Kal Ström

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In the integrated economy that emerged, corporations have been able to use their transnational powers to dictate their own terms to virtually any country in the world. With the free movement of capital, corporations can choose to build factories in nations with the weakest labor unions or locate polluting plants in countries with lax environmental laws, basing their decisions solely on maximizing returns for their shareholders. Governments compete with each other to make their nations the most attractive for corporate investment.
The Patterning Instinct: A Cultural History of Humanity's Search for Meaning
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