For courses in International Economics, International Finance, and International Trade. This package includes MyLab Economics. A balanced approach to theory and policy applications International Economics: Theory and Policy provides engaging, balanced coverage of the key concepts and practical applications of the two main topic areas of the discipline. For both international trade and international finance, an intuitive introduction to theory is followed by detailed coverage of policy applications. With this new 11th Edition, the author team of Nobel Prize-winning economist Paul Krugman, renowned researcher Maurice Obstfeld, and Marc Melitz of Harvard University continues to set the standard for International Economics courses. This package includes MyLabTM Economics, an online homework, tutorial, and assessment program designed to work with this text to personalize learning and improve results. With a wide range of interactive, engaging, and assignable activities, students are encouraged to actively learn and retain tough course concepts. MyLab Economics should only be purchased when required by an instructor. Please be sure you have the correct ISBN and Course ID.
Instructors, contact your Pearson rep for more information.
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1. Introduction
PART 1: INTERNATIONAL TRADE THEORY
2. World Trade: An Overview
3. Labor Productivity and Comparative Advantage: The Ricardian Model
4. Specific Factors and Income Distribution
5. Resources and Trade: The Heckscher-Ohlin Model
6. The Standard Trade Model
7. External Economies of Scale and the International Location of Production
8. Firms in the Global Economy: Export Decisions, Outsourcing, and Multinational Enterprises
PART 2: INTERNATIONAL TRADE POLICY
9. The Instruments of Trade Policy
10. The Political Economy of Trade Policy
11. Trade Policy in Developing Countries
12. Controversies in Trade Policy
PART 3: EXCHANGE RATES AND OPEN-ECONOMY MACROECONOMICS
13. National Income Accounting and the Balance of Payments
14. Exchange Rates and the Foreign Exchange Market: An Asset Approach
15. Money, Interest Rates, and Exchange Rates
16. Price Levels and the Exchange Rate in the Long Run
17. Output and the Exchange Rate in the Short Run
18. Fixed Exchange Rates and Foreign Exchange Intervention
PART 4: INTERNATIONAL MACROECONOMIC POLICY
19. International Monetary Systems: An Historical Overview
20. Financial Globalization: Opportunity and Crisis
21. Optimum Currency Areas and the Euro
22. Developing Countries: Growth, Crisis, and Reform
MATHEMATICAL POSTSCRIPTS
Postscript to Chapter 5: The Factor-Proportions Model
Postscript to Chapter 6: The Trading World Economy
Postscript to Chapter 8: The Monopolistic Competition Model
Postscript to Chapter 20: Risk Aversion and International Portfolio Diversification
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This title is a Pearson Global Edition. The Editorial team at Pearson has worked closely with educators around the world to include content, which is especially relevant to students outside the United States.
Reveal theory and applications of trade and finance via a unified structure
The text’s unified structure presents a balance of theoretical and practical coverage of both trade and finance. For each topic area, chapters on core theory are followed by a series of application chapters that confront policy questions using the newest empirical work, data, and policy debates. This structure enables students to grasp theoretical concepts and then see those same concepts in action, aiding retention and highlighting the relevance of course material.
· The sections in the text’s first half provide engaging and practical coverage of the tenets and applications of international trade. Key coverage includes the following:
o An integrated, empirical-based treatment of the latest models of trade, such as the gravity, Ricardian, factor endowments, and imperfect competition models.
o A thorough discussion of the causes and effects of trade policy focused on the income-distribution effects of trade.
o An emphasis on the potential substitutability of international trade and international movements of factors of production, featuring an analysis of international borrowing and lending as intertemporal trade--the exchange of present consumption for future consumption.
· The content in the latter half of the text brings the concepts and applications of international finance to life. Highlights are as follows:
o A unified model of open-economy macroeconomics that provides students with a cohesive approach to the theory, based on an asset-market approach to exchange rate determination with expectations in a central role.
o A discussion of the international monetary experience that stresses the idea that different exchange rate systems lead to different policy coordination problems.
