International economics:
Gespeichert in:
1. Verfasser: | |
---|---|
Format: | Buch |
Sprache: | English |
Veröffentlicht: |
London [u.a.]
Routledge
2009
|
Ausgabe: | 7. ed. |
Schlagworte: | |
Online-Zugang: | Inhaltsverzeichnis |
Beschreibung: | Bis 6. Auf. u.d.T.: Dunn, Robert M.: International economics |
Beschreibung: | XXXIII, 748 S. graph. Darst. |
ISBN: | 0415772850 0415772869 9780415772853 9780415772860 |
Internformat
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245 | 1 | 0 | |a International economics |c Theo S. Eicher, John H. Mutti, and Michelle H. Turnovsky |
250 | |a 7. ed. | ||
264 | 1 | |a London [u.a.] |b Routledge |c 2009 | |
300 | |a XXXIII, 748 S. |b graph. Darst. | ||
336 | |b txt |2 rdacontent | ||
337 | |b n |2 rdamedia | ||
338 | |b nc |2 rdacarrier | ||
500 | |a Bis 6. Auf. u.d.T.: Dunn, Robert M.: International economics | ||
650 | 4 | |a International economic relations | |
650 | 7 | |a Außenwirtschaft |2 stw | |
650 | 7 | |a Außenwirtschaftspolitik |2 stw | |
650 | 7 | |a Außenwirtschaftstheorie |2 stw | |
650 | 7 | |a Internationale Wirtschaftsbeziehungen |2 stw | |
650 | 4 | |a Weltwirtschaft | |
650 | 4 | |a International economic relations | |
650 | 0 | 7 | |a Außenwirtschaftstheorie |0 (DE-588)4120953-9 |2 gnd |9 rswk-swf |
650 | 0 | 7 | |a Weltwirtschaft |0 (DE-588)4065468-0 |2 gnd |9 rswk-swf |
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Datensatz im Suchindex
_version_ | 1804138364308291584 |
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adam_text | Contents
List of Case Studies
xiii
List of Boxes
xv
List of Figures
xxi
List of Tables
xxv
Preface
xxix
1
Introduction: Life in an International Economy
1
References and Suggestions for Further Reading
7
PART I INTERNATIONAL TRADE AND TRADE POLICY
9
2
Why Do Nations Trade? Some Early Answers
13
Learning Objectives
13
Absolute Advantage
14
Comparative Advantage
16
Reciprocal Demand and Prices Internationally
20
Comparative Advantage with Many Goods
23
Empirical Verification in a World with Many Goods
26
Summary of Key Concepts
28
Case Study: Rising Productivity: A Guarantee of Manufacturing Success?
29
Questions for Study and Review
30
References and Suggestions for Further Reading
32
VI
3
Why Do Nations Trade? Some Later Answers
34
Learning Objectives
34
Consumer Preferences and the Gains from Trade
35
Production Capabilities and the Gains from Trade
41
International Trade with Constant Costs
43
International Trade with Increasing Costs
49
The Division of the Gains from Trade
52
Summary of Key Concepts
59
Case Study: Terms of Trade Changes and Australian Growth
59
Questions for Study and Review
61
References and Suggestions for Further Reading
63
Appendix: The Role of Money Prices
64
4
Trade and the Role of Factor Endowments
66
Learning Objectives
66
Factor Proportions as a Determinant of Trade
67
Trade and Changing Factor Endowments
78
Trade, the Distribution of Income and Factor Price Changes
82
Relaxing Some Assumptions of the
H
-О
Model
89
Empirical Verification of the
H
-О
Model
93
Summary of Key Concepts
97
Case Study: Trade Liberalization and the Distribution of Income in Brazil
97
Questions for Study and Review
99
References and Suggestions for Further Reading
101
Appendix: Mathematical Representations of Relationships in the
H
-О
Model
103
5
Scale, Competition and Trade
106
Learning Objectives
106
External Economies of Scale
108
Internal Economies of Scale
113
Economies of Scale and Monopolistic Competition
118
Trade with Other Forms of Imperfect Competition
126
Summary of Key Concepts
132
Case Study: A Further Case of Intra-Industry Trade: Carrying Coals to Newcastle?
