Bibliographic Information

Brookings trade forum

ed by Susan M.Collins and Robert Z. Lawrence.

Brookings Institution, c1998-

  • 1998
  • 1999
  • 2000
  • 2001
  • 2002
  • 2003
  • 2004
  • 2005
  • 2006
  • 2007
  • 2008/2009

Available at  / 35 libraries

Search this Book/Journal

Note

Includes bibliographical references.

1999: Susan M. Collins, Robert Z. Lawrence, editors

2000-: Susan M. Collins, Dani Rodrik editors

2004, 2006: Susan M. Collins and Carol Graham editors

2005: Susan M. Collins and Lael Brainard editors

2007: Susan M. Collins, editor

2008: Lael Brainard and Isaac Sorkin, editors

Description and Table of Contents

Volume

2008/2009 ISBN 9780815702986

Description

" Brookings Trade Forum provides comprehensive analysis on current and emerging issues of international trade and macroeconomics. Practitioners and academics contribute to each volume, with papers that provide an in-depth look at a particular topic. The 2008/2009 edition focuses on climate policy and its impact on trade. Contents include * Five ""Gs"": Lessons for Governing Global Climate from World Trade William Antholis (Brookings) * International Trade Law and the Economics of Climate Policy: Evaluating the Legality and Effectiveness of Proposals to Address Competitiveness and Leakage Concerns Jason E. Bordoff (Brookings) * Technology Transfers and Climate Change: International Flows, Barriers, and Frameworks Thomas L. Brewer (Georgetown University) *Addressing the Leakage / Competitiveness Issue in Climate Change Policy Proposals Jeffrey A. Frankel (Harvard University) * The Economic and Environmental Effects of Border Tax Adjustments for Climate Policy Warwick J. Mckibbin and Peter J.Wilcoxen (Brookings) * The Climate Commons and a Global Environment Organization (GEO) C. Ford Runge (University of Minnesota) "

Table of Contents

A* Five GsA": Lessons for Governing Global Climate from World Trade William Antholis (Brookings) A* International Trade Law and the Economics of Climate Policy: Evaluating the Legality and Effectiveness of Proposals to Address Competitiveness and Leakage Concerns Jason E. Bordoff (Brookings) A* Technology Transfers and Climate Change: International Flows, Barriers, and Frameworks Thomas L. Brewer (Georgetown University) A*Addressing the Leakage / Competitiveness Issue in Climate Change Policy Proposals Jeffrey A. Frankel (Harvard University) A* The Economic and Environmental Effects of Border Tax Adjustments for Climate Policy Warwick J. Mckibbin and Peter J.Wilcoxen (Brookings) A* The Climate Commons and a Global Environment Organization (GEO) C. Ford Runge (University of Minnesota)
Volume

1998 ISBN 9780815711872

Description

The Brookings Institution introduces a series of annual volumes that provide the most authoritative and in-depth analysis available on current and emerging issues in international trade. Each edition will present a series of papers on a particular theme prepared by leading experts in the field. Discussions of the papers by other leading trade practitioners will also be included. This first edition focuses on private practices and trade policy, examining the future of international rules on antidumping and competition. Contents include: "Antidumping and Antitrust: What Problems Does Each Address?" by Alan Sykes, University of Chicago "Antidumping: What Does the Evidence Show?" by Bobby Willig, Princeton University "Unilateral and Bilateral Experience" by Merit Janow, Columbia University "Regional Agreements" by Bernard Hoekman, The World Bank "Multilateralizing Competition Policy Conventions: Foundations and Guidelines" by J. David Richardson, Syracuse University "Political Economy of Competition Policies" by I.M. Destler, University of Maryland
Volume

2005 ISBN 9780815712848

Description

Tentative contents include: Offshoring: Threats and Opportunities Daniel Trefler (University of Toronto) Modeling the Offshoring of White-Collar Services: From Comparative Advantage to the New Theories of Trade and FDI James Markusen (University of Colorado) Globalization and the Outsourcing of Services: The Impact of Indian Offshoring Rafiq Dossani (Stanford University) Offshoring in the Semiconductor Industry: A Historical Perspective Clair Brown and Greg Linden (University of California, Berkeley) A Fairer Deal For America's Workers in a New Era of Offshoring Lael Brainard and Robert Litan (Brookings Institution and the Kauffman Foundation)
Volume

