Introduction.
Part I: Factor Proportions Theory:.
1. Trade Theory and Factor Intensities: An Interpretive Essay: Ronald W. Jones (University of Rochester).
2. Implications of Many Industries in the Heckscher-Ohlin Trade Model: E. Kwan Choi (Iowa State University).
3. Robustness of the Stolper-Samuelson Price Link: Henry Thompson (Auburn University).
4. Specialization and the Volume of Trade: Do the Data Obey the Laws: James Harrigan (Federal Reserve Bank of New York).
5. The Factor Content of Trade: Donald R. Davis and David E. Weinstein (Columbia University).
6. Global Production Sharing and Rising Inequality: A Survey of Trade and Wages: Robert C. Feenstra (University of California, Davis) and Gordon H. Hanson (University of California, San Diego).
7. External Economies in the International Trade Theory: A Survey: Jae-Young Choi (Lamar University) and Eden Yu (City University of Hong Kong).
Part II: Trade Policy:.
1. The Political Economy of Trade Policy: Empirical Approaches: Kishore Gawande (University of New Mexico) and Pravin Krishna (Brown University).
2. Antidumping: Bruce A. Blonigen (University of Oregon) and Thomas J. Prusa (Rutgers University).
Part III: Investment:.
1. Foreign Direct Investment and the Operations of Multinational Firms: Concepts, History and Data: Robert E. Lipsey (National Bureau of Economic Research).
2. Discriminating Among Alternative Theories of the Multinational Enterprise: James Markusen and Keith E. Maskus (University of Colorado).
Part IV: New Trade Theory:.
1. The Economic Geography of Trade, Production and Income: A Survey of Empirics: Henry G. Overman, Stephen Redding, and Anthony J. Venables (London School of Economics).
2. Plant- and Firm-Level Evidence on “New” Trade Theories: James R. Tybout (Pennsylvania State University).
Index
E. Kwan Choi is Professor of Economics at Iowa State
University and the Editor of Review of International Economics. He
is also Associate Editor of Japanese Economic Review and Managing
Editor of Review of Development Economics. Prof. Choi has published
in many top journals, including Economica, Journal of Development
Economics, and International Economic Review.
James Harrigan is a Senior Economist in the International Research Department of the Federal Reserve Bank of New York. He has also taught at the University of Pittsburgh and Columbia University, and is a member of the National Bureau of Economic Research. He is a former co-editor of The Journal of International Economics.
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