Home>Publications>Econometrica>On the General Structure of Ricardian Models with a Continuum of Goods: Applications to Growth, Tariff Theory, and Technical Change
A continuum of goods is introduced into the general Ricardian model of international trade. By looking at the derived demand for labor, it is demonstrated that the analysis of the model can be reduced to the analysis of anequivalent model of pure exchange in which each country essentially trades its own labor of other countries. Furthermore unlike the case where the number of goods is finite, the derived demand for labor becomes a differentiable function of the relative wages of the different countries. How this facilitates the analysis of comparative statics exercises is illustrated by establishing number of propositions in the theory of growth, technical change, and tariffs.
MLA
Wilson, Charles A.. “On the General Structure of Ricardian Models with a Continuum of Goods: Applications to Growth, Tariff Theory, and Technical Change.” Econometrica, vol. 48, .no 7, Econometric Society, 1980, pp. 1675-1702, https://www.jstor.org/stable/1911928
Chicago
Wilson, Charles A.. “On the General Structure of Ricardian Models with a Continuum of Goods: Applications to Growth, Tariff Theory, and Technical Change.” Econometrica, 48, .no 7, (Econometric Society: 1980), 1675-1702. https://www.jstor.org/stable/1911928
APA
Wilson, C. A. (1980). On the General Structure of Ricardian Models with a Continuum of Goods: Applications to Growth, Tariff Theory, and Technical Change. Econometrica, 48(7), 1675-1702. https://www.jstor.org/stable/1911928
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