International Economics 7th Edition Gerber Solutions Manual

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International Economics 7th Edition Gerber Solutions Manual.

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  • ISBN-10 ‏ : ‎ 0134472098
  • ISBN-13 ‏ : ‎ 978-0134472096
  • Author:  James Gerber

A principles-¿level introduction that’s accessible to readers of all backgrounds, International Economics uses real-life applications to cover both the macro and micro components of international economics. The text illuminates economic institutions and policies, as well as recent developments in the global economy, without requiring the use of higher-¿level math. In addition, the text has a flexible approach, which includes self-¿contained chapters and comprehensive coverage, allowing readers to adapt its concepts to a wide range of possible uses. The 7th Edition includes a number of enhancements, such as updated tables and graphs, new case studies, and revised discussion of relevant topics.

 

Table of Content:

  1. PART 1 Introduction and Institutions
  2. Chapter 1 An Introduction to the World Economy
  3. Learning Objectives
  4. Introduction: International Economic Integration
  5. Elements of International Economic Integration
  6. The Growth of World Trade
  7. Capital and Labor Mobility
  8. Features of Contemporary International Economic Relations
  9. Deeper Integration
  10. Multilateral Organizations
  11. Regional Trade Agreements
  12. Trade and Economic Growth
  13. Twelve Themes in International Economics
  14. The Gains from Trade and New Trade Theory (Chapters 3, 4, and 5)
  15. Wages, Jobs, and Protection (Chapters 3, 6, 7, and 8)
  16. Trade Deficits (Chapters 9, 11, and 12)
  17. Regional Trade Agreements (Chapters 2, 13, and 14)
  18. The Resolution of Trade Conflicts (Chapters 2, 7, and 8)
  19. The Role of International Institutions (Chapters 2, 8, and 12)
  20. Exchange Rates and the Macroeconomy (Chapters 10 and 11)
  21. Financial Crises and Global Contagion (Chapter 12)
  22. Capital Flows and the Debt of Developing Countries (Chapters 2, 9, and 12)
  23. Latin America and the World Economy (Chapter 15)
  24. Export-Led Growth in East Asia (Chapter 16)
  25. China and India in the World Economy (Chapter 17)
  26. Vocabulary
  27. Study Questions
  28. Chapter 2 International Economic Institutions Since World War II
  29. Learning Objectives
  30. Introduction: International Institutions and Issues Since World War II
  31. International Institutions
  32. A Taxonomy of International Economic Institutions
  33. The IMF, The World Bank, and The WTO
  34. The IMF and World Bank
  35. The GATT, the Uruguay Round, and the WTO
  36. Regional Trade Agreements
  37. Five Types of Regional Trade Agreements
  38. Regional Trade Agreements and the WTO
  39. For and Against RTAs
  40. The Role of International Economic Institutions
  41. The Definition of Public Goods
  42. Maintaining Order and Reducing Uncertainty
  43. Criticism of International Institutions
  44. Sovereignty and Transparency
  45. Ideology
  46. Implementation and Adjustment Costs
  47. Summary
  48. Vocabulary
  49. Study Questions
  50. PART 2 International Trade
  51. Chapter 3 Comparative Advantage and the Gains from Trade
  52. Learning Objectives
  53. Introduction: The Gains From Trade
  54. Adam Smith and the Attack on Economic Nationalism
  55. A Simple Model of Production and Trade
  56. Absolute Productivity Advantage and the Gains from Trade
  57. Comparative Productivity Advantage and The Gains from Trade
  58. The Production Possibilities Curve
  59. Relative Prices
  60. The Consumption Possibilities Curve
  61. The Gains from Trade
  62. Domestic Prices and the Trade Price
  63. Absolute and Comparative Productivity ­Advantage Contrasted
