01433cam a2200253 45000010008000000030008000080050017000160080041000330100017000740200021000910400027001120500019001390820015001582450098001732600044002713000035003153500010003505040041003605050662004016500038010636500027011016500023011287000028011513143069BD-DhUL20200105091751.0740603s1973 dcua b 000 0 eng  a 73082986  a0913998036 (pbk) aDLCcDLCdDLCdBD-DhUL00aHF1411b.C587400a382.1bCOR12aA reordered world :bemerging international economic problems /cedited by Richard N. Cooper. aWashington :bPotomac Associatesc1973. axxiv, 260 p. :bill. ;c21 cm. a$3.50 aIncludes bibliographical references.0 aTakeyama, Y. Don't take Japan for granted.--Malmgren, H. B. Coming trade wars?--Cooper, R. N. Trade policy is foreign policy.--Cleveland, H. van B. How the dollar standard died.--Cooper, R. N. The future of the dollar.--Krause, L. B. Why exports are becoming irrelevant.--Bergsten, C. F. The threat from the third world.--Cooper, R. N. Third world tariff tangle.--Diebold, J. Multinational corporations: why be scared of them?--Luard, E. Who gets what on the seabed?--Moran, T. H. New deal or raw deal in raw materials.--Adelman, M. A. Is the oil shortage real?--Levy, W. J. An Atlantic-Japanese energy policy.--Hollick, A. L. Seabeds make strange politics. 0aInternational economic relations. 0aInternational finance. 0aCommercial policy.1 aCooper, Richard N.eed.