A Marshall Plan for the 1990s: An International Roundtable on World Economic Development
By (Author) Charles A. Cerami
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Praeger Publishers Inc
10th April 1989
United States
Tertiary Education
Non Fiction
Political ideologies and movements
337
Hardback
276
This symposium of papers by statesmen and leading experts from around the world examines the global economic situation and voices concern about the potential for world unemployment and trade crisis in the 1990s. A new "Marshall Plan" would involve a concerted worldwide effort to improve the situation. This plan was first formulated by Charles A. Cerami while undertaking a study of the global trade picture for the United States Departments of State, Treasury and Commerce. Meeting with scores of diplomats and policy makers in some 40 countries, Cerami sought possible solutions to economic problems on the global level. Each of the contributors to this volume is important in the world mechanism of government and politics. This compendium is an important tool in the effort to promote a working consensus among the leaders of different nationalities and political beliefs to plan for economic development. The "Marshall Plan" would consist of the radical solution of a vast expansion of the number and size of markets, and therefore of the quantity of products to be absorbed. Since the economies of the developed world (the United States, Europe, Japan and Asia) already absorb a great deal, the major effort would be to develop more markets in Third World nations. Students and scholars of business and economics, as well as international business people, should find this book interesting.
CHARLES A. CERAMI was Senior Editor, Research Institute of America, foreign affairs editor, the Kiplinger Washington Publications, Senior Fellow, later Councillor, Atlantic Council of the U.S (directing world trade study commissioned by U.S. Departments of State, Treasury, and Commerce). Kiplinger Publications for over twenty years.