World Trade Evolution

World Trade Evolution

Author: Lili Yan Ing

Publisher: Routledge

Published: 2018-10-08

Total Pages: 442

ISBN-13: 1351061526

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The book provides theoretical and empirical evidence on how world trade evolves, how trade affects resource allocation, how trade competition affects productivity, how China shock affects world trade and how trade affects large and small countries. It is a useful reference which focuses on new approaches to international trade by looking into country-specific as well as firm-product level-specific cases.


Imports, Exports, and Jobs

Imports, Exports, and Jobs

Author: Lori G. Kletzer

Publisher: W. E. Upjohn Institute

Published: 2002

Total Pages: 242

ISBN-13:

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Annotation Kletzer attempts to heighten our understanding of the labor market costs of freer trade. While economy-wide net benefits may ensue from lossening trade policies, such policies do not proclude localized net losses. This book aims to measure some of these losses in the hope that future policy making will address them and the people who bear the burdon.


North-South Trade, Employment and Inequality

North-South Trade, Employment and Inequality

Author: Adrian Wood

Publisher: Clarendon Press

Published: 1994-02-17

Total Pages: 482

ISBN-13: 0191521329

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Drawing on three fields of economics (international, labour, and development), this study shows that expansion of North-South trade in manufactures has had a far greater impact on labour markets than earlier work suggested. In the South, unskilled workers have benefited most from this trade, but in the North, the gains have been concentrated on skilled labour, while unskilled workers have suffered falling wages and rising unemployment. This decline in the economic position of unskilled workers has increased inequality, and aggravated crime and other forms of social erosion, on both sides of the Atlantic. The failure of Northern governments to recognize that trade with the South has these adverse side-effects, and to take appropriate counter-measures, has fuelled the rise of protectionism - the worst possible response, which slows economic progress in both regions. The best solution for the longer term in the North is more investment in education, to raise the supply of skilled labour. However, the benefits of this investment will emerge slowly. During the next one or two decades, Professor Wood argues, other measures are also urgently needed to boost the demand for, and incomes of, unskilled workers.