Trade War Economics (Hardcover)
Rajesh Kumar
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Add to basketSold by CitiRetail, Stevenage, United Kingdom
AbeBooks Seller since June 29, 2022
Condition: New
Quantity: 1 available
Add to basketHardcover. In an era marked by multipolar power rivalries, pandemic-era protectionism, and institutional fragmentation, global trade is undergoing a strategic shift. This book investigates the resurgence of reciprocal tariff wars in the 21st century and assesses their implications for global macroeconomic stability. It is premised on the argument that we have entered a new geoeconomic paradigm in which nations increasingly use tariffs and other economic tools as instruments of power, leading to heightened volatility in trade relations and economic performance.By uniting perspectives from international economics and political economy, the book examines why these retaliatory trade conflicts have resurfaced, how they are unfolding across different regions, and what consequences they hold for the stability of the global economic order. It begins by grounding the reader in foundational theories of trade retaliation and geoeconomics. It then delves into institutional stress points, regional realignments, and systemic shiftscovering both developed and developing economies, including Asia, the West, Africa, and the Global South. Sectoral case studies on high-tech industries, digital trade conflicts, capital flows, and currency tensions illustrate how tariffs ripple through financial systems, reshape supply chains, and spark inflationary shocks. It concludes by offering forward-looking policy scenarios and institutional innovations, including bilateralism, minilateralism, and emerging digital governance frameworks. Further, it focuses on investor sentiment, financial market behaviour, and digital sovereignty conflicts, deepening the analysis beyond traditional trade balances.By framing tariff wars within a broader geoeconomic paradigm, the book contributes a critical and future-oriented lens to one of the most urgent challenges facing global economic stability today. It will appeal to scholars of international trade, macroeconomic governance, and global politics, as well as policymakers navigating a fractured trade order. In an era marked by multipolar power rivalries, pandemic-era protectionism, and institutional fragmentation, global trade is undergoing a strategic shift. This book investigates the resurgence of reciprocal tariff wars in the 21st century and assesses their implications for global macroeconomic stability. This item is printed on demand. Shipping may be from our UK warehouse or from our Australian or US warehouses, depending on stock availability.
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In an era marked by multipolar power rivalries, pandemic-era protectionism, and institutional fragmentation, global trade is undergoing a strategic shift. This book investigates the resurgence of reciprocal tariff wars in the 21st century and assesses their implications for global macroeconomic stability. It is premised on the argument that we have entered a “new geoeconomic paradigm” in which nations increasingly use tariffs and other economic tools as instruments of power, leading to heightened volatility in trade relations and economic performance.
By uniting perspectives from international economics and political economy, the book examines why these retaliatory trade conflicts have resurfaced, how they are unfolding across different regions, and what consequences they hold for the stability of the global economic order. It begins by grounding the reader in foundational theories of trade retaliation and geoeconomics. It then delves into institutional stress points, regional realignments, and systemic shifts―covering both developed and developing economies, including Asia, the West, Africa, and the Global South. Sectoral case studies on high-tech industries, digital trade conflicts, capital flows, and currency tensions illustrate how tariffs ripple through financial systems, reshape supply chains, and spark inflationary shocks. It concludes by offering forward-looking policy scenarios and institutional innovations, including bilateralism, minilateralism, and emerging digital governance frameworks. Further, it focuses on investor sentiment, financial market behaviour, and digital sovereignty conflicts, deepening the analysis beyond traditional trade balances.
By framing tariff wars within a broader geoeconomic paradigm, the book contributes a critical and future-oriented lens to one of the most urgent challenges facing global economic stability today. It will appeal to scholars of international trade, macroeconomic governance, and global politics, as well as policymakers navigating a fractured trade order.
Rajesh Kumar is an Assistant Professor in the School of Business, Galgotias University, India, and a Research Scholar at the National Institute of Technology, Agartala, India
Prasoon M. Tripathi is the Director of the Business School, Institute of Management Studies Ghaziabad, Uttar Pradesh, India.
Debasis Neogi is Professor and Dean of the Department of Management, Humanities and Social Sciences, National Institute of Technology, Agartala, India.
Abhishek Bhushan Singhal is Professor, at Institute of Management Studies Ghaziabad, Uttar Pradesh, India.
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