How Secured are Advanced Economies if Advancing Economies are less secured?

Article


Arreymbi, Johnnes 2007. How Secured are Advanced Economies if Advancing Economies are less secured? Intellectual Economics. 1 (1), pp. 7-18.
AuthorsArreymbi, Johnnes
Abstract

The modern world economies are today threatened with insecurity throughout every aspect of business,
technology, health care, public resources and more increasingly governments and policies structures. The
philosophy that a secure premise can be adequately protected and give maximum security to the ringed-occupants can
no longer hold. Borders have become porous; the ring of steel and castle-style high walls can no longer protect any
economy. The environment under which they operate can be influenced so much by other factors such as neighbours,
economics of existence, technologies and relationships to name a few. This paper analysis ICT issues in relation to
economics of security and development, and highlights the adage that, ‘No man is an Island’, i.e. no system can exist
in isolation. And with the world becoming a global village, (in)security of any nation must be the concern of one and
every nation in the global equation. Can ICT ‘balance the act’ and provide solutions to the many global questions?

Keywordseconomics of security; development and sustainability; ICT; economies
JournalIntellectual Economics
Journal citation1 (1), pp. 7-18
ISSN1822-8011
1822-8038
Year2007
Publisher's version
License
CC BY-ND
Web address (URL)http://www3.mruni.eu/~int.economics/1nr/Johnes%20ARREYMBI.pdf
http://hdl.handle.net/10552/762
Publication dates
Print2007
Publication process dates
Deposited28 Apr 2010
Additional information

Citation:
Arreymbi, J. (2007) ‘How Secured are Advanced Economies if Advancing Economies are less secured?’ Intellectual Economics 1 (1) 7-18.

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