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Virtual trade in a changing world: comparative advantage, growth and inequality/ Sugata Marjit, Gouranga G. Das, Biswajit Mandal

By: Contributor(s): Material type: TextTextSeries: Cambridge Elements in International EconomicsPublication details: Cambridge: CUP, 2023Description: 91 pages: charts, diagrams, tables; 22 cmISBN:
  • 9781009101332
Subject(s): DDC classification:
  • 23rd  381 M344
Contents:
Introduction -- Theory and pattern of virtual trade -- Trade, growth and factor income -- Capital mobility and virtual trade -- Conclusion and road ahead
Summary: Virtual economic transactions have radically transformed the way we think about trade and markets in closed and open economies. Continuous decline in costs of information and communications and setting up of phenomenally large number of virtual platforms have brought in 'Time' as an essential element in the discourse on international trade. This work delves deep into the issue of how Time enters as a major catalyst of international trade and virtual transactions. This changes the way we look at ideas of comparative advantage, factor mobility, growth, income distribution, and allied concepts. A key result is that greater physical distance might encourage trade contrary to what we are accustomed to accept.
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Includes bibliography

Introduction -- Theory and pattern of virtual trade -- Trade, growth and factor income -- Capital mobility and virtual trade -- Conclusion and road ahead

Virtual economic transactions have radically transformed the way we think about trade and markets in closed and open economies. Continuous decline in costs of information and communications and setting up of phenomenally large number of virtual platforms have brought in 'Time' as an essential element in the discourse on international trade. This work delves deep into the issue of how Time enters as a major catalyst of international trade and virtual transactions. This changes the way we look at ideas of comparative advantage, factor mobility, growth, income distribution, and allied concepts. A key result is that greater physical distance might encourage trade contrary to what we are accustomed to accept.

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