2002 ISBN 9780815712855

Description

Currency crises are extremely perplexing problems, initially erupting in a country's financial markets and spreading throughout a country's economy and beyond -often with devastating consequences for real economic activity. Experts on the two most recent crises -in Argentina and Turkey -together with others who have studied currency crises more broadly, examine why such crises continue to erupt and how to mitigate their impact, possibly preventing additional crises in the future. Contents includes: Argentina's Avoidable Crisis: Bad Luck, Bad Economics, Bad Politics, Bad Advice Andrew Powell, Universidad Torcuato di Tella Hard Money's Soft Underbelly: Understanding the Argentine Crisis Ricardo Hausmann, Harvard University Andres Velasco, Harvard University Banking Sector Fragility and Turkey's 2000-01 Financial Crisis Fatih OEzatay, Merkez Bankasi Guven Sak, Merkez Bankasi Panel: Lessons of Recent Currency Crises Morris Goldstein, Institute for International Economics Currency Crises: A Practitioner's View Jose Luis Machinea, Inter-American Development Bank Does East Asia Need a New Development Paradigm? Yung Chul Park, Korea University Currency crises are extremely perplexing problems, initially erupting in a country's financial markets and spreading throughout a country's economy and beyond -often with devastating consequences for real economic activity. Experts on the two most recent crises -in Argentina and Turkey -together with others who have studied currency crises more broadly, examine why such crises continue to erupt and how to mitigate their impact, possibly preventing additional crises in the future. Argentina's Avoidable Crisis: Bad Luck, Bad Economics, Bad Politics, Bad Advice Andrew Powell, Universidad Torcuato di Tella Hard Money's Soft Underbelly: Understanding the Argentine Crisis Ricardo Hausmann, Harvard University Andres Velasco, Harvard University Banking Sector Fragility and Turkey's 2000-01 Financial Crisis Fatih OEzatay, Merkez Bankasi Guven Sak, Merkez Bankasi Panel: Lessons of Recent Currency Crises Morris Goldstein, Institute for International Economics Currency Crises: A Practitioner's View Jose Luis Machinea, Inter-American Development Bank Does East Asia Need a New Development Paradigm? Yung Chul Park, Korea University
Volume

2004 ISBN 9780815712862

Description

This annual series provides comprehensive analysis on current and emerging issues of international trade and macroeconomics. Contents: GLOBALIZATION AND INEQUALITY Competing Concepts of Inequality in the Globalization Debate Martin Ravallion (World Bank) Channels from Globalization to Inequality: Productivity World versus Factor World William Easterly (New York University) Health in an Age of Globalization Angus Deaton (Princeton University) BROADER INDICATORS OF WELL-BEING Assessing the Impact of Globalization on Poverty and Inequality: A New Lens on an Old Puzzle Carol Graham (Brookings Institution) Poverty and the Organization of Political Violence: A Review and Some Conjectures Nicholas Sambanis (Yale University) IMPACT OF GLOBALIZATION Trade, Inequality, and Poverty: What Do We Know? Pinelopi Goldberg (Yale University) and Nina Pavcnik (Dartmouth College) The Impact of Globalization on the Poor Pranab Bardhan (University of California, Berkeley) LOOKING FORWARD Why Global Inequality Matters Nancy Birdsall (Center for Global Development) Some Speculation on Growth and Poverty over the Twenty-First Century Kenneth Rogoff (Harvard University)
Volume

2003 ISBN 9780815712879

Description

This annual series provides comprehensive analysis on current and emerging issues of international trade and economics. In this volume, researchers use theory and empirics to provide novel analyses of six of the key issues surrounding the integration of developing countries into the global market place. Contents include: Trade Policy and Industrial Sector Responses in the Developing World: Interpreting the Evidence Erkan Erdem and James Tybout (Pennsylvania State University) Globalization's Impact on Compliance with Labor Standards Ann Harrison and Jason Scorse (University of California, Berkeley) When Economic Reform Goes Wrong: Cashews in Mozambique Margaret McMillan (Tufts University), Dani Rodrik (Harvard University), and Karen Horn Welch (Stanford University) Staying The Course: Maintaining Fiscal Control In Developing Countries Christopher Adam and David Bevan (Oxford University) Through What Channels Does External Debt Affect Growth? Catherine Pattillo, Helene Poirson, and Luca Ricci (International Monetary Fund) Crisis Resolution: Next Steps Barry Eichengreen (University of California, Berkeley), Kenneth Kletzer (University of California, Santa Cruz), and Ashoka Mody (International Monetary Fund)
Volume