133
Questions for Study and Review
135
References and Suggestions for Further Reading
137
Appendix A: Monopolistic Competition and Trade
139
Appendix B: Oligopoly, the Cournot Model, and Trade
141
Contents
vii
6
The Theory of Protection Tariffs and Other Barriers to Trade
143
Learning Objectives
143
Partial Equilibrium Analysis of Trade Barriers
145
General Equilibrium Analysis of Trade Barriers
162
The Effective Rate of Protection
165
Intervention in Export Markets
170
Summary of Key Concepts
174
Case Study: The Elimination of the MFA
175
Questions for Study and Review
177
References and Suggestions for Further Reading
179
7
Arguments for Protection and the Political Economy of Trade
Policy
182
Learning Objectives
182
Arguments for Restricting Imports
184
Dumping
201
The Political Economy of Trade Policy
208
Summary of Key Concepts
211
Case Study: Are Chinese and Vietnamese Shoes Dumped in the E.U. Market?
212
Questions for Study and Review
213
References and Suggestions for Further Reading
216
Appendix: Optimum Tariffs: A Partial Equilibrium Perspective
218
8
International Mobility of Labor and Capital
220
Learning Objectives
220
A Basic Model of Capital Mobility
224
Additional Issues Raised by Labor Mobility
228
Multinational Corporations
234
Summary of Key Concepts
244
Case Study: The Daimler Chrysler Marriage and Divorce
245
Questions for Study and Review
246
References and Suggestions for Further Reading
247
9
Regional Blocs: Preferential Trade Liberalization
249
Learning Objectives
249
Alternative Forms of Preferential Trade Agreements
250
Efficiency Gains and Losses From Preferential Trade Agreements
251
Measuring the Economic Effects of a Preferential Trade Agreement
256
The European Union
258
NAFTA
264
viii Contents
Summary of Key Concepts
268
Case Study: A Russia-EU Free Trade Agreement?
269
Questions for Study and Review
270
References and Suggestions for Further Reading
272
10
Commercial Policy and the WTO
274
Learning Objectives
274
The Rationale for Multilateral Trade Liberalization
275
Precursors to Multilateral Trade Liberalization
276
Multilateral Trade Liberalization under the
GATT
278
The Establishment of the WTO
284
Resolving Trade Disputes in the WTO
288
Developing Countries and the WTO
292
Summary of Key Concepts
295
Case Study: Discipline Over Agricultural Policies? The Case of U.S. Cotton Subsidies
296
Questions for Study and Review
297
References and Suggestions for Further Reading
299
11
Trade and Growth
300
Learning Objectives
300
Building Blocks to Determine the Effects of Economic Growth on Trade
302
Large Countries and Changes in the Terms Of Trade
308
Developing-Country Perspectives and the Effects of Trade on Growth
312
Alternative Trade Policies and the Transition to Greater Manufactured Output
319
Growth and Environmental Externalities
324
Summary of Key Concepts
329
Case Study: China s Trade: Lessons to be Learned?
