Contents:
Volume I
Acknowledgements
Introduction: Globalization and Labour Markets: Literature Review
and Synthesis David Greenaway and Douglas R. Nelson
PART I STOLPER-SAMUELSON THEOREM
1. Wolfgang F. Stolper and Paul A. Samuelson (1941), ‘Protection
and Real Wages’
2. Ronald W. Jones (1965), ‘The Structure of Simple General
Equilibrium Models’
3. Ronald W. Jones and José A. Scheinkman (1977), ‘The Relevance of
the Two-Sector Production Model in Trade Theory’
4. P.J. Lloyd and A.G. Schweinberger (1997), ‘Conflict Generating
Product Price Changes: The Imputed Output Approach’
5. Ronald W. Jones (1997), ‘Trade, Technology, and Income
Distribution’
PART II TRADE AND WAGES
6. Stephen P. Magee (1980), ‘Three Simple Tests of the
Stolper-Samuelson Theorem’
7. Robert Z. Lawrence and Matthew J. Slaughter (1993),
‘International Trade and American Wages in the 1980s: Giant Sucking
Sound or Small Hiccup?’
8. Jagdish Bhagwati and Vivek H. Dehejia (1994), ‘Freer Trade and
Wages of the Unskilled – Is Marx Striking Again?’
9. Alan V. Deardorff and Robert W. Staiger (1988), ‘An
Interpretation of the Factor Content of Trade’
10. Adrian Wood (1995), ‘How Trade Hurt Unskilled Workers’
11. Jeffrey D. Sachs and Howard J. Shatz (1998), ‘International
Trade and Wage Inequality in the United States: Some New
Results’
12. Edward E. Leamer (1998), ‘In Search of Stolper-Samuelson
Linkages between International Trade and Lower Wages’
13. Paul Krugman (1995), ‘Growing World Trade: Causes and
Consequences’
14. Joseph F. Francois and Douglas Nelson (1998), ‘Trade,
Technology, and Wages: General Equilibrium Mechanics’
15. Rod Tyers and Yongzheng Yang (1997), ‘Trade with Asia and Skill
Upgrading: Effects on Labor Markets in the Older Industrial
Countries’
PART III LABOUR-MARKET MICROSTRUCTURE AND ADJUSTMENT
16. Michael Mussa (1974), ‘Tariffs and the Distribution of Income:
The Importance of Factor Specificity, Substitutability, and
Intensity in the Short and Long Run’
17. Ronald W. Jones (1996), ‘International Trade, Real Wages, and
Technical Progress: The Specific-Factors Model’
18. Donald R. Davis (1998), ‘Does European Unemployment Prop Up
American Wages? National Labor Markets and Global Trade’
19. Carl Davidson, Lawrence Martin and Steven Matusz (1988), ‘The
Structure of Simple General Equilibrium Models with Frictional
Unemployment’
20. Steven J. Matusz (1994), ‘International Trade Policy in a Model
of Unemployment and Wage Differentials’
21. Noel Gaston and Daniel Trefler (1995), ‘Union Wage Sensitivity
to Trade and Protection: Theory and Evidence’
Name Index
Volume II
Acknowledgements
An introduction by the editors to both volumes appears in Volume
I
PART I TRADE AND EMPLOYMENT
1. Dieter Schumacher (1984), ‘North–South Trade and Shifts in
Employment: A Comparative Analysis of Six European Community
Countries’
2. Ana L. Revenga (1992), ‘Exporting Jobs? The Impact of Import
Competition on Employment and Wages in U.S. Manufacturing’
3. Ciaran Driver, Andrew Kilpatrick and Barry Naisbitt (1985), ‘The
Employment Effects of UK Manufacturing Trade Expansion with the EEC
and the Newly Industrialising Countries’
4. David Greenaway, Robert C. Hine and Peter Wright (1999), ‘An
Empirical Assessment of the Impact of Trade on Employment in the
United Kingdom’
5. Thomas L. Hungerford (1995), ‘International Trade, Comparative
Advantage and the Incidence of Layoff Employment Spells’
6. Lori G. Kletzer (1998), ‘International Trade and Job
Displacement in U.S. Manufacturing, 1979–1991’
7. Patrick A. Messerlin (1995), ‘The Impact of Trade and Capital
Movements on Labour: Evidence on the French Case’
8. Noel Gaston (1998), ‘The Impact of International Trade and
Protection on Australian Manufacturing Employment’
PART II MIGRATION AND LABOUR MARKET ADJUSTMENT
9. Jean Baldwin Grossman (1984), ‘Illegal Immigrants and Domestic
Employment’
10. George J. Borjas (1987), ‘Immigrants, Minorities, and Labor
Market Competition’
11. David Card (1990), ‘The Impact of the Mariel Boatlift on the
Miami Labor Market’
12. Joseph G. Altonji and David Card (1991), ‘The Effects of
Immigration on the Labor Market Outcomes of Less-skilled
Natives’
13. Kristin F. Butcher and David Card (1991), ‘Immigration and
Wages: Evidence from the 1980’s’
14. Robert J. LaLonde and Robert H. Topel (1991), ‘Immigrants in
the American Labor Market: Quality, Assimilation, and
Distributional Effects’
15. George J. Borjas, Richard B. Freeman and Lawrence F. Katz
(1997), ‘How Much Do Immigration and Trade Affect Labor Market
Outcomes?’
16. Michael J. Greenwood, Gary L. Hunt and Ulrich Kohli (1997),
‘The Factor-market Consequences of Unskilled Immigration to the
United States’
17. Rachel M. Friedberg and Jennifer Hunt (1995), ‘The Impact of
Immigrants on Host Country Wages, Employment and Growth’
PART III FDI AND LABOUR MARKETS
18. Magnus Blomström, Gunnar Fors and Robert E. Lipsey (1997),
‘Foreign Direct Investment and Employment: Home Country Experience
in the United States and Sweden’
19. S. Lael Brainard and David A. Riker (1997), ‘Are U.S.
Multinationals Exporting U.S. Jobs?’
20. Robert C. Feenstra and Gordon H. Hanson (1999), ‘The Impact of
Outsourcing and High-Technology Capital on Wages: Estimates for the
United States, 1979–1990’
21. Robert Z. Lawrence (1994), ‘Trade, Multinationals, and
Labor’
22. James R. Markusen and Anthony J. Venables (1997), ‘The Role of
Multinational Firms in the Wage-Gap Debate’
Name Index
Edited by David Greenaway, Professor of Economics and Pro-Vice Chancellor, University of Nottingham, UK and Douglas R. Nelson, Professor of Economics, Tulane University, US and Professorial Research Fellow, University of Nottingham, UK
'The authors have assembled a collection of the best articles on
one of the most important current issues in international
economics. Those who are tracking the debate on labour market
adjustments in open economies will find these volumes
invaluable.'
*Peter J. Lloyd, University of Melbourne, Australia*
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