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International economics is concerned with the effects upon economic activity from international differences in productive resources and consumer preferences and the international institutions that affect them. It seeks to explain the patterns and consequences of transactions and interactions between the inhabitants of different countries ...
Gene Michael Grossman (born December 11, 1955, in New York) is an American economist who is the Jacob Viner Professor of International Economics at Princeton University.He is known for his research on international trade, in large part focusing on the relationship between economic growth and trade and the political economy of trade policy.
Country foreign exchange reserves minus external debt. In international economics, the balance of payments (also known as balance of international payments and abbreviated BOP or BoP) of a country is the difference between all money flowing into the country in a particular period of time (e.g., a quarter or a year) and the outflow of money to the rest of the world.
Print/export Download as PDF; ... International economics (9 C, 22 P) L. ... Pages in category "Subfields of economics"
Ronald Ian McKinnon (10 July 1935 – 1 October 2014) was an applied economist.His primary interests were international economics and economic development, with strong secondary interests in transitional economies and fiscal federalism.
Economic globalization is the intensification and stretching of economic interrelations around the globe. [3] [4] It encompasses such things as the emergence of a new global economic order, the internationalization of trade and finance, the changing power of transnational corporations, and the enhanced role of international economic institutions.
The National Library of Economics (ZBW – Leibniz Information Centre for Economics) is the world's largest research infrastructure for economic literature, online as well as offline. The ZBW is a member of the Leibniz Association and has been a foundation under public law since 2007.
Unequal exchange is used primarily in Marxist economics, but also in ecological economics (more specifically also as ecologically unequal exchange), to describe the systemic hidden transfer of labor and ecological value from poor countries in the imperial periphery (mainly in the Global South) to rich countries and monopolistic corporations in the imperial core (mainly in the Global North) due ...