Publication | Closed Access
Recent Perspectives on Trade and Inequality
163
Citations
38
References
2011
Year
Development EconomicsTradeEconomic IntegrationIncome DistributionIncome InequalityEconomic GrowthRecent PerspectivesNew MechanismsTransfer EarningsIncomplete ContractingInternational RedistributionEconomic InequalityEconomicsTrade PatternTrade LiberalizationTrade PolicyTrade EconomicsBusinessLabor Market ImpactInequality
The 1990s dealt a blow to traditional Heckscher-Ohlin analysis of the relationship between trade and income inequality, as it became clear that rising inequality in low-income countries and other features of the data were inconsistent with that model. As a result, economists moved away from trade as a plausible explanation for rising income inequality. In recent years, however, a number of new mechanisms have been explored through which trade can affect (and usually increase) income inequality. These include within-industry effects due to heterogeneous firms, the effects of offshoring of tasks, effects on incomplete contracting, and the effects of labor-market frictions. A number of these mechanisms have received substantial empirical support.
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