Barrel of a gun oil wars affect economies. The World Bank and other 'international' institutions have done little to serve the interests of developing nations - just look at the World Bank induced economic collapse of Argentina. Free trade and abolition of protectionism also makes it easier for Western Corporations to bleed developing nations dry. The World Bank, etc. only help out developing nations financially if they agree to repeal various laws restricting their economy from being completely exploited by the West.smtt686 wrote:
there is no barrel of a gun economic decisions. The WTO, EU, NAFTA, CAFTA, ASEAN, OPEC and open markets prove that.CameronPoe wrote:
I don't think controlling the global economy down the barrel of a gun is a good thing, nor is altering it by delving into the politics of other nations. Tough times should drive ourselves to become more resourceful, which will make us more inventive, better capitalists well capable of dealing with upsets in the global economy. The fact of the matter is the playing field isn't even and it's our fault. We need to rectify that.smtt686 wrote:
but dont you think in a global economy we need to be interested in each others business. If you jack your resources up, should we have to suffer because that country did something stupid or underhanded. i think its a good thing we are in each others business. It for one keeps an even playing field and keeps everyone honest. There is nothing bad about watching your interests dont you think.
Last edited by CameronPoe (2006-08-16 14:26:57)