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The Impact of International Trade on Wages (National Bureau of Economic Research Conference Report) [Hardcover]

Robert C. Feenstra (Editor)

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Book Description

July 15, 2000 0226239632 978-0226239637 1
Since the early 1980s, the U.S. economy has experienced a growing wage differential: high-skilled workers have claimed an increasing share of available income, while low-skilled workers have seen an absolute decline in real wages. How and why this disparity has arisen is a matter of ongoing debate among policymakers and economists. Two competing theories have emerged to explain this phenomenon, one focusing on international trade and labor market globalization as the driving force behind the devaluation of low-skill jobs, and the other focusing on the role of technological change as a catalyst for the escalation of high-skill wages.

This collection brings together innovative new ideas and data sources in order to provide more satisfying alternatives to the trade versus technology debate and to assess directly the specific impact of international trade on U.S. wages. This timely volume offers a thorough appraisal of the wage distribution predicament, examining the continued effects of technology and globalization on the labor market.

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About the Author

Robert C. Feenstra is associate professor of economics at the University of California at Davis and is coeditor of the Journal for International Economics.

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Inside This Book (learn more)
First Sentence:
The U.S. Bureau of the Census recently reported that in 1997 the real median income of U.S. households returned to the peak achieved in 1989, which was the year before a short recession (U.S. Department of Commerce 1998a, v, xii). Read the first page
Key Phrases - Statistically Improbable Phrases (SIPs): (learn more)
education premia, mean displacement rate, annual displacement rate, human capital regime, smaller earnings losses, nonproduction labor, regional employment shocks, residual wage inequality, mandated decline, industry wage premiums, relative demand shocks, total manufacturing shipments, import real exchange rates, industry export orientation, other primary metals, signaling regime, industry fixed effects, mandated rise, intraindustry trade, log wage regression, offer curve, productivity database, industrialized partners, domestic product prices, state fixed effects
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
United States, National Bureau of Economic Research, Brookings Papers, Quarterly Journal of Economics, New York, American Economic Review, Bureau of Labor Statistics, Current Population Surveys, Displaced Worker Surveys, Journal of Economic Perspectives, Journal of Political Economy, University of California, Brookings Institution, Content Production Nonproduction, University of Chicago Press, Department of Labor, John Bound, Standard Industrial Classification, Correlation Version, Journal of International Economics, Syracuse University, Bradford Jensen, Census of Manufactures, Imports Labor Labor Independent Variables, Annual Survey of Manufactures
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