Foram encontradas 50 questões.
No país A são necessárias 8 horas de trabalho para produzir uma unidade do bem 1 e 7 horas de trabalho para produzir uma unidade do bem 2. Já no país B, são necessárias 5 horas de trabalho para produzir o bem 1 e 6 horas de trabalho para produzir o bem 2. É correto afirmar que
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Loja Franca é o regime aduaneiro especial que permite
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O regime aduaneiro especial que permite ver em recinto alfandegado armazenagem de mercadoria estrangeira para atender o fluxo comercial de países limítrofes com terceiros países é denominado
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Caracterizam-se como áreas de livre comércio com o exterior vivo destinadas à instalação de empresas voltadas para a produção de bens a serem comercializados exclusivamente no exterior. Essa definição refere-se às
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Com relação à Zona Franca de Manaus (ZFM), assinale a alternativa correta.
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Globalization is not the only – or even the actual – story of the global economy over the past four decades. In The Globalization Myth: Why Regions Matter, author Shannon O’Neil shows that the world has become more international but not nearly as global as the narrative of economic globalization suggests. As companies, money, ideas, and people went abroad over the last forty years, more often than not they moved and traded regionally rather than globally.
Charting the rise of three major regional supply chain hubs in Asia, Europe, and North America, O’Neil demonstrates how the countries that traded with countries nearer-by gained a competitive edge. By contrast, for nations without strong commercial ties to their neighbors, workers and consumers are, to a large extent, left on the ends of global supply chains, relegated to sending out raw materials and bringing in final goods. These goods from distant shores compete with, rather than support, local manufacturers, leaving these nations in the economic slow lane.
Despite the rise of a North American manufacturing platform, the United States continues to be less connected with its neighbors than its Asian or European commercial rivals. To keep up with and face Asia’s expansive reach and Europe’s industrial prowess, U.S. politicians, entrepreneurs, and workers need to recognize that the United States requires deeper regional ties. International trade deals and other policies that recognize this reality would allow the United States to preserve and expand its domain in the global marketplace.
The Globalization Myth provides a comprehensive path forward for the United States and other countries looking to get ahead in the global economy. The answer is not isolation, nor is it unfettered globalization. Rather, embracing and deepening regional ties is a way to succeed in an internationally connected and competing world.
The book concludes by offering students in International Business and International Relations a series of discussion and essay questions such as “Does industrial policy work? When should it be used? Discuss the costs and benefits of industrial policy for national economies”.
(Shannon K. O’Neil. https://www.cfr.org, 16.11.2022. Adaptado)
The two questions “Does industrial policy work? When should it be used?” (paragraph 5) would correctly complement the fragment “Students will be interested in learning “ in alternative
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Globalization is not the only – or even the actual – story of the global economy over the past four decades. In The Globalization Myth: Why Regions Matter, author Shannon O’Neil shows that the world has become more international but not nearly as global as the narrative of economic globalization suggests. As companies, money, ideas, and people went abroad over the last forty years, more often than not they moved and traded regionally rather than globally.
Charting the rise of three major regional supply chain hubs in Asia, Europe, and North America, O’Neil demonstrates how the countries that traded with countries nearer-by gained a competitive edge. By contrast, for nations without strong commercial ties to their neighbors, workers and consumers are, to a large extent, left on the ends of global supply chains, relegated to sending out raw materials and bringing in final goods. These goods from distant shores compete with, rather than support, local manufacturers, leaving these nations in the economic slow lane.
Despite the rise of a North American manufacturing platform, the United States continues to be less connected with its neighbors than its Asian or European commercial rivals. To keep up with and face Asia’s expansive reach and Europe’s industrial prowess, U.S. politicians, entrepreneurs, and workers need to recognize that the United States requires deeper regional ties. International trade deals and other policies that recognize this reality would allow the United States to preserve and expand its domain in the global marketplace.
The Globalization Myth provides a comprehensive path forward for the United States and other countries looking to get ahead in the global economy. The answer is not isolation, nor is it unfettered globalization. Rather, embracing and deepening regional ties is a way to succeed in an internationally connected and competing world.
The book concludes by offering students in International Business and International Relations a series of discussion and essay questions such as “Does industrial policy work? When should it be used? Discuss the costs and benefits of industrial policy for national economies”.
(Shannon K. O’Neil. https://www.cfr.org, 16.11.2022. Adaptado)
In the fragment from the fourth paragraph “Rather, embracing and deepening regional ties is a way to succeed in a globalized world”, the underlined term can be replaced, with no change in meaning, by
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Globalization is not the only – or even the actual – story of the global economy over the past four decades. In The Globalization Myth: Why Regions Matter, author Shannon O’Neil shows that the world has become more international but not nearly as global as the narrative of economic globalization suggests. As companies, money, ideas, and people went abroad over the last forty years, more often than not they moved and traded regionally rather than globally.
