The growing disparity between the developed and the developing countries has once again rekindled the debate about the relative merits of foreign investment as means whereby the developed countries can help the devel oping countries in both achieving a reasonable rate of growth and also from preventing the widening gap between the North and the South from widening even further. This renewed interest in the debate was most sharply highlighted at the recently concluded North-South economic summit conference at Cancun, Mexico. There, the United States took the position that massive increases in foreign aid were neither practical nor the best means of ensuring continuing and satisfactory growth in the developing countries. Rather the solution was to be found in depending on a free market economy and on inflows of private foreign investment. Behind these views, of course lie the more fundamental questions: for example, what should be the role of multinational corporations in the developing countries since they constitute the main source of foreign private investment? Should there be greater cooperation between the public sectors of the North and the South? What is the best means of bridging the economic gap between the North and the South: through direct transfers of wealth from the North to the South or through raising South's growth rates via the transfer of technology and the inflow of investment by multinationals? These questions are of fundamental importance and have wide ranging implications, not only for the economic
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Articles with reference to Bangladesh.
No author available
· 2005
Survey done in Jamalganj Upazilla of Bangladesh under the Community Based Haor Resource Management Project.
· 2005
On community development participation and condition in Jamalganj Subdivision in Sunamganj District under the Community Based Haor Resource Management Project and the household survey done in four villages of the subdivision; a study supported mainly by Centre national de la recherche scientifique, France along with IUCN, Bangladesh.
With reference to Bangladesh.
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No image available