1st Edition

Competing in a Global Economy An Empirical Study on Trade and Specialization

By Robert H. Ballance, Helmut Forstner Copyright 1990

    Global patterns of production and trade in manufactures have changed tremendously over the past two decades. The growth of world trade has been accompanied by a rapid increase in the number of products, suppliers and buyers involved in international markets. At the same time, the means by which manufacturers compete and collaborate have been changing. The great challenges that these developments pose for policy makers and practitioners provide the basic motive for this comprehensive assessment of the underlying forces and determinants that are reshaping the world's industrial map.

    Based upon an empirical approach, the analysis is closely interwoven with key elements of economic theory. the Heckscher-Ohlin model provides the framework for most of the book's interpretation, but less formal models focusing on economies of scale, product differentiation and other aspects of imperfect competition also figure prominently. The extensive research with access to UNIDO's vast body of unpublished information and contributions from specialists, has resulted in a blend of theoretical and empirical material which yields new insights into the way firms and industries compete in international markets.

    List of tables; list of figures; list of abbreviations Preface The transformation of world industry: an introduction and summary Inter-industrial trends in manufacturing production Inter-industry trade in a global system Two-way trade in similar products International patterns of factor endowments Factor requirements, output and trade Country differences, country similarities and the structure of trade Economies of scale and market structure Intra-industry trade revisited A retrospective view Appendix A (Technical); Appendix B (Statistical); Bibliography; Index

    Biography

    Robert Ballance, Helmut Forstner