  64. Gains From Trade with no Absolute Advantage
  65. Comparative Advantage and “Competitiveness”
  66. Economic Restructuring
  67. Summary
  68. Vocabulary
  69. Study Questions
  70. Chapter 4 Comparative Advantage and Factor Endowments
  71. Learning Objectives
  72. Introduction: The Determinants of Comparative Advantage
  73. Modern Trade Theory
  74. The HO Trade Model
  75. Gains from Trade in the HO Model
  76. Trade and Income Distribution
  77. The Stolper-Samuelson Theorem
  78. The Specific Factors Model
  79. Empirical Tests of the Theory of Comparative Advantage
  80. Extension of the HO Model
  81. The Product Cycle
  82. Foreign Trade versus Foreign Investment
  83. Off-Shoring and Outsourcing
  84. Migration and Trade
  85. The Impact of Trade on Wages and Jobs
  86. Summary
  87. Vocabulary
  88. Study Questions
  89. Chapter 5 Beyond Comparative Advantage
  90. Learning Objectives
  91. Introduction: More Reasons to Trade
  92. Intraindustry Trade
  93. Characteristics of Intraindustry Trade
  94. The Gains from Intraindustry Trade
  95. Trade and Geography
  96. Geography, Transportation Costs, and Internal Economics of Scale
  97. External Economies of Scale
  98. Trade and External Economies
  99. Industrial Policy
  100. Industrial Policies and Market Failure
  101. Industrial Policy Tools
  102. Problems with Industrial Policies
  103. Summary
  104. Vocabulary
  105. Study Questions
  106. Chapter 6 The Theory of Tariffs and Quotas
  107. Learning Objectives
  108. Introduction: Tariffs and Quotas
  109. Analysis of a Tariff
  110. Consumer and Producer Surplus
  111. Prices, Output, and Consumption
  112. Resource Allocation and Income Distribution
  113. Other Potential Costs
  114. Retaliation
  115. Innovation
  116. Rent Seeking
  117. The Large Country Case
  118. Effective Versus Nominal Rates of Protection
  119. Analysis of Quotas
  120. Types of Quotas
  121. The Effect on the Profits of Foreign Producers
  122. Hidden Forms of Protection
  123. Summary
  124. Vocabulary
  125. Study Questions
  126. Chapter 7 Commercial Policy
  127. Learning Objectives
  128. Introduction: Commercial Policy, Tariffs, and Arguments for Protection
  129. Tariff Rates in the World’s Major Traders
  130. The Costs of Protectionism
  131. The Logic of Collective Action
  132. Why Nations Protect Their Industries
  133. Revenue
  134. The Labor Argument
  135. The Infant Industry Argument
  136. The National Security Argument
  137. The Cultural Protection Argument
  138. The Retaliation Argument
  139. The Politics of Protection in the United States
  140. Antidumping Duties
  141. Countervailing Duties
  142. Escape Clause Relief
  143. Section 301 and Special 301
  144. Summary
  145. Vocabulary
  146. Study Questions
  147. Chapter 8 International Trade and Labor and Environmental Standards
  148. Learning Objectives
  149. Introduction: Income and Standards
  150. Setting Standards: Harmonization, Mutual Recognition, or Separate?
  151. Labor Standards
  152. Defining Labor Standards
  153. Labor Standards and Trade
  154. Effectiveness
  155. Hazy Borderline between Protectionism and Concern
  156. The Specific Content of Labor Standards
  157. The Potential to Set Off a Trade War
  158. Evidence on Low Standards as a Predatory Practice
  159. Trade and the Environment
  160. Transboundary and NonTransboundary Effects
  161. Trade and Environmental Impacts That Do Not Cross Borders
  162. Trade and Transboundary Environmental Problems
  163. Alternatives to Trade Measures
  164. Labels for Exports
  165. Requiring Home Country Standards
  166. Increasing International Negotiations
  167. Summary
  168. Vocabulary
  169. Study Questions
  170. PART 3 International Finance
  171. Chapter 9 Trade and the Balance of Payments
