429 research outputs found

    International Trade, Finance and Development

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    This chapter highlights the interrelations between countries through trade and finance, and illustrates some of the policy consequences. It presents a short history of exchange rate regimes, illustrates international vehicle currencies, and discusses capital and investment flows. Since the exchange rate is a price, a rise in the exchange rate indicates that the item being traded has become more expensive, just like any other price rise indicates. There are two types of interest rate parity conditions: covered and uncovered. The chapter explains how the choices have changed over time by focusing on the most recent main international monetary regimes. It overviews these regimes, their duration, and the main characteristics: gold standard, world wars and recession, Bretton Woods, floating rates. Almost all countries at some time or another engage in some type of foreign exchange market intervention, through their legal framework, direct intervention, or interest rate policy. The International Monetary Fund identifies ten exchange rate regimes

    It's a big world after all

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    International Trade, Finance and Development

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    Християнсько-демократичні ідеї та деструктивні дії функціонерів ХДПУ

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    У статті аналізуються та вивчаються деструктивні дії політичних функціонерів у діяльності Християнсько-демократичної партії України.The paper contains the analysis and the research of political functionaries’ destructive actions in activity of the Christian Democratic Party of Ukraine

    On the revealed comparative advantages of Dutch cities

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    Davis and Dingel explain the distributions of skills, occupations, and sectors across cities. Their model predicts that larger cities will be relatively skill-abundant and specialize in skill-intensive activities. This relates the model to factor-driven comparative advantages. They also develop an elasticity test and pairwise comparison test for the spatial distributional implications of the model. What is not analyzed, however, is the associated structure of trade flows. This next step—the analysis of the structure of trade—is the main contribution of our article. We combine micro-economic data to analyze how the sorting process of factors of production across cities determines the revealed comparative advantage (RCA) distributions of Dutch cities. We find that (i) the sorting of factors of production across cities is consistent with Davis and Dingel, (ii) RCA patterns differ significantly across locations, (iii) RCA differences can be explained by the interaction of local skill-abundance and sector skill-intensity (in line with the factor abundance model), and (iv) the RCA analysis relative to the Netherlands mostly, but not always, coincides with that relative to the world
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