Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Hence, as intra-industry trade has developed many economists have looked at other explanations. One attempt to explain IIT was made by Finger (1975), who thought that occurrence of intra-industry trade was “unremarkable” as existing classifications place goods of heterogeneous factor endowments in a single industry.
This means for example the Country in consideration Exports the same quantity of good i as much as it Imports. Conversely, if GL i = 0, there is no intra-industry trade at all. This would mean that the Country in consideration only either Exports or only Imports good i .
Marginal Intra-Industry Trade, a concept originating in international economics, refers to the degree to which the change in a country's exports over a certain period of time are essentially of the same products as its change in imports over the same period.
Data was extracted from the World Trade Organization's Trade Profile Database. [ 1 ] [ 2 ] Colour indicate leading merchandise export destination for indicated country (EU aggregated), c. 2007-10 Colour indicate leading source of merchandise imports for indicated country (EU aggregated), c. 2007-10
The probe is being conducted under Section 301 of the Trade Act of 1974, the same unfair trade practices statute Trump invoked to impose tariffs of up to 25% on some $370 billion worth of Chinese ...
New trade theory (NTT) is a collection of economic models in international trade theory which focuses on the role of increasing returns to scale and network effects, which were originally developed in the late 1970s and early 1980s.
New Trade Theory analyses individual enterprises and plants in an international competitive situation. The classical trade theory—i.e., the Heckscher–Ohlin model—has no enterprises in mind. The new trade theory treats enterprises in an industry as identical entities. "New" New Trade Theory (NNTT) gives focus on the diversity of enterprises.
New trade theory; Economic geography; Intra-industry trade; Gravity model of trade; Ricardian trade theories; Balassa–Samuelson effect; Linder hypothesis; Leontief paradox; Lerner symmetry theorem; Terms of trade