In his recent book, The Globalization Paradox: Democracy and the Future of the World Economy, Dani Rodrik argues that there is a policy สามเหลี่ยมที่เป็นไปไม่ได้ among local autonomy, democracy, and globalization. He argues that globalization requires some constraint over national measures. He assumes that domestic autonomy, combined with democracy, will produce unconstrained national measures inconsistent with globalization. He concedes that it would be possible to have globalization with democracy, but only with global government as opposed to national autonomy. However, he views it as unlikely that we will soon move toward the type of global government that would include democratic accountability. Furthermore, among the three, he would preserve local autonomy and democracy at the expense of globalization.