329
Questions for Study and Review
331
References and Suggestions for Further Reading
332
Appendix: Demonstrating the Effects of Exogenous Technical Change
334
PART II INTERNATIONAL FINANCE AND OPEN ECONOMY
MACROECONOMICS
337
12
The Balance of Payments and the Exchange Rate
341
Learning Objectives
341
The Balance of Payments: International Transactions Accounts
342
The International Investment Position
352
The Exchange Rate
353
Summary of Key Concepts
360
Case Study I CSI: Trade Deficit
361
siar z- S^.:i
: . Contents ix
Case Study II Dark Matter Makes the US Deficit Disappear
362
Questions for Study and Review
364
References and Suggestions for Further Reading
365
Appendix
366
13
Fundamentals of Exchange Rate Systems
374
Learning Objectives
374
Flexible Exchange Rates: Adjustment through Market Forces
379
Fixed Exchange Rates: Adjustment through Central Bank Intervention
383
The Exchange Rate and Open-Economy National Income Accounting
390
The Marshall-Lerner Condition
392
The J-Curve Effect
395
Summary of Key Concepts
397
Case Study I: On Europe: Europe Feels Weight of Strong Euro
398
Case Study II: China Slightly Loosens the Reins on its Currency s Market Fluctuation
399
Questions for Study and Review
401
References and Suggestions for Further Reading
403
Appendix: The Marshall-Lerner Condition
404
14
An Introduction to Modeling the Open Economy
406
Learning Objectives
406
Key Features of a Basic Open-Economy Model
407
A Small Open Economy with Fixed Exchange Rates
409
A Small Open Economy with Flexible Exchange Rates
422
Summary of Key Concepts
426
Case Study I: America is Borrowing Trouble
426
Case Study II: Greenspan Warns Against Raising Tariffs on China
428
Questions for Study and Review
430
References and Suggestions for Further Reading
433
15
Extensions of the Basic Open-Economy Model: Policy
Effectiveness and the Large Open Economy
435
Learning Objectives
435
Sterilization and Policies to Manage External Deficits
437
Internal and External Balance: The Policy Mix
445
The Large Open Economy
449
Summary of Key Concepts
460
Case Study I: Switching Engines: Global Economic Growth has become Less
Dependent on American Spending
461
Case Study II: The Fiscal Fallacy of Decoupling from America
463
Questions for Study and Review
464
References and Suggestions for Further Reading
467
Contents
-ІІІІІИ
16 International Capital
Markets
469
Learning Objectives
469
International Financial Flows
470
Financial Markets and Instruments
475
Various Agents and the Functions of the Markets
482
The Short-Term Exchange Rate Determination and Technical Analysis
486
Summary of Key Concepts
492
Case Study: Marking the Dealer s Cards: What Economists Can Learn from Currency
Traders
492
Questions for Study and Review
494
References and Suggestions for Further Reading
495
17
Modeling International Capital Markets
497
Learning Objectives
497
International Capital Market Arbitrage
498
Integrating Interest Arbitrage into the Open-Economy Model
507
Summary of Key Concepts
515
Case Study I: Carry On Speculating
516
Case Study II: The Domino Effect
518
Questions for Study and Review
520
References and Suggestions for Further Reading
522
18
Policy Under Fixed Exchange Rates
524
Learning Objectives
524
A Review of the Building Blocks: the IS, LM, and BP curves
526
Monetary Policy under Fixed Exchange Rates
529
Fiscal Policy under Fixed Exchange Rates
534
Exchange Rate Policy
541
The Policy Mix: Internal and External Balance
546
Summary of Key Concepts
552
Case Study I: The Petrodollar Peg
553
Case Study II: Don t Revalue the Yuan
555
Questions for Study and Review
556
References and Suggestions for Further Reading
558
19
Policy under Flexible Exchange Rates and Extensions of the
Mundell-Fleming Model
560
Learning Objectives
560
Monetary Policy under Flexible Exchange Rates
561
Fiscal Policy under Flexible Exchange Rates
566
The Large Open Economy under Flexible Exchange Rates
572
Contents xi
Price Adjustment in the Mundell-Fleming Model
578
Summary of Key Concepts
584
Case Study I: Insight: Currency Lessons Learned since the Upheaval
585
Case Study II: Preparing to Float
587
Questions for Study and Review
589
References and Suggestions for Further Reading
591
Appendix: The Policy Mix Revisited: Internal and External Balance
591
20
Perfectly Flexible Prices and Exchange Rate Dynamics
595
Learning Objectives
595
International Arbitrage and Purchasing Power Parity
596
