scispace - formally typeset
Search or ask a question
Topic

Factor price

About: Factor price is a research topic. Over the lifetime, 2764 publications have been published within this topic receiving 86176 citations.


Papers
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, the authors examined and extended a result of Deardorff and Staiger (An interpretation of the factor content of trade), who showed how the factor of trade may indicate the factor price adjustments that can be attributed to that trade.

46 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors adopt a traditional definition of the subject, and focus primarily on the explanation of international transactions in goods, services, and assets, and on the main domestic effects of those transactions.
Abstract: This Handbook adopts a traditional definition of the subject, and focuses primarily on the explanation of international transactions in goods, services, and assets, and on the main domestic effects of those transactions. The first volume deals with the "real side" of international economics. It is concerned with the explanation of trade and factor flows, with their main effects on goods and factor prices, on the allocation of resources and income distribution and on economic welfare, and also with the effects on national policies designed explicitly to influence trade and factor flows. In other words, it deals chiefly with microeconomic issues and methods. The second volume deals with the "monetary side" of the subject. It is concerned with the balance of payments adjustment process under fixed exchange rates, with exchange rate determination under flexible exchange rates, and with the domestic ramifications of these phenomena. Accordingly, it deals mainly with economic issues, although microeconomic methods are frequently utilized, especially in work on expectations, asset markets, and exchange rate behavior.

46 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the consequences of a liberalization of shopping hours in a market where consumers collect price information through non-sequential search are analyzed and it is shown that price reductions, increases in consumer welfare and larger market shares of more efficient firms are possible.

46 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, it is argued that the emphasis on specific factors may lead to a danger of circular reasoning unless one can successfully explain the mechanism that determines the relative supply of these factors.
Abstract: The Heckscher-Ohlin-Samuelson (H-O-S) model has played a central role in the pure theory of international trade, contributing to the clarification of such diverse questions as the determinants of comparative advantage, the effects of trade upon factor prices, the effects of economic growth on international trade and vice versa, the relationship between international movements of goods and factors, and so forth. However, contrary to the original intention of Ohlin himself, as has been exemplified in his discussion in Harrod and Hague (1963, pp. 398-399), this model has tended to concentrate on a relatively small number of generic factors of production such as capital and labour, and to neglect the role played by those factors that are somehow specific to various industries. Harrod, on the other hand, emphasized the importance of industry-specific factors many years ago, viewing their relative abundance as a major cause of differences in comparative advantage. (See Harrod, 1957, pp. 19 and 36, 1958; and Harrod and Hague, 1963, pp. 422-423. For his own definition of specific factors see Harrod, 1957, p. 33.) It may be argued, however, that the emphasis on specific factors may lead to a danger of circular reasoning unless one can successfully explain the mechanism that determines the relative supply of these factors. Take the ordinary two-factor, two-commodity H-O-S model, for example, and suppose that a country has a comparative advantage in the labour-intensive (say, textile) industry because of its relative abundance of labour. In the trade equilibrium position a relatively large proportion of labour will be engaged in the textile industry, and those workers in this industry must have acquired specific skills which are necessary to produce textiles. They are specific factors, at least for the short run. It would not be particularly interesting, however, to state that the country has a comparative advantage in the textile industry because it has a relatively abundant supply of textile workers, since they have become relatively abundant as a result of the expansion of the textile industry in which the country has a comparative advantage, and not vice versa. Thus, there is a clear limitation to a theory based on specific factors which does not analyse the mechanism that determines their supplies. On the other hand, it may also be argued that one need not seek merely the long-run determinants of international trade and investment. We may conceive of specific factors such as those whose inter-industry mobility is limited in the short run, and limit our scope to a relatively short period of time, the length of the period being dependent upon the degree of shiffability of a particular factor of production concerned: see the view of Haberler in Harrod and Hague (1963, p. 396). It is in this context that we now

46 citations


Network Information
Related Topics (5)
Wage
47.9K papers, 1.2M citations
88% related
Monetary policy
57.8K papers, 1.2M citations
87% related
Productivity
86.9K papers, 1.8M citations
87% related
Interest rate
47K papers, 1M citations
86% related
Unemployment
60.4K papers, 1.3M citations
86% related
Performance
Metrics
No. of papers in the topic in previous years
YearPapers
20236
20227
202115
202017
201919
201816