  172. Learning Objectives
  173. Introduction: The Current Account
  174. The Trade Balance
  175. The Current and Capital Account Balances
  176. MyEconLab Real-time Data
  177. Introduction to the Financial Account
  178. Types of Financial Flows
  179. MyEconLab Real-time Data
  180. Limits on Financial Flows
  181. The Current Account and the Macroeconomy
  182. The National Income and Product Accounts
  183. Are Current Account Deficits Harmful?
  184. International Debt
  185. The International Investment Position
  186. Summary
  187. Vocabulary
  188. Study Questions
  189. APPENDIX A
  190. Measuring the International Investment Position
  191. APPENDIX B
  192. Balance of Payments Data
  193. Bureau of Economic Analysis
  194. International Financial Statistics
  195. Balance of Payments Statistics
  196. APPENDIX C
  197. A Note on Numbers
  198. Chapter 10 Exchange Rates and Exchange Rate Systems
  199. Learning Objectives
  200. Introduction: Fixed, Flexible, or In-Between?
  201. Exchange Rates and Currency Trading
  202. Reasons for Holding Foreign Currencies
  203. Institutions
  204. Exchange Rate Risk
  205. The Supply and Demand for Foreign Exchange
  206. Supply and Demand with Flexible Exchange Rates
  207. Exchange Rates in the Long Run
  208. Exchange Rates in the Medium Run and Short Run
  209. The Real Exchange Rate
  210. Alternatives to Flexible Exchange Rates
  211. Fixed Exchange Rate Systems
  212. Choosing the Right Exchange Rate System
  213. Single Currency Areas
  214. Conditions for Adopting a Single Currency
  215. Summary
  216. Vocabulary
  217. Study Questions
  218. APPENDIX
  219. The Interest Rate Parity Condition
  220. Chapter 11 An Introduction to Open Economy Macroeconomics
  221. Learning Objectives
  222. Introduction: The Macroeconomy in a Global Setting
  223. Aggregate Demand and Aggregate Supply
  224. Fiscal and Monetary Policies
  225. Fiscal Policy
  226. Monetary Policy
  227. Current Account Balances Revisited
  228. Fiscal and Monetary Policies, Interest Rates, and Exchange Rates
  229. Fiscal and Monetary Policy and the Current Account
  230. The Long Run
  231. Macro Policies for Current Account Imbalances
  232. The Adjustment Process
  233. Macroeconomic Policy Coordination in Developed Countries
  234. Summary
  235. Vocabulary
  236. Study Questions
  237. Chapter 12 International Financial Crises
  238. Learning Objectives
  239. Introduction: The Challenge to Financial Integration
  240. Definition of a Financial Crisis
  241. Vulnerabilities, Triggers, and Contagion
  242. Vulnerability: Economic Imbalances
  243. Vulnerability: Volatile Capital Flows
  244. How Crises Become International: Contagion
  245. Domestic Issues in Crisis Avoidance
  246. Moral Hazard and Financial Sector Regulation
  247. Exchange Rate Policy
  248. Capital Controls
  249. Domestic Policies for Crisis Management
  250. Reform of the International Financial Architecture
  251. A Lender of Last Resort
  252. Conditionality
  253. Reform Urgency
  254. Summary
  255. Vocabulary
  256. Study Questions
  257. PART 4 Regional Issues in the Global Economy
  258. Chapter 13 The United States in the World Economy
  259. Learning Objectives
  260. Introduction: A Changing World Economy
  261. Background and Context
  262. The Shifting Focus of U.S. Trade Relations
  263. The Nafta Model
  264. Demographic and Economic Characteristics of North America
  265. Canada–U.S. Trade Relations
  266. Mexican Economic Reforms
  267. The North American Free Trade Agreement
  268. Two NAFTA-Specific Issues
  269. New and Old Agreements
  270. Labor and Environmental Standards
  271. Investor-State Relations
  272. Jobs and Trade Agreements
  273. Summary
  274. Vocabulary
  275. Study Questions