Monetarist Approach to the Exchange Rate
610
Exchange Rate Dynamics
-
Overshooting
611
Summary of Key Concepts
616
Case Study I: Soft Currency
617
Case Study II: McCurrencies
619
Questions for Study and Review
622
References and Suggestions for Further Reading
623
Appendix: Further Implications of the Monetarist or Long-Run Model
623
21
The International Monetary System: A Brief History
626
Learning Objectives
626
The Gold Standard
628
Reconstruction and Exchange Rates after World War I
636
The
Bretton
Woods System
639
A Brief History of the Float after
Bretton
Woods
644
The New Financial Architecture: The Basel Accords
647
Summary of Key Concepts
650
Case Study I: Financial Reform
-
Reality Check at the IMF
651
Case Study II: IMF Quotas
-
Monetary Misquotations
653
Questions for Study and Review
655
References and Suggestions for Further Reading
656
Appendix: The IMF versus the World Bank
-
Differences and Recent Collaboration
656
22
European Monetary Integration
659
Learning Objectives
659
European Issues with
Bretton
Woods and the Snake
660
The European Monetary System and its Exchange Rate Mechanism
665
The
1992-3
European Currency Crises
672
The European Economic and Monetary Union
675
Summary of Key Concepts
684
xii
Contents
Case Study: Beggar Thy Neighbour
685
Questions for Study and Review
687
References and Suggestions for Further Reading
689
23
International Financial Crises
691
Learning Objectives
691
The
1970s
Oil Shocks: Financial Flow Imbalances and the Origins of the Debt Crises
692
A Model of Currency Crises: Krugman s Model of Speculative Attacks
694
The End of Capital Flows: Debt Crises in the
1980s 695
The Resurgence of Capital Flows to Emerging Markets in the
1
990s
696
The Effect of Capital Inflows in the Mundell-Fleming Model
696
The End of Exuberant International Lending: The Asian Financial Crisis
699
Contagion
702
The Aftermath of the East Asian Crisis: The Economics of Reserve Accumulation
703
Reserve Accumulation, and International Competitiveness Implications
705
Summary of Key Concepts
706
Case Study I: Guilt by Association
707
Case Study II: Who s in Charge of Determining U.S. Interest Rates? It May Be Beijing.
709
Questions for Study and Review
710
References and Suggestions for Further Reading
710
Glossary
712
Index
736
|
adam_txt |
Contents
List of Case Studies
xiii
List of Boxes
xv
List of'Figures
xxi
List of Tables
xxv
Preface
xxix
1
Introduction: Life in an International Economy
1
References and Suggestions for Further Reading
7
PART I INTERNATIONAL TRADE AND TRADE POLICY
9
2
Why Do Nations Trade? Some Early Answers
13
Learning Objectives
13
Absolute Advantage
14
Comparative Advantage
16
Reciprocal Demand and Prices Internationally
20
Comparative Advantage with Many Goods
23
Empirical Verification in a World with Many Goods
26
Summary of Key Concepts
28
Case Study: Rising Productivity: A Guarantee of Manufacturing Success?
29
Questions for Study and Review
30
References and Suggestions for Further Reading
32
VI
3
Why Do Nations Trade? Some Later Answers
34
Learning Objectives
34
Consumer Preferences and the Gains from Trade
35
Production Capabilities and the Gains from Trade
41
International Trade with Constant Costs
43
International Trade with Increasing Costs
49
The Division of the Gains from Trade
52
Summary of Key Concepts
59
Case Study: Terms of Trade Changes and Australian Growth
59
Questions for Study and Review
61
References and Suggestions for Further Reading
63
Appendix: The Role of Money Prices
64
4
Trade and the Role of Factor Endowments
66
Learning Objectives
66
Factor Proportions as a Determinant of Trade
67
Trade and Changing Factor Endowments
78
Trade, the Distribution of Income and Factor Price Changes
82
Relaxing Some Assumptions of the
H
-О
Model
89
Empirical Verification of the
H
-О
Model
93
Summary of Key Concepts
97
Case Study: Trade Liberalization and the Distribution of Income in Brazil
97
Questions for Study and Review
99
References and Suggestions for Further Reading
101
Appendix: Mathematical Representations of Relationships in the
H
-О
Model
103
5
Scale, Competition and Trade
106
Learning Objectives
106
External Economies of Scale
108
Internal Economies of Scale
113
Economies of Scale and Monopolistic Competition
118
Trade with Other Forms of Imperfect Competition
126
Summary of Key Concepts
132
Case Study: A Further Case of Intra-Industry Trade: Carrying Coals to Newcastle?
