Trade, globalization and poverty /

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Bibliographic Details
Imprint:London ; New York : Routledge, 2008.
Description:xiv, 268 p. ; 24 cm.
Language:English
Series:Routledge studies in international business and the world economy ; 40
Subject:
Format: Print Book
URL for this record:http://pi.lib.uchicago.edu/1001/cat/bib/6689155
Hidden Bibliographic Details
Other authors / contributors:Dinopoulos, Elias.
ISBN:9780415773225 (hardcover)
0415773229 (hardcover)
9780203932926 (e-book)
0203932927 (e-book)
Notes:"This volume celebrates the seventieth birthday of Jagdish Bhagwati"--Introd.
Includes index.
Table of Contents:
  • Part 1. Globalization and Poverty
  • 1. Globalization and Poverty
  • 2. Globalization and Poverty: What is the Evidence?
  • Part 2. Globalization and Wages
  • 3. International Trade, Labour Turnover and the Wage Premium: Testing the
  • 4. Human Capital, Trade Liberalization and Income Risk
  • Part 3. Globalization and Hi-Tech Industries
  • 5. Globalization, Information Technology and the US Economic Performance
  • 6. Patent Protection and Global Schumpeterian Growth
  • Part 4. Globalization and Institutions
  • 7. On the Viability of Conditional Assistance Programs
  • 8. The United States is a Small Country in World Trade: Further Evidence and Implications for Globalization
  • Part 5. Multinationals and Labor Migration
  • 9. Foreign Manufacturing Affiliates of US Multinationals: Myths and Realities in the Globalization Debate
  • 10. Who Makes the Rules of Globalization?: Corporate Influence in Global and Regional Trade Agreements
  • 11. Taxing the Brain Drain: A Reassessment of the Bhagwati Proposal
  • Part 6. Multilateralism and Regionalism
  • 12. Preferential Trading and Welfare: The Small-Union Case Revisited
  • 13. Free Trade Areas and International Rivalry
  • I. Poverty and Wages
  • 1. Globalization and Poverty
  • 2. Globalization and Poverty: What is the Evidence?
  • 3. International Trade, Labour Turnover, and the Wage Premium: Testing the Bhagwati-Dehejia Hypothesis for Canada Eugene Beaulieu
  • 4. Human Capital, Trade Liberalization, and Income Risk
  • III. International Technology Transfer and Multinational Firms
  • 5. Patent Protection and Global Schumpeterian Growth
  • 6. Innovation, Imitation, and International Rivalry
  • 7. Foreign Manufacturing Affiliates of US Multinationals: Myths and Realities in the Globalization Debate
  • 8. Who Makes the Rules of Globalization? Corporate Influence in Global and Regional Trade Agreements
  • IV. Policies and Institutions
  • 9. Preferential Trading and Welfare: The Small-Union Case Revisited
  • 10. on the Viability of Conditional Assistance Programs
  • 11. The United States is a Small Country in World Trade: Further Evidence and Implications for Globalization
  • 12. Taxing the Brain Drain: A Reassessment of the Bhagwati Proposal