  276. Chapter 14 The European Union: Many Markets into One
  277. Learning Objectives
  278. Introduction: The European Union
  279. The Size of the European Market
  280. The European Union and ITS Predecessors
  281. The Treaty of Rome
  282. Institutional Structure
  283. EU Institutions and Finance
  284. Deepening and Widening the Community in the 1970s and 1980s
  285. Before the Euro
  286. The Second Wave of Deepening: The Single European Act
  287. The Delors Report
  288. Forecasts of the Gains from the Single European Act
  289. Problems in the Implementation of the SEA
  290. The Effects of Restructuring
  291. Harmonization of Technical Standards
  292. Value-Added Taxes
  293. Public Procurement
  294. The Third Wave of Deepening: The Maastricht Treaty
  295. Monetary Union and the Euro
  296. Costs and Benefits of Monetary Union
  297. The Political Economy of the Euro
  298. Widening the European Union
  299. New Members
  300. The Demographic Challenge of the Future
  301. Summary
  302. Vocabulary
  303. Study Questions
  304. Chapter 15 Trade and Policy Reform in Latin America
  305. Learning Objectives
  306. Introduction: Defining a “Latin American” Economy
  307. Population, Income, and Economic Growth
  308. Import Substitution Industrialization
  309. Origins and Goals of ISI
  310. Criticisms of ISI
  311. Macroeconomic Instability and Economic Populism
  312. Populism in Latin America
  313. The Debt Crisis of The 1980s
  314. Proximate Causes of the Debt Crisis
  315. Responses to the Debt Crisis
  316. Neoliberal Policy Reform and the Washington Consensus
  317. Stabilization Policies to Control Inflation
  318. Structural Reform and Open Trade
  319. The Next Generation of Reforms
  320. Summary
  321. Vocabulary
  322. Study Questions
  323. Chapter 16 Export-Oriented Growth in East Asia
  324. Learning Objectives
  325. Introduction: High-Growth Asian Economies
  326. Population, Income, and Economic Growth
  327. A Note on Hong Kong
  328. General Characteristics of Growth
  329. Shared Growth
  330. Rapid Accumulation of Physical and Human Capital
  331. Rapid Growth of Manufactured Exports
  332. Stable Macroeconomic Environments
  333. The Institutional Environment
  334. Fiscal Discipline and Business–Government Relations
  335. Avoiding Rent Seeking
  336. The Role of Industrial Policies
  337. Targeting Specific Industries
  338. Did Industrial Policies Work?
  339. The Role of Manufactured Exports
  340. The Connections between Growth and Exports
  341. Is Export Promotion a Good Model for Other Regions?
  342. Is There an Asian Model of Economic Growth?
  343. Summary
  344. Vocabulary
  345. Study Questions
  346. Chapter 17 China and India in the World Economy
  347. Learning Objectives
  348. Introduction: New Challenges
  349. Demographic and Economic Characteristics
  350. Economic Reform in China and India
  351. The Reform Process in China
  352. Indian Economic Reforms
  353. Shifting Comparative Advantages
  354. China and India in The World Economy
  355. Chinese and Indian Trade Patterns
  356. Tariffs and Protection
  357. Current Account Balances
  358. Looking Forward
  359. Four Issues
  360. Services
  361. Manufacturing
  362. Resources
  363. Multilateral Institutions
  364. Unresolved Issues
  365. Environmental Pressures
  366. State Capitalism
  367. The Choices Ahead
  368. Summary
  369. Vocabulary
  370. Study Questions
  371. Glossary
  372. Index
  373. A
  374. B
  375. C
  376. D
  377. E
  378. F
  379. G
  380. H
  381. I
  382. J
  383. K
  384. L
  385. M
  386. N
  387. O
  388. P
  389. Q
  390. R
  391. S
  392. T
  393. U
  394. V
  395. W
  396. Z
  397. Practice, Engage, and Assesswith MyEconLab®

 

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