Charting the rise of three major regional supply chain hubs in Asia, Europe, and North America, O’Neil demonstrates how the countries that traded with countries nearer-by gained a competitive edge. By contrast, for nations without strong commercial ties to their neighbors, workers and consumers are, to a large extent, left on the ends of global supply chains, relegated to sending out raw materials and bringing in final goods. These goods from distant shores compete with, rather than support, local manufacturers, leaving these nations in the economic slow lane.
Despite the rise of a North American manufacturing platform, the United States continues to be less connected with its neighbors than its Asian or European commercial rivals. To keep up with and face Asia’s expansive reach and Europe’s industrial prowess, U.S. politicians, entrepreneurs, and workers need to recognize that the United States requires deeper regional ties. International trade deals and other policies that recognize this reality would allow the United States to preserve and expand its domain in the global marketplace.
The Globalization Myth provides a comprehensive path forward for the United States and other countries looking to get ahead in the global economy. The answer is not isolation, nor is it unfettered globalization. Rather, embracing and deepening regional ties is a way to succeed in an internationally connected and competing world.
The book concludes by offering students in International Business and International Relations a series of discussion and essay questions such as “Does industrial policy work? When should it be used? Discuss the costs and benefits of industrial policy for national economies”.
(Shannon K. O’Neil. https://www.cfr.org, 16.11.2022. Adaptado)
A true cognate between English and Portuguese is found in the underlined word in alternative
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Globalization is not the only – or even the actual – story of the global economy over the past four decades. In The Globalization Myth: Why Regions Matter, author Shannon O’Neil shows that the world has become more international but not nearly as global as the narrative of economic globalization suggests. As companies, money, ideas, and people went abroad over the last forty years, more often than not they moved and traded regionally rather than globally.
Charting the rise of three major regional supply chain hubs in Asia, Europe, and North America, O’Neil demonstrates how the countries that traded with countries nearer-by gained a competitive edge. By contrast, for nations without strong commercial ties to their neighbors, workers and consumers are, to a large extent, left on the ends of global supply chains, relegated to sending out raw materials and bringing in final goods. These goods from distant shores compete with, rather than support, local manufacturers, leaving these nations in the economic slow lane.
Despite the rise of a North American manufacturing platform, the United States continues to be less connected with its neighbors than its Asian or European commercial rivals. To keep up with and face Asia’s expansive reach and Europe’s industrial prowess, U.S. politicians, entrepreneurs, and workers need to recognize that the United States requires deeper regional ties. International trade deals and other policies that recognize this reality would allow the United States to preserve and expand its domain in the global marketplace.
The Globalization Myth provides a comprehensive path forward for the United States and other countries looking to get ahead in the global economy. The answer is not isolation, nor is it unfettered globalization. Rather, embracing and deepening regional ties is a way to succeed in an internationally connected and competing world.
The book concludes by offering students in International Business and International Relations a series of discussion and essay questions such as “Does industrial policy work? When should it be used? Discuss the costs and benefits of industrial policy for national economies”.
(Shannon K. O’Neil. https://www.cfr.org, 16.11.2022. Adaptado)
In the fragment from the third paragraph “neighbors, workers and consumers are, to a large extent, left on the ends of global supply chains”, the underlined expression can be correctly translated into Portuguese as
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Globalization is not the only – or even the actual – story of the global economy over the past four decades. In The Globalization Myth: Why Regions Matter, author Shannon O’Neil shows that the world has become more international but not nearly as global as the narrative of economic globalization suggests. As companies, money, ideas, and people went abroad over the last forty years, more often than not they moved and traded regionally rather than globally.
Charting the rise of three major regional supply chain hubs in Asia, Europe, and North America, O’Neil demonstrates how the countries that traded with countries nearer-by gained a competitive edge. By contrast, for nations without strong commercial ties to their neighbors, workers and consumers are, to a large extent, left on the ends of global supply chains, relegated to sending out raw materials and bringing in final goods. These goods from distant shores compete with, rather than support, local manufacturers, leaving these nations in the economic slow lane.
Despite the rise of a North American manufacturing platform, the United States continues to be less connected with its neighbors than its Asian or European commercial rivals. To keep up with and face Asia’s expansive reach and Europe’s industrial prowess, U.S. politicians, entrepreneurs, and workers need to recognize that the United States requires deeper regional ties. International trade deals and other policies that recognize this reality would allow the United States to preserve and expand its domain in the global marketplace.
The Globalization Myth provides a comprehensive path forward for the United States and other countries looking to get ahead in the global economy. The answer is not isolation, nor is it unfettered globalization. Rather, embracing and deepening regional ties is a way to succeed in an internationally connected and competing world.
The book concludes by offering students in International Business and International Relations a series of discussion and essay questions such as “Does industrial policy work? When should it be used? Discuss the costs and benefits of industrial policy for national economies”.
(Shannon K. O’Neil. https://www.cfr.org, 16.11.2022. Adaptado)
The United States is repeatedly mentioned because it
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