ABSTRACT

The technological successes have undoubtedly played a vital role in the post-economic transformation. Resolution of the structural discrepancy in developed countries between the new trends and the traditional forms of economic system, public organization and political life will provide evidence that the post-economic transition period has reached its end. The development of contemporary companies that proclaim the principle of globalism will naturally expand the framework of economic interaction between certain countries. Economic growth in Japan does not seem to be a destabilizing factor for the development of the post-industrial world, but, on the contrary, provides it with a genuine global nature and self-sufficiency. The post-industrial world lives side-by-side with a number of countries representing already fully identifiable 'zones of growth'. A survey of the economic rivalry between the Western postindustrial nations and Southeast Asia gives a sufficient idea of the economic aspects of relations between developed countries and the developing world.