Give students learning tools to master course material
· Learning Goals list essential concepts so students understand what they need to take away from each chapter.
· Case Studies illustrate theory using real-world applications and provide important historical context.
· Special Boxes offer vivid illustrations of points made in the text, including President Jefferson’s trade embargo of 1807—1809, specific disputes over trade, the role of currency swap lines among central banks, and the rapid accumulation of foreign exchange reserves by developing countries.
· 200+ Captioned diagrams reinforce discussions in the text and help students in reviewing the material.
· Summary and Key Terms. Each chapter closes with a summary recapping the major points to aid student review of the material.
· Problems, many of which cite real data or policies, allow students to practice what they’re learning. They range from routine computational drills to more analytical questions and problems. All end-of-chapter problems are included in Pearson MyLab™ Economics so that instructors can assign homework without needing to grade students’ work by hand.
· Further Reading sections at the end of each chapter provide annotated bibliographies of both seminal works and recent articles, encouraging students to explore the material further.
Relay recent developments in the theoretical and practical sides of international economics
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Relay recent developments in the theoretical and practical sides of international economics
· Case study on trade and unemployment discusses the potential links between import competition from developing countries--especially China--and declining manufacturing employment in the US (Chapter 4).
· Case study documents the trend towards greater wage convergence in the European Union following its expansion to the East (Chapter 4).
· Box explores how the compensation of capital owners relative to workers has increased in the US (Chapter 5).
· Box discusses recent evidence showing that the gains from trade have a pro-poor bias--because consumers with relatively lower incomes tend to consume a relatively higher share of their income on goods that are more widely traded (Chapter 6).
· Box explains how many of the goods we consume are produced offshore in “Global Value Chains” and how this recent trend leads to misleading statistics for bilateral trade deficits (Chapter 8).
· Coverage of the failure of the Doha Round of trade negotiations to reach an agreement, and the failure of the Trans-Pacific Partnership (Chapter 10).
· Box discusses “Brexit”--Britain’s startling vote to leave the European Union (EU) (Chapter 10).
· Research suggests that rapid changes in international trade flows have larger adverse effects on workers than previously realized (Chapter 12).
· Box describes China’s offshore market and the relationship between its onshore and offshore exchange rates (Chapter 14).
· Box on the role of invoice currencies in exchange-rate pass-through (Chapter 17).
· Box describes the dangers of deflation (Chapter 19).
· Box on Brexit, specifically the process through which Britain is likely to leave the EU (Chapter 21).
· Coverage of the key role of commodities in developing-country growth, and the commodity “super cycle” (Chapter 22).
· Additional coverage of relevant topics and events including the impact of the North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA) on car production in Canada, Mexico, and the United States; why the decision by Nabisco to move production of Oreo cookies to Mexico is a consequence of trade restrictions on refined sugar; the role of negative interest rates in unconventional monetary policy; and the increasingly important role of emerging market economies in driving global growth.
This package includes Pearson MyLabTM Economics, an online homework, tutorial, and assessment program designed to work with this text to personalize learning and improve results. With a wide range of interactive, engaging, and assignable activities, students are encouraged to actively learn and retain tough course concepts.
· Math Review Exercises. Pearson MyLab Economics now offers a rich array of assignable and auto-graded exercises covering fundamental math concepts geared specifically to principles and intermediate economics students. Aimed at increasing student confidence and success, the new math skills review Chapter R is accessible from the assignment manager and contains over 150 graphing, algebra, and calculus exercises for homework, quiz, and test use. Offering economics students warm-up math assignments, math remediation, or math exercises as part of any content assignment has never been easier!
· HTML5 Player. In addition to mat
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Produktdetaljer
ISBN
9781292214993
Publisert
2018-02-27
Utgave
11. utgave
Utgiver
Vendor
Pearson Education Limited
Vekt
1371 gr
Høyde
255 mm
Bredde
205 mm
Dybde
30 mm
Aldersnivå
U, 05
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Kombinasjonsprodukt