Results 301 to 310 of about 1,809,039 (333)

Comparative advantage

Annals of Tourism Research, 2007
The objective of this paper is to explain international tourism flows in terms of supply-side factors associated with its production in destination countries. Unlike demand-oriented analysis, the study suggests that there are parallels between tourism and international trade flows that are typically explained from the supply-side variables, the ...
Zhang, Jie, Jensen, Camilla
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Comparative advantage under oligopoly [PDF]

open access: possibleJournal of International Economics, 1997
We analyze the principle of comparative advantage when agents in the world market are aware of the influence their individual supply exerts on the equilibrium exchange rate of goods, We show that specialization following comparative disadvantage can be an oligopoly equilibrium in a Ricardian economy.
CORDELLA, Tito, GABSZEWICZ, Jean
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Comparative Advantages

2022
Abstract Chapter 3 turns toward the high-wage workers. While low-wage workers are often understood as scrambling over hurdles that interfere with their ability to use digital technologies in the same ways as high-wage workers, this chapter flips the script to understand how high-wage workers are the beneficiaries of “digital privilege ...
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Comparative Advantage in Individuals

The Review of Economics and Statistics, 1978
THE presence or absence of comparative advantage is important to many fields of inquiry besides international trade. Recently, comparative advantage in the performance of tasks by individuals has been shown to be a minimum requirement for the distribution of labor earnings to be different in form from the distribution of abilities (Sattinger, 1975). In
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The comparative advantages

Nature, 1987
Calcium in Muscle Activation: A Comparative Approach By Johann Caspar Ruegg. Springer-Verlag: 1986. Pp.300. DM198.
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Vertical Comparative Advantage

The International Trade Journal, 2011
Despite being the cornerstone of trade theory, the concept of comparative advantage remains an empirically and operationally weak concept. Typically invoked as the rationale for and of trade proper, comparative advantage is rarely ever described in any detail, let alone measured and tested.
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