skipar fyri ráðstevnuni. Ráðstevnan hevur heitið, Growth in Blue Bio-Economy, møguleikar fyri vøkstri í tilfeingisvinnu í havinum. Bio-economy, ella bláur tilfeingisbúskapur, er búskapur sum byggir á livandi
capacities to participate effectively in the new economy that is so revolutionizing the world today. President Clinton, you once stated that in the "new economy, information, education, and motivation are
and therefore it is difficult to evaluate how large a part of the money flows through the Faroe economy. -“Sindri is of a special nature, which possibly can be compared to the work done by the oil companies
Aarhus Universitet. Prógv Beinta Simonsen hevur lokið prógv sum Master of Art í Global Political Economy á University of Sussex í Onglandi.
Granskingarverkætlanin fyri økismenning hevur givið út bókina The Restructuaration of the Faroese Economy. Granskingarverkætlanin hevur í góð tvey ár húsast í Klaksvík, og hetta er eitt úrslitið av arbeiðinum
úttalilsum og greinum, sum snúgva seg um oljuframtíðina í heiminum. Eitt nú stendur í bókini ?The New Economy of Oil?, sum kom út í fjør, m.a.: ?There is already a long list of basins where the industry held
Hin 36 síðu langa frágreiðingin, sum World Economic Forum hevur gjørt, kallast “The New Plastics Economy: Rethinking the future of plastics", og vónað verður, at frágreiðingin kann fáa fólk at hugsa øðrvísi
commercial production of hydrocarbons. This will undoubtedly have a major effect on the Faroese economy and society. In this context, it was interesting, at the recent NORA conference in Torshavn, to compare [...] petroleum industry (it is still very small) so much as the fact that Newfoundland has a much smaller economy than Norway. In population terms it is one tenth of the size, and in GDP terms even smaller. Accordingly [...] of the opportunity that petroleum development presents for expanding and diversifying the Faroese economy. This will initially occur through an expansion of oil activity itself, with more Faroese companies
a national mantra. And swim they have, using their powers as a sovereign state to navigate their economy through difficult and dangerous waters. Iceland is the story which, perhaps more than any other,
ella stjórnarskipan (sí Ruth Gavison, “What Belongs in a Constitution”, Constitutional Political Economy, s. 89-105, 2002). Reglur mugu nevniliga sum tað minsta vera um: 1) stýrisskipan, 2) borgarans rættindi