登入選單
返回Google圖書搜尋
Punching Below Their Weight
其他書名
Why Canada and Mexico are So Important to the United States Yet So Impotent in Washington
出版Canadian Centre for Policy Alternatives, 2011
URLhttp://books.google.com.hk/books?id=rCtcAQAACAAJ&hl=&source=gbs_api
註釋Some eight million Mexican immigrants the twentieth century, American foreign direct comprise 30% of the foreign-born workers in the investment largely focusing there on the mining, United States, with the next two largest contributing manufacturing, finance/insurance, and information- countries - the Philippines and India - a distant technology sectors.3 The northern neighbour was still second an [...] Our review of the mainstream economic research In sum, without Canada and Mexico, the U. S. economy which estimates that gains reaped by countries from would be markedly smaller and less competitive vis-à- their foreign trade suggests conservatively that the vis the rest of the world. [...] The outright intelligence capacities, thus pushing the U. S. anti- nationalization of Mexico's oil sector just before the terrorist defence perimeter out towards the periphery's Second World War represented the extreme case of a far-flung frontiers, the United States' perceived neighbour constraining U. S. economic power. [...] Washington's continuing was so jeopardized by the narcotics scourge so that it pressure on Ottawa to extend the intellectual property shared interests with the United States in controlling rights for Big Pharma at the expense of cheaper generic the cartels, it joined the fray. [...] The impact of the Mexican military - either by not cooperating with or by actively In sum, the security puzzle of the United States' seeking to block U. S. designs - has been uneven in geographical periphery is that Canada and Mexico light of its marginal military importance in U. S. eyes.