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Creator este exact
Gribincea, Corina
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Diplomaţia economică ca instrument de realizare a intereselor naţionale Economic diplomacy is traditionally defined as the decision-making, policy-making and advocating of the Sending state’s business interests. Economic diplomacy requires application of technical expertise that analyze the effects of a country’s (Receiving State) economic situation on its political climate and on the sending State’s economic interests. The Sending State and Receiving State, foreign business leaders, as well as government decision-makers, work together on some of the most cutting-edge issues in foreign policy, such as technology, the environment, and HIV/AIDS, as well as in the more traditional areas of trade and finance. Versatility, flexibility, sound judgment and strong business skills are all needed in the execution of Economic Diplomacy. International and Domestic economic issues. This includes the “rules for economic relations between states” that have been pursued since World War II. Owing to the increased globalization and the resultant interdependence among states during the 1990s obliges “economic diplomacy to go deep into domestic decision making” as well. This covers “policies relating to production, movement or exchange of goods, services, instruments (including official development assistance), money information and their regulation” (Bayne and Woolcock). -
Diplomaţia economică şi impactul problemelor energetice asupra relaţiilor internaţionale la începutul sec. al XXI-lea One of the essential components of state power in all times was and is the access to resources - land, water and energy. However, with technical and scientific progress, the rapid growth of industrial production, the transition from fossil fuels (coal and oil) that determines the role and place in developing countries lies with a separate energy reso¬urces. The crucial role of hydrocarbons, which became the basis for the development of the modern economy, was mostly manifested during the Second World War, when the outcome of battles depended on largely stable supplies of crude oil and the possibility of producing fuel at scale. Highlighting the political component of energy security and growing interdependence between the economic and political aspects imposed by the necessity to analyze trends in international economic relations under current energy conditions.