Measuring Globalisation: OECD Economic Globalisation Indicators 2010
This second edition of the OECD Economic Globalisation Indicators presents a broad range of indicators showing the magnitude and intensity of globalisation. This process is becoming increasingly important for policymakers and other analysts, hence the need for a volume that brings together the existing measures, based on national data sources and comparable across countries. Together, the indicators shed new light on financial, technological and trade interdependencies within OECD and non-OECD countries.
Measures of globalisation include indicators on capital movements and foreign direct investments, international trade, the economic activity of multinational firms and the internationalisation of technology. In addition, the 2010 edition also includes indicators linked to the current financial crisis, portfolio investments, environmental aspects and the emergence of global value chains.
Global economic crisis: stock market trends
An expanded supply of credit and an underassessment of risk combined with the use of intermediate (often unregulated and nontransparent) lenders to gradually undermine the stability of the financial system. Owing to the extent of the contagion across assets, institutions and countries, the financial crisis rapidly acquired a global character (Blanchard, 2009).