North-South, a Programme for Survival: Report of the Independent Commission on International Development IssuesThis report describes the world deadlock at the end of the 1970s: unused factories and mass unemployment in rich countries, and desperate, unmet needs in the poorer countries. It explains how this situation came about and how relationships between the developed and the developing world changed over the preceding three decades. |
Contents
Peace Justice Jobs An Introduction by Willy Brandt | 7 |
The Setting | 30 |
Dimensions of Development | 48 |
Copyright | |
17 other sections not shown
Common terms and phrases
adjustment agricultural areas arms assistance balance of payments billion borrowing Bretton Woods system CALIFORNIA/SANTA CRUZ capital cent Commission costs CRUZ The University currencies deficits developing countries discussed domestic Dragoslav Avramović effective efforts employment energy ensure environment exchange expanded exploration exports facilities finance foreign funds GATT global governments greater Group of 77 growth hunger important improved income increased industrialized countries institutions international economic investment labour least developed countries loans long-term major manufactures markets measures mineral monetary system multilateral multinational multinational corporations mutual interests negotiations newly industrializing countries North and South North-South OPEC organizations participation policies political poor poorest countries population poverty problems production programme lending projects Protectionism rates reform regional require reserves rural sectors share social stabilization supplies Third World trade transfer transnational corporations UNCTAD United Nations UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA/SANTA World Bank world economy