2006 ISBN 9780815712961

Description

This annual series provides comprehensive analysis on current and emerging issues of international trade and economics. Tentative contents include: Boom Towns and Ghost Countries: Geography, Agglomeration, and Population Mobility Lant Pritchett (World Bank) Global Wage Differences and International Worker Flows Mark Rosenzweig (Kennedy School of Government, Harvard University) What's Wrong with Plan B? International Migration as the Alternative to Development Devesh Kapur (University of Texas) and John Hale (Michigan State University) Global Labor Markets: Issues and Implications Alan Blinder (Princeton University), Michael Kremer (Harvard University), Carmen Pages (World Bank), and Isabel Sawhill (Brookings Institution)
Volume

2007 ISBN 9780815712985

Description

Tentative contents include: China and FDI John Whalley (University of Western Ontario) and Xian Xin (China Agricultural University) Productivity and Taxes as Drivers of FDI Assaf Razin (Tel Aviv University and Cornell University) and Efraim Sadka (Tel Aviv University) How to Investigate the Impact of Foreign Direct Investment on Development and Use the Results to Guide Policy Theodore Moran (Georgetown University) Profit Sharing between Governments and Multinationals in Natural Resource Extraction: Evidence from a Firm-Level Panel Margaret McMillan (Tufts University) and Andrew Waxman (World Bank) Returns on FDI: Does the U.S. Really Do Better? Barry Bosworth, Susan M. Collins, and Gabriel Chodorow-Reich (Brookings)
Volume

1999 ISBN 9780815715252

Description

Growing economic integration has become a major concern among policymakers and international institutions in the 1990s. In light of this concern, the practitioners and academics contributing to the Brookings Trade Forum 1999 have focused on key aspects of governing in a global economy. This is the second in the Brookings Institution series of annual volumes that provide the most authoritative and in-depth analysis available on current and emerging issues in international trade. The 1999 edition focuses on governing in a global economy. Contents include: "Policies in a Globalized Economy" by Paul R. Krugman, Massachusetts Institute of Technology "The Domestic Political Resistance to U.S. Global Leadership" by I. M. Destler, University of Maryland and Institute for International Economics "The Future of the World Trade Organization"" by Sylvia Ostry, University of Toronto "Fin de Siecle Deja Vu: Is Globalization Today Really Different than Globalization a Hundred Years Ago?" by Michael Bordo, Rutgers University, Barry Eichengreen, University of California, Berkeley, and Douglas Irwin, Dartmouth College "Governing the Global Economy: Does One Architectural Style Fit All?" by Dani Rodrik, Harvard University
Volume

2000 ISBN 9780815715733

Description

This annual series provides comprehensive analysis on current and emerging issues of international trade and macroeconomics. Practitioners and academics contribute to each volume, with papers that provide an in-depth look at a particular topic. The third edition focuses on policy challenges for the next millennium. Contents include: "Fixing for Your Life" Guillermo Calvo and Carmen Reinhart (University of Maryland) "Verifiability and the Vanishing Intermediate Exchange Rate Regime" Jeffrey Frankel (Harvard University), Sergio Schmukler, and Luis Serven (World Bank) "Short- and Long-Run Integration: Do Capital Controls Matter?" Graciela Kaminsky (George Washington University) and Sergio Schmukler (World Bank) "The Role and Effectiveness of the WTO Dispute Settlement Mechanism" John H. Jackson (Georgetown University) "Regulatory Protectionism, Developing Nations, and a Two-Tier World Trade System" Richard E. Baldwin (Graduate Institute of International Studies) "Trade Policy: What's Next?" W. Bowman Cutter (Warburg Pincus), Richard Haass (Brookings Institution), and Daniel Tarullo (Georgetown University)
Volume

2001 ISBN 9780815715757

Description

This annual series provides comprehensive analysis on current and emerging issues of international trade and macroeconomics. Practitioners and academics contribute to each volume, with papers that provide an in-depth look at a particular topic. The fourth edition focuses on the issues and implications of globalization. Contents include: "Holding International Reserves in an Era of High Capital Mobility" Robert P. Flood (International Monetary Fund) and Nancy Marion (Dartmouth College) "The Impossible Duo? Globalization and Monetary Independence in Emerging Markets" Andres Velasco (Harvard University) "The Adoption of International Labor Standards Conventions: Who, When, and Why?" Nancy H. Chau and Ravi Kanbur (Cornell University) "The Determinants of Individual Trade Policy Preferences: International Survey Evidence" Kevin O'Rourke and Richard Sinnott (Trinity College, Dublin) "Borders, Trade, and Welfare" James E. Anderson (Boston College) and Eric van Wincoop (Federal Reserve Bank of New York) Expansion Strategies of U.S. Multinational Firms Gordon Hanson (University of Michigan), Raymond J. Mataloni Jr. (BEA), and Matthew J. Slaughter (Dartmouth College)

by "Nielsen BookData"

Details

Page Top