Abstract

This paper addresses urgent questions from today's political and scientific discourse, such as whether the established economic doctrines of free trade and comparative advantages will retain their validity in the face of the current anti-globalisation movement. In doing so, the author analyses an early modern, small-scale example of globalisation-induced economic and societal transformation. To make the impact of job relocation on various stakeholders describable in a holistic manner, the author introduces a multi-criteria impact analysis (MCIA). The outcome of the study reveals the way in which relocation-induced effects can stabilise or destabilise cross-border production networks.

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