Dr. Andrew Campbell
Abstract
Globalization has altered the economic conditions and nature of the state. The nexus of global economic, diplomatic, and military activity that shifted the Bretton Woods system formed global trading regimes into stateless corporations that influence national sovereignty and international strategies for emerging markets. Scholars argue that national interests among emerging developing countries to expand domestic economic power reshape the geo-political and military landscape (Friedman, 2009). More importantly, international marketers must understand that as indigenous industrial and service capacities of developing countries mature, national interests to balance domestic consumer demand and global. . .


