Publication | Closed Access
Trade, product cycles, and inequality within and between countries
40
Citations
34
References
2004
Year
International EconomicsWage InequalityNorthern Product InnovationTradeEconomic IntegrationAgricultural EconomicsIncome InequalityProduct CyclesProductivityEconomic AnalysisEconomicsRegional EconomicsTrade PatternLabor EconomicsTrade LiberalizationTrade PolicyMacroeconomicsIndustrial DevelopmentTrade EconomicsBusinessEconomic ChangeGlobal Trade
Abstract. This paper incorporates Northern product innovation and product‐cycle‐driven technology transfer into the continuum‐of‐goods Heckscher‐Ohlin model. The creation of very skill‐intensive goods induces the North to transfer production of older, less skill‐intensive goods to the South. These relocated goods are the most skill intensive by Southern standards. Hence, product cycles raise the relative demand for skilled workers and thus wage inequality within both regions. This runs contrary to the Stolper‐Samuelson theorem, but accords well with the fact that wage inequality has risen in both Northern and Southern countries. Moreover, product cycles increase income inequality between countries. JEL classification: F1
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