Beschreibung
InhaltsangabeIntroduction.- Part I: Evidence and the Debate: Wages and Employment.- Part II: Explaining Symmetric Wage-Gap: The Standard Trade Theory: How Far Does It Go?; Trade Liberalization and Symmetric Wage-Gap; Input Trade: An Alternative Explanation.- Part III: Trade, Capital Flow and Employment: Liberalization and Employment in the Organized Sector.- Part IV: Trade Liberalization, Wage Inequality and Employment in the South: Diverse Trade Pattern, Complementarity and Fragmentation; Segmented Input Markets and Non-Traded Good; Trade, Skill Formation and the Wage-Gap.- Conclusion.
Inhalt
Introduction.- Part I: Evidence and the Debate: Wages and Employment.- Part II: Explaining Symmetric Wage-Gap: The Standard Trade Theory: How Far Does It Go?; Trade Liberalization and Symmetric Wage-Gap; Input Trade: An Alternative Explanation.- Part III: Trade, Capital Flow and Employment: Liberalization and Employment in the Organized Sector.- Part IV: Trade Liberalization, Wage Inequality and Employment in the South: Diverse Trade Pattern, Complementarity and Fragmentation; Segmented Input Markets and Non-Traded Good; Trade, Skill Formation and the Wage-Gap.- Conclusion.