• Home
  • About Us
  • Contact
  • Subscriptions
  • Disclaimer
Making It Magazine
Industry for Development
  • Features
  • Global Forum
    • Hot Topic
  • Policy Brief
  • The Magazine
  • Extra!
  • All Posts
  • Subscribe
Browse: Home / subsidies

subsidies

Garment industry leads the way

Garment industry leads the way

11 September 2011

A country feature on the possibility of Bangladesh’s graduation from LDC status, and exclusive interview with the Minister of Industries

Posted in All Posts, Features | Tagged agriculture, Bangladesh, Bangladeshi Minister of Industries, capitalism, collective, competition, country features, Debapriya Bhattacharya, democratic deliberation, development, Dilip Barua, economic arrangements, emerging market economy, gender equality, Global, global commons, global ecosystem, globalization, governance, graduations from LDC status, green industry, growth, imbalance, individualism, Industrial Development, inequality, institutions, International, interview, issue 7, ldc, Least Developed Country, macroeconomic, Making It, market, MDGs, nation state, opportunities, policy, political economy, politics, productivity, regulation, stabilization, subsidies, sustainability, technology transfer, trade, UN, UNIDO, United Nations

Fairer, greener and more sustainable

Fairer, greener and more sustainable

24 August 2011

Hedda Oehlberger-Femundsenden argues that UNIDO’s Green Industry initiative can build on the successes of globalization, while helping to rectify its shortcomings

Posted in All Posts, Features | Tagged agriculture, Brazil, Brundtland Commission, capitalism, China, climate change, collective, competition, conflict, democratic deliberation, development, economic arrangements, economic crisis, emerging market economy, energy, environment, financial, fuel, g20, germany, Global, global commons, global ecosystem, global warming, globalization, governance, green industry, greenhouse gas emission, growth, Hedda Oehlberger-Femundsenden, imbalance, India, individualism, Industrial Development, industry, inequality, institutions, International, issue 7, Japan, legitimacy, macroeconomic, Making It, Malaysia, market, nation state, opportunities, paradox, policy, political economy, politics, pollution, poverty, productivity, regulation, Republic of Korea, resources, rio+20, Singapore, social cohesion, sovereignty, stabilization, subsidies, sustainability, technology transfer, trade, trade capacity building, UN, UN Commission on Sustainable Development, UNCSD 2012, UNEP, UNIDO, United Nations, United Nations Environment Programme, United Nations Millennium Summit, unrest, World Commission on Environment and Development, world economy

The globalization paradox

The globalization paradox

24 August 2011

Dani Rodrik argues that the paradox of globalization is that it works best when it is not pushed too far, and discusses how to avoid further global crises

Posted in All Posts, Features | Tagged agriculture, Brazil, capitalism, China, collective, comparative advantage, currency appreciation, Dani Rodrik, democratic deliberation, development, doha, economic arrangements, emerging market economy, EU, European Union, finance, financial, g20, Global, global commons, global ecosystem, global lender, globalization, governance, Harvard, imbalance, imf, India, individualism, Industrial Development, institutions, International, international monetary fund, issue 7, jurisdictional boundaries, labour mobility, legitimacy, macroeconomic, Making It, market, market-based, mercantilist policies, nation state, paradox, policies, political economy, politics, regulation, Renminbi, russia, safeguards, semi-private goods, social protection mechanism, South Africa, sovereignty, stabilization, subsidies, sustainability, trade, trade barriers, Turkey, UN, UNIDO, United Nations, United States, USA, world economy, World Trade Organization, WTO

Climate change and trade

Climate change and trade

11 January 2011

In an exclusive interview, Patricia Francis, Executive Director of the International Trade Centre, speaks about the carbon footprint of trade and the implications for Least Developed Countries

Posted in All Posts, Global Forum | Tagged agriculture, buy local, carbon footprint, carbon-intensive growth, Carnegie Institution for Science, climate change, co2, consumer, development, economic growth, emissions, environment, export, GDP, goal, international trade centre, interview, ITC, ldc, least developed countries, low carbon technology, Making It, market, North, Patricia Francis, poverty reduction, South, subsidies, technology, trade, transport

Read latest issue online

Read the last issue online

Tweets by makingitmag

Archives

  • 2019
  • 2018
  • 2017
  • 2016
  • 2015
  • 2014
  • 2013
  • 2012
  • 2011
  • 2010
  • 2009

Login



  • en  English
  • es  Español
  • fr  Français
  • zh-hans  简体中文

Copyright © 2019 UNIDO.