Economics Without Borders 2017
DOI: 10.1017/9781316636404.008
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Winners and Losers of Globalization: Sixteen Challenges for Measurement and Theory

Abstract: The goal of this chapter is to summarize the state of the art in research in international trade and global production, and discuss issues relevant to European policymakers. Much of recent research on globalization is primarily empirical, owing to the proliferation of available data. We begin by discussing recent advances in measuring the causes and effects of globalization, and discussing the particular data challenges that have emerged. We then turn to theories of trade and global production, first summarizi… Show more

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Cited by 6 publications
(8 citation statements)
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References 130 publications
(156 reference statements)
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“…As Hornok and Koren (2016) report in a survey, there is ample evidence (and theory to explain it) that trade increases inequality, and that the associated costs may be larger than previously thought. However, the academic debate on the needed redistribution from the winners of liberalization towards its losers in order to achieve Pareto gains has occupied generations of trade economists.…”
Section: 0% Of Consumption 5 Conclusionmentioning
confidence: 97%
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“…As Hornok and Koren (2016) report in a survey, there is ample evidence (and theory to explain it) that trade increases inequality, and that the associated costs may be larger than previously thought. However, the academic debate on the needed redistribution from the winners of liberalization towards its losers in order to achieve Pareto gains has occupied generations of trade economists.…”
Section: 0% Of Consumption 5 Conclusionmentioning
confidence: 97%
“…First, there are many additional gains from trade that have been elicited in the literature and which our model is unable to capture, including the traditional gains from specialization, the gains from access to a larger market allowing the exploitation of scale economies (Krugman, 1980), the gains from the reallocation of resources towards more productive firms resulting in higher aggregate productivity (Melitz, 2003) and the gains associated from productivity gains related to importing inputs to production (see the numerous references in the survey by Hornok and Koren (2016)). All those gains would reinforce our argument because they result in aggregate productivity increases.…”
Section: 0% Of Consumption 5 Conclusionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Firm-level data analysis started with Bernard and Jensen's papers (Bernard & Jensen, 1999) on firm characteristics within countries and industries, but they focused mainly on firms that exported manufactured goods. Although service trade patterns seem similar to those in goods trade there is still a lack of research on service firms (Benkovskis et al, 2019;Hornok & Koren, 2017;Kelle & Kleinert, 2010;Wagner, 2021). Moreover, services have sometimes been left out of international trade as intangible money flows moved via bank transactions.…”
Section: Nature Of Servicesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…At firm level, the number of employees, ownership, service type, service exports and turnover volumes were the most relevant indicators for further study (Aaby & Slater, 1989;Verwaal & Donkers, 2002). The literature suggests substantial challenges to measuring cross-border service flows (Cernat & Kutlina-Dimitrova, 2014;Hornok & Koren, 2017;Lee & Goldman, 2020;Rueda-Cantuche et al, 2016).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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