133
Questions for Study and Review
135
References and Suggestions for Further Reading
137
Appendix A: Monopolistic Competition and Trade
139
Appendix B: Oligopoly, the Cournot Model, and Trade
141
Contents
vii
6
The Theory of Protection Tariffs and Other Barriers to Trade
143
Learning Objectives
143
Partial Equilibrium Analysis of Trade Barriers
145
General Equilibrium Analysis of Trade Barriers
162
The Effective Rate of Protection
165
Intervention in Export Markets
170
Summary of Key Concepts
174
Case Study: The Elimination of the MFA
175
Questions for Study and Review
177
References and Suggestions for Further Reading
179
7
Arguments for Protection and the Political Economy of Trade
Policy
182
Learning Objectives
182
Arguments for Restricting Imports
184
Dumping
201
The Political Economy of Trade Policy
208
Summary of Key Concepts
211
Case Study: Are Chinese and Vietnamese Shoes Dumped in the E.U. Market?
212
Questions for Study and Review
213
References and Suggestions for Further Reading
216
Appendix: Optimum Tariffs: A Partial Equilibrium Perspective
218
8
International Mobility of Labor and Capital
220
Learning Objectives
220
A Basic Model of Capital Mobility
224
Additional Issues Raised by Labor Mobility
228
Multinational Corporations
234
Summary of Key Concepts
244
Case Study: The Daimler Chrysler Marriage and Divorce
245
Questions for Study and Review
246
References and Suggestions for Further Reading
247
9
Regional Blocs: Preferential Trade Liberalization
249
Learning Objectives
249
Alternative Forms of Preferential Trade Agreements
250
Efficiency Gains and Losses From Preferential Trade Agreements
251
Measuring the Economic Effects of a Preferential Trade Agreement
256
The European Union
258
NAFTA
264
viii Contents
Summary of Key Concepts
268
Case Study: A Russia-EU Free Trade Agreement?
269
Questions for Study and Review
270
References and Suggestions for Further Reading
272
10
Commercial Policy and the WTO
274
Learning Objectives
274
The Rationale for Multilateral Trade Liberalization
275
Precursors to Multilateral Trade Liberalization
276
Multilateral Trade Liberalization under the
GATT
278
The Establishment of the WTO
284
Resolving Trade Disputes in the WTO
288
Developing Countries and the WTO
292
Summary of Key Concepts
295
Case Study: Discipline Over Agricultural Policies? The Case of U.S. Cotton Subsidies
296
Questions for Study and Review
297
References and Suggestions for Further Reading
299
11
Trade and Growth
300
Learning Objectives
300
Building Blocks to Determine the Effects of Economic Growth on Trade
302
Large Countries and Changes in the Terms Of Trade
308
Developing-Country Perspectives and the Effects of Trade on Growth
312
Alternative Trade Policies and the Transition to Greater Manufactured Output
319
Growth and Environmental Externalities
324
Summary of Key Concepts
329
Case Study: China's Trade: Lessons to be Learned?
