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References for Trade and labor markets: Lessons from China’s rise
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Further reading
- Dauth, W., Findeisen, S., Suedekum, J. "The rise of the East and the Far East: German labor markets and trade integration." Journal of the European Economic Association 12:6 (2014): 1643–1675.
- Eaton, J., Kortum, S. "Putting Ricardo to work." Journal of Economic Perspectives 26:2 (2012): 65–90.
- Utar, H. "When the floodgates open: ‘Northern’ firms’ response to removal of trade quotas on Chinese goods." American Economic Journal: Applied Economics 6:4 (2014): 226–250.
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Key references
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Autor, D. H., Dorn, D., Hanson, G. H. "The China
syndrome: Local labor market effects of import competition in
the United States." American Economic
Review 103:6 (2013): 2121–2168. Key reference: [1]
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Krugman, P. R., Obstfeld, M. International
Economics: Theory and Policy (7th Edition). Boston, MA: Addison Wesley, 2005. Key reference: [2]
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Autor, D. H., Dorn, D., Hanson, G. H. "The China Shock:
Learning from labor market adjustment to large changes in
trade." Annual Review of
Economics 8:1 (2016): 205–240. Key reference: [3]
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Bernard, A. B., Bradford Jensen, J., Schott, P. K. "Survival of the
best fit: Exposure to low-wage countries and the (uneven) growth
of US manufacturing plants." Journal of
International Economics 68:1 (2006): 219–237. Key reference: [4]
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Acemoglu, D., Autor, D., Dorn, D., Hanson, G. H., Price, B. "Import competition
and the great US employment sag of the 2000s." Journal of Labor
Economics 34:S1 (2016): S141–S198. Key reference: [5]
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Balsvik, R., Jensen, S., Salvanes, K. G. "Made in China,
sold in Norway: Local labor market effects of an import
shock." Journal of Public
Economics 127:C (2015): 137–144. Key reference: [6]
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Chetverikov, D., Larsen, B., Palmer, C. "IV quantile
regression for group-level treatments, with an application to
the distributional effects of trade" Econometrica 84:2 (2016): 809–833. Key reference: [7]
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Autor, D. H., Dorn, D., Hanson, G. H., Song, J. "Trade adjustment:
Worker level evidence." Quarterly Journal
of Economics 129:4 (2014): 1799–1860. Key reference: [8]
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Pessoa, J. P. International
Competition and Labor Market Adjustment. CEP Discussion
Paper No.1411, 2016-03. Key reference: [9]
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Amiti, M., Dai, M., Feenstra, R. C., Romalis, J. How Did China’s
WTO Entry Benefit U.S. Consumers? NBER Working
Paper No.23487, 2017-06. Key reference: [10]
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The Economist Towards the end of
poverty, 2013-06-01. Key reference: [11]
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Dix-Carneiro, R., Kovak, B. K. "Trade
liberalization and regional dynamics." American Economic
Review 107:10 (2017): 2908–2946. Key reference: [12]
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Autor, D. H., Dorn, D., Hanson, G. H. "The China
syndrome: Local labor market effects of import competition in
the United States." American Economic
Review 103:6 (2013): 2121–2168.
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Additional References
- Ashournia, D., Munch, J., Nguyen, D. The Impact of Chinese Import Penetration on Danish Firms and Workers. Oxford University Department of Economics Discussion Paper Series No.703, 2014-04.
- Donoso, V., Martin, V., Minondo, A. "Do differences in exposure to Chinese imports lead to differences in local labour market outcomes? An analysis for Spanish provinces." Regional Studies (2014).
- Hummels, D., Jorgensen, R., Munch, J., Xiang, C. "The wage effects of offshoring: Evidence from Danish matched worker–firm data." American Economic Review 104:6 (2014): 1597–1629.
- Utar, H. Workers beneath the Floodgates: Impact of Low-Wage Import Competition and Workers’ Adjustment. CESIfo Working Paper No.6224, 2016.