Quantitative Analysis of Newly Evolving Patterns of International Trade offers a variety of perspectives on new forms and developments of international trade and related activities for Japan, the United States, China, and some other important trading countries, to develop new methods and data for measuring the factor contents of emerging new modes of international trade. Such methods and data are crucially important for evaluating impacts of the new modes on factor markets in the United States, Japan, and other major trading countries, and also for forecasting the future development of world trade and foreign direct investment (FDI), evaluating welfare gains from trade, estimating impacts of free trade agreements, and designing effective trade and FDI policies.
Sample Chapter(s)
Introduction (138 KB)
Chapter 1: The Determinants of Offshore Production by Multinational Corporations: A Comparison of Japanese and U.S. Multinational Corporations (847 KB)
Contents:
- Introduction and Overview (Robert M Stern)
- Fragmentation and Outsourcing:
- The Determinants of Offshore Production by Multinational Corporations: A Comparison of Japanese and U.S. Multinational Corporations (Toshiyuki Matsuura, Kiyoyasu Tanaka and Shujiro Urata)
- Does Material and Service Offshoring Improve Domestic Productivity? Evidence from Japanese Manufacturing Industries (Keiko Ito and Kiyoyasu Tanaka)
- Does Firm Boundary Matter? The Effect of Offshoring on Productivity of Japanese Firms (Banri Ito, Eiichi Tomiura and Ryuhei Wakasugi)
- Global Sourcing: Evidence from Spanish Firm-Level Data (Wilhelm K Kohler and Marcel Smolka)
- The Effects of Offshoring on the Composition of Employment in Italy (Anna M Falzoni and Lucia Tajoli)
- Effects of Trade and Foreign Direct Investment:
- International Production/Distribution Networks in East Asia and Domestic Operations: Evidence from Japanese Firms (Mitsuyo Ando and Fukunari Kimura)
- Japan's Exports and Employment (Kozo Kiyota)
- What Determines the Extensive Margin of International Trade? An Investigation of the Cross-Section of U.S. Imports (Peter Debaere and Shalah Mostashari)
- Modes of East Asian Trade and Foreign Direct Investment: U.S. and Japan (K C Fung, Hitomi Iizaka and Alan Siu)
- The Influence of Multinational Exposure on Private Chinese Trade (Deborah Swenson)
- The Effects of Foreign Direct Investment on China's Labor Market (Theresa M Greaney and Yao Li)
- Clusters, Productivity, and Exports in Taiwanese Manufacturing Industries (Eric Y Cho and Hideki Yamawaki)
Readership: Academic trade specialists as well as graduate and undergraduate students studying international trade theory and policy.
Robert M Stern is Professor of Economics and Public Policy (Emeritus) in the Department of Economics and Gerald R Ford School of Public Policy at the University of Michigan, Ann Arbor. He received his PhD in economics from Columbia University in 1958. He was a Fulbright scholar in the Netherlands in 1958–1959, taught at Columbia University for two years, and joined the faculty at the University of Michigan in 1961. He has been an active contributor to international economic research and policy for more than four decades. He has published numerous papers, books, and edited volumes on a wide variety of topics, including international commodity problems, the determinants of comparative advantage, price behavior in international trade, balance-of-payments policies, the computer modeling of international trade and trade policies, trade and labor standards, services liberalization, US-Japan international economic relations, and issues of multilateral and preferential trade liberalization. He has been a consultant to and done research under the auspices of many US Government agencies and international organizations.