The Increasing Returns Revolution in Trade and Geography
Thirty years have passed since a small group of theorists began applying concepts and tools from industrial organization to the analysis of international trade. The new models of trade that emerged from that work didn't supplant traditional trade theory so much as supplement it, creating an int...
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Veröffentlicht in: | The American economic review 2009-06, Vol.99 (3), p.561-571 |
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description | Thirty years have passed since a small group of theorists began applying concepts and tools from industrial organization to the analysis of international trade. The new models of trade that emerged from that work didn't supplant traditional trade theory so much as supplement it, creating an integrated view that made sense of aspects of world trade that had previously posed major puzzles. The "new trade theory" - an unfortunate phrase, now quite often referred to as "the old new trade theory" - also helped build a bridge between the analysis of trade between countries and the location of production within countries. In this paper I will try to retrace the steps and, perhaps even more important, the state of mind that made this intellectual transformation possible. At the end I'll also ask about the relevance of those once-revolutionary insights in a world economy that, as I'll explain, is arguably more classical now than it was when the revolution in trade theory began. [PUBLICATION ABSTRACT] |
doi_str_mv | 10.1257/aer.99.3.561 |
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The new models of trade that emerged from that work didn't supplant traditional trade theory so much as supplement it, creating an integrated view that made sense of aspects of world trade that had previously posed major puzzles. The "new trade theory" - an unfortunate phrase, now quite often referred to as "the old new trade theory" - also helped build a bridge between the analysis of trade between countries and the location of production within countries. In this paper I will try to retrace the steps and, perhaps even more important, the state of mind that made this intellectual transformation possible. At the end I'll also ask about the relevance of those once-revolutionary insights in a world economy that, as I'll explain, is arguably more classical now than it was when the revolution in trade theory began. 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subjects | Commercial production Comparative advantage Economic geography Economic models Economic theory Economies of scale Exports Geography Global economy Imperfect competition Increasing returns Industrial organization International trade Monopolistic competition Specialization Studies Subcultures Trade Trade models Trade theory World War I World War II |
title | The Increasing Returns Revolution in Trade and Geography |
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