329
Questions for Study and Review
331
References and Suggestions for Further Reading
332
Appendix: Demonstrating the Effects of Exogenous Technical Change
334
PART II INTERNATIONAL FINANCE AND OPEN ECONOMY
MACROECONOMICS
337
12
The Balance of Payments and the Exchange Rate
341
Learning Objectives
341
The Balance of Payments: International Transactions Accounts
342
The International Investment Position
352
The Exchange Rate
353
Summary of Key Concepts
360
Case Study I CSI: Trade Deficit
361
siar'z-'S^.:i
: '. Contents ix
Case Study II "Dark Matter" Makes the US Deficit Disappear
362
Questions for Study and Review
364
References and Suggestions for Further Reading
365
Appendix
366
13
Fundamentals of Exchange Rate Systems
374
Learning Objectives
374
Flexible Exchange Rates: Adjustment through Market Forces
379
Fixed Exchange Rates: Adjustment through Central Bank Intervention
383
The Exchange Rate and Open-Economy National Income Accounting
390
The Marshall-Lerner Condition
392
The J-Curve Effect
395
Summary of Key Concepts
397
Case Study I: On Europe: Europe Feels Weight of Strong Euro
398
Case Study II: China Slightly Loosens the Reins on its Currency's Market Fluctuation
399
Questions for Study and Review
401
References and Suggestions for Further Reading
403
Appendix: The Marshall-Lerner Condition
404
14
An Introduction to Modeling the Open Economy
406
Learning Objectives
406
Key Features of a Basic Open-Economy Model
407
A Small Open Economy with Fixed Exchange Rates
409
A Small Open Economy with Flexible Exchange Rates
422
Summary of Key Concepts
426
Case Study I: America is Borrowing Trouble
426
Case Study II: Greenspan Warns Against Raising Tariffs on China
428
Questions for Study and Review
430
References and Suggestions for Further Reading
433
15
Extensions of the Basic Open-Economy Model: Policy
Effectiveness and the Large Open Economy
435
Learning Objectives
435
Sterilization and Policies to Manage External Deficits
437
Internal and External Balance: The Policy Mix
445
The Large Open Economy
449
Summary of Key Concepts
460
Case Study I: Switching Engines: Global Economic Growth has become Less
Dependent on American Spending
461
Case Study II: The Fiscal Fallacy of Decoupling from America
463
Questions for Study and Review
464
References and Suggestions for Further Reading
467
Contents
-ІІІІІИ
16 International Capital
Markets
469
Learning Objectives
469
International Financial Flows
470
Financial Markets and Instruments
475
Various Agents and the Functions of the Markets
482
The Short-Term Exchange Rate Determination and Technical Analysis
486
Summary of Key Concepts
492
Case Study: Marking the Dealer's Cards: What Economists Can Learn from Currency
Traders
492
Questions for Study and Review
494
References and Suggestions for Further Reading
495
17
Modeling International Capital Markets
497
Learning Objectives
497
International Capital Market Arbitrage
498
Integrating Interest Arbitrage into the Open-Economy Model
507
Summary of Key Concepts
515
Case Study I: Carry On Speculating
516
Case Study II: The Domino Effect
518
Questions for Study and Review
520
References and Suggestions for Further Reading
522
18
Policy Under Fixed Exchange Rates
524
Learning Objectives
524
A Review of the Building Blocks: the IS, LM, and BP curves
526
Monetary Policy under Fixed Exchange Rates
529
Fiscal Policy under Fixed Exchange Rates
534
Exchange Rate Policy
541
The Policy Mix: Internal and External Balance
546
Summary of Key Concepts
552
Case Study I: The Petrodollar Peg
553
Case Study II: Don't Revalue the Yuan
555
Questions for Study and Review
556
References and Suggestions for Further Reading
558
19
Policy under Flexible Exchange Rates and Extensions of the
Mundell-Fleming Model
560
Learning Objectives
