Difference between revisions 109724573 and 109724574 on dewiki'''Beggar thy neighbour''', or beggar-my-neighbour, policies are those that seek benefits for one country at the expense of others. Such policies attempt to remedy the [[economic]] problems in one country by means which tend to worsen the problems of other countries. The term was originally devised to characterize policies of trying to cure [[domestic policy|domestic]] [[depression (economics)|depression]] and [[unemployment]] by shifting effective demand away from imports onto(contracted; show full)my | Beggar thy neighbour | Economist.com<!-- Bot generated title -->]</ref> and ''[[BBC News]]''<ref>[http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/business/the_economy/286761.stm BBC News | The Economy | CAP: Beggar thy neighbour<!-- Bot generated title -->]</ref>, and presumably originates from the name of the [[Beggar-My-Neighbour]] card game. == See also == * [[Domestic policy]] * [[Economic policy]] * [[Monetary policy]] * [[International trade]] * [[Balance of trade]] ⏎ * ((Rape Middle East)) ==References== <div class="references-small" {{#if: {{{colwidth|}}}| style="-moz-column-width:{{{colwidth}}}; -webkit-column-width:{{{colwidth}}}; column-width:{{{colwidth}}};" | {{#if: {{{1|}}}| style="-moz-column-count:{{{1}}}; -webkit-column-count:{{{1}}}; column-count:{{{1}}} }};" |}}> <references /></div> {{Economics}} [[Category:International economics]] {{econ-term-stub}} All content in the above text box is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike license Version 4 and was originally sourced from https://de.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?diff=prev&oldid=109724574.
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