One of the striking features of the international economy is that while the level of average wage rates in rich countries is many times that in poor countries, their average rates of return to capital seem to be roughly similar or the differences in them relatively very small. This cannot be fully explained away by the fact that capital is internationally much more mobile than labor. There is remarkably little movement of return-sensitive private capital between the richest and the poorest countries. In this paper we assume instead that factors of production are internationally immobile, and try to explain the observed asymmetry in the pattern of factor prices in terms of particular types of differences in production functions between rich ...
Available online 7 September 2006By making use of a simple general-equilibrium model that is relevan...
Why capital does not flow more heavily into poorer countries with lower capital-labor ratios is aque...
In this paper two sets of issues are addressed using panel data from the manufacturing sector of fiv...
How does factor accumulation a¤ect an open economys pattern of international special-ization and ret...
Countries? ” If there exist aggregate production functions representing approximately the same techn...
Most existing studies examine the issue of skilled-unskilled wage inequality by using models that ar...
This paper investigates the nature of income inequality across nations. Several exercises, such as v...
Since his original publication in 1990, Robert E Lucas Jr’s observation of capital failing to flow b...
In this paper, we investigate the effects of international labor movement on differences in per capi...
Whether or not the marginal product of capital (MPK) differs across countries is a question that kee...
This paper employs local regression to estimate the output elasticity with respect to labor, human c...
Whether or not the marginal product of capital (MPK) differs across countries is a question that kee...
Composition of capital is systematically related to income levels: rich countries have higher shares...
This paper explores the hypothesis that wage differentials between skill groups across countries are...
Why do some countries and regions have higher capital intensity than others? This question is at the...
Available online 7 September 2006By making use of a simple general-equilibrium model that is relevan...
Why capital does not flow more heavily into poorer countries with lower capital-labor ratios is aque...
In this paper two sets of issues are addressed using panel data from the manufacturing sector of fiv...
How does factor accumulation a¤ect an open economys pattern of international special-ization and ret...
Countries? ” If there exist aggregate production functions representing approximately the same techn...
Most existing studies examine the issue of skilled-unskilled wage inequality by using models that ar...
This paper investigates the nature of income inequality across nations. Several exercises, such as v...
Since his original publication in 1990, Robert E Lucas Jr’s observation of capital failing to flow b...
In this paper, we investigate the effects of international labor movement on differences in per capi...
Whether or not the marginal product of capital (MPK) differs across countries is a question that kee...
This paper employs local regression to estimate the output elasticity with respect to labor, human c...
Whether or not the marginal product of capital (MPK) differs across countries is a question that kee...
Composition of capital is systematically related to income levels: rich countries have higher shares...
This paper explores the hypothesis that wage differentials between skill groups across countries are...
Why do some countries and regions have higher capital intensity than others? This question is at the...
Available online 7 September 2006By making use of a simple general-equilibrium model that is relevan...
Why capital does not flow more heavily into poorer countries with lower capital-labor ratios is aque...
In this paper two sets of issues are addressed using panel data from the manufacturing sector of fiv...