560
Monetary Policy under Flexible Exchange Rates
561
Fiscal Policy under Flexible Exchange Rates
566
The Large Open Economy under Flexible Exchange Rates
572
Contents xi
Price Adjustment in the Mundell-Fleming Model
578
Summary of Key Concepts
584
Case Study I: Insight: Currency Lessons Learned since the Upheaval
585
Case Study II: Preparing to Float
587
Questions for Study and Review
589
References and Suggestions for Further Reading
591
Appendix: The Policy Mix Revisited: Internal and External Balance
591
20
Perfectly Flexible Prices and Exchange Rate Dynamics
595
Learning Objectives
595
International Arbitrage and Purchasing Power Parity
596
Monetarist Approach to the Exchange Rate
610
Exchange Rate Dynamics
-
Overshooting
611
Summary of Key Concepts
616
Case Study I: Soft Currency
617
Case Study II: McCurrencies
619
Questions for Study and Review
622
References and Suggestions for Further Reading
623
Appendix: Further Implications of the Monetarist or Long-Run Model
623
21
The International Monetary System: A Brief History
626
Learning Objectives
626
The Gold Standard
628
Reconstruction and Exchange Rates after World War I
636
The
Bretton
Woods System
639
A Brief History of the Float after
Bretton
Woods
644
The New Financial Architecture: The Basel Accords
647
Summary of Key Concepts
650
Case Study I: Financial Reform
-
Reality Check at the IMF
651
Case Study II: IMF Quotas
-
Monetary Misquotations
653
Questions for Study and Review
655
References and Suggestions for Further Reading
656
Appendix: The IMF versus the World Bank
-
Differences and Recent Collaboration
656
22
European Monetary Integration
659
Learning Objectives
659
European Issues with
Bretton
Woods and the Snake
660
The European Monetary System and its Exchange Rate Mechanism
665
The
1992-3
European Currency Crises
672
The European Economic and Monetary Union
675
Summary of Key Concepts
684
xii
Contents
Case Study: Beggar Thy Neighbour
685
Questions for Study and Review
687
References and Suggestions for Further Reading
689
23
International Financial Crises
691
Learning Objectives
691
The
1970s
Oil Shocks: Financial Flow Imbalances and the Origins of the Debt Crises
692
A Model of Currency Crises: Krugman's Model of Speculative Attacks
694
The End of Capital Flows: Debt Crises in the
1980s 695
The Resurgence of Capital Flows to "Emerging Markets" in the
1
990s
696
The Effect of Capital Inflows in the Mundell-Fleming Model
696
The End of Exuberant International Lending: The Asian Financial Crisis
699
Contagion
702
The Aftermath of the East Asian Crisis: The Economics of Reserve Accumulation
703
Reserve Accumulation, and International Competitiveness Implications
705
Summary of Key Concepts
706
Case Study I: Guilt by Association
707
Case Study II: Who's in Charge of Determining U.S. Interest Rates? It May Be Beijing.
709
Questions for Study and Review
710
References and Suggestions for Further Reading
710
Glossary
712
Index
736 |
any_adam_object | 1 |
any_adam_object_boolean | 1 |
author | Eicher, Theo |
author_GND | (DE-588)133538931 |
author_facet | Eicher, Theo |
author_role | aut |
author_sort | Eicher, Theo |
author_variant | t e te |
building | Verbundindex |
bvnumber | BV035187734 |
callnumber-first | H - Social Science |
callnumber-label | HF1359 |
callnumber-raw | HF1359 |
callnumber-search | HF1359 |
callnumber-sort | HF 41359 |
callnumber-subject | HF - Commerce |
classification_rvk | QM 000 |
ctrlnum | (OCoLC)263605394 (DE-599)BVBBV035187734 |
dewey-full | 337 |
dewey-hundreds | 300 - Social sciences |
dewey-ones | 337 - International economics |
dewey-raw | 337 |
dewey-search | 337 |
dewey-sort | 3337 |
dewey-tens | 330 - Economics |
discipline | Wirtschaftswissenschaften |
discipline_str_mv | Wirtschaftswissenschaften |
