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Wednesday, August 24, 2022
Blocs Spark Concerns on Divided World
"BRICS countries gather not in a closed club or an exclusive circle, but as a big family of mutual support and a partnership for win-win cooperation"
State-owned investors are showing a preference for BRICS and other developing countries as investment destinations, investing increasingly less in Group of Seven nations
The UK's economic slump was the largest among the G7 countries, and the latest downward revision makes it worse than that of Spain.
Prolonging the conflict in Ukraine is the worst alternative for all sides.
Deciding to host such provocative exercises in the heart of the Balkans only signals for Serbia recognise Kosovo’s independence, and end its Russophilia.
It has been established that BRICS is one of the most unusual groupings in global politics. The countries that are signified by the acronym – Brazil, Russia, India, China and South Africa at first glance have precious little tying them together. However, upon deeper reflection similarities, albeit not in the traditional sense of regional groupings, start to arise
The digital economy is characterised by an unusually high level of market concentration, where trends seem to indicate monopolies or oligopolies at the sectoral level. A significant part of this market concentration is driven by network effects in multi-sided markets, as well as data enclosures that limit competition