motivations for public ownership in mineral industries......Page 182 9.4 The distinguishing characteristics of state-owned mineral firms and of the environments in which they operate......Page 184 Operations......Page 186 Financial environment and investment behavior......Page 188 9.5 The impact of state ownership on the national economy......Page 192 Control......Page 193 Mineral rent......Page 194 Other national goals......Page 195 Disillusion and privatization......Page 196 9.6 Implications for the international mineral markets......Page 198 10.1 Measurement of commodity dependence......Page 200 10.2 Export instability......Page 204 10.3 Extraction of fiscal revenue......Page 211 10.4 The Dutch disease and the resource curse......Page 218 The Dutch disease......Page 219 Resource curse......Page 222 10.5 Exchange rate policies in monoeconomies......Page 223 10.6 Conclusion: a general case for economic diversification?......Page 226 References......Page 228 Index......Page 238 "The world is going through an exceptional commodity boom triggered by a global demand shock largely caused by the sudden emergence of China and India as sizeable raw material importers. Prices of numerous commodities tripled between 2003 and 2006, resulting in huge windfalls for producers and a financial squeeze on consumers. A Handbook of Primary Commodities in the Global Economy is a guide to the ins and outs of this increasingly crucial part of the world economy. Assuming nothing more from readers than a basic understanding of economics, Marian Radetzki introduces and explains pertinent issues surrounding international commodity markets such as the global geography of raw materials, price formation, price trends, the role of commodity exchanges, the threat of depletion, cartel action, state ownership and the new commodity nationalism."--Jacket
The world is going through an exceptional commodity boom triggered by a global demand shock largely caused by the sudden emergence of China and India as sizeable raw material importers. Prices of numerous commodities tripled between 2003 and 2006, resulting in huge windfalls for producers and a financial squeeze on consumers. A Handbook of Primary Commodities in the Global Economy is a guide to the ins and outs of this increasingly crucial part of the world economy. Assuming nothing more from readers than a basic understanding of economics, Marian Radetzki introduces and explains pertinent issues surrounding international commodity markets such as the global geography of raw materials, price formation, price trends, the role of commodity exchanges, the threat of depletion, cartel action, state ownership and the commodity nationalism.