edition | 7. ed. |
format | Book |
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id | DE-604.BV035187734 |
illustrated | Illustrated |
index_date | 2024-07-02T23:00:29Z |
indexdate | 2024-07-09T21:27:01Z |
institution | BVB |
isbn | 0415772850 0415772869 9780415772853 9780415772860 |
language | English |
oai_aleph_id | oai:aleph.bib-bvb.de:BVB01-016994394 |
oclc_num | 263605394 |
open_access_boolean | |
owner | DE-355 DE-BY-UBR DE-521 DE-473 DE-BY-UBG DE-703 DE-Aug4 DE-2070s DE-M382 DE-20 DE-Re13 DE-BY-UBR |
owner_facet | DE-355 DE-BY-UBR DE-521 DE-473 DE-BY-UBG DE-703 DE-Aug4 DE-2070s DE-M382 DE-20 DE-Re13 DE-BY-UBR |
physical | XXXIII, 748 S. graph. Darst. |
publishDate | 2009 |
publishDateSearch | 2009 |
publishDateSort | 2009 |
publisher | Routledge |
record_format | marc |
spelling | Eicher, Theo Verfasser aut International economics Theo S. Eicher, John H. Mutti, and Michelle H. Turnovsky 7. ed. London [u.a.] Routledge 2009 XXXIII, 748 S. graph. Darst. txt rdacontent n rdamedia nc rdacarrier Bis 6. Auf. u.d.T.: Dunn, Robert M.: International economics International economic relations Außenwirtschaft stw Außenwirtschaftspolitik stw Außenwirtschaftstheorie stw Internationale Wirtschaftsbeziehungen stw Weltwirtschaft Außenwirtschaftstheorie (DE-588)4120953-9 gnd rswk-swf Weltwirtschaft (DE-588)4065468-0 gnd rswk-swf Außenwirtschaftspolitik (DE-588)4003857-9 gnd rswk-swf Weltwirtschaft (DE-588)4065468-0 s DE-604 Außenwirtschaftstheorie (DE-588)4120953-9 s Außenwirtschaftspolitik (DE-588)4003857-9 s 1\p DE-604 Mutti, John H. 1947- Sonstige (DE-588)133538931 oth Turnovsky, Michelle H. Sonstige oth Erscheint auch als Online-Ausgabe 0-203-87861-2 Erscheint auch als Online-Ausgabe 978-0-203-87861-3 Digitalisierung UB Bamberg application/pdf http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=016994394&sequence=000002&line_number=0001&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA Inhaltsverzeichnis 1\p cgwrk 20201028 DE-101 https://d-nb.info/provenance/plan#cgwrk |
spellingShingle | Eicher, Theo International economics International economic relations Außenwirtschaft stw Außenwirtschaftspolitik stw Außenwirtschaftstheorie stw Internationale Wirtschaftsbeziehungen stw Weltwirtschaft Außenwirtschaftstheorie (DE-588)4120953-9 gnd Weltwirtschaft (DE-588)4065468-0 gnd Außenwirtschaftspolitik (DE-588)4003857-9 gnd |
subject_GND | (DE-588)4120953-9 (DE-588)4065468-0 (DE-588)4003857-9 |
title | International economics |
title_auth | International economics |
title_exact_search | International economics |
title_exact_search_txtP | International economics |
title_full | International economics Theo S. Eicher, John H. Mutti, and Michelle H. Turnovsky |
title_fullStr | International economics Theo S. Eicher, John H. Mutti, and Michelle H. Turnovsky |
title_full_unstemmed | International economics Theo S. Eicher, John H. Mutti, and Michelle H. Turnovsky |
title_short | International economics |
title_sort | international economics |
topic | International economic relations Außenwirtschaft stw Außenwirtschaftspolitik stw Außenwirtschaftstheorie stw Internationale Wirtschaftsbeziehungen stw Weltwirtschaft Außenwirtschaftstheorie (DE-588)4120953-9 gnd Weltwirtschaft (DE-588)4065468-0 gnd Außenwirtschaftspolitik (DE-588)4003857-9 gnd |
topic_facet | International economic relations Außenwirtschaft Außenwirtschaftspolitik Außenwirtschaftstheorie Internationale Wirtschaftsbeziehungen Weltwirtschaft |
url | http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=016994394&sequence=000002&line_number=0001&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA |
work_keys_str_mv | AT eichertheo internationaleconomics AT muttijohnh internationaleconomics AT turnovskymichelleh internationaleconomics |