From: Alejandro Valle Baeza (avalleb@prodigy.net.mx)
Date: Tue Feb 11 2003 - 15:09:15 EST
Jerry, perhaps this is a response for your question: " Re: Comparative advantage discussion a.. Messages sorted by: [ date ][ thread ][ subject ][ author ] b.. Next message: John M. Legge: "Capital controls" c.. Previous message: =?iso-8859-1?Q?G._Sebasti=E1n_Menescaldi?=: "(no subject)" d.. In reply to: aldo balardini: "Comparative advantage discussion" Fri, 13 Nov 1998 13:23:14 -0800 Jim Devine (jdevine@popmail.lmu.edu) >Now, if we assume a different theory of money, like that found in >CAPITAL or in THE GENERAL THEORY, Ricardo's outcome will be >completely different. As gold flows out of England, bank reserves >decline, interest rate increase, investment declines and output >declines. England experiences a chronical trade account deficit. >Portugal on the other hand receives gold, which makes bank reserves >increase, lowering interest rates, increasing investment and output. >Portugal experiences a chronical trade account surplus and a capital >account deficit as capital flows into England attracted by the higher >interest rate. England, ironically, becomes the chronically indebted >country and Portugal the chronically creditor country. >A different theory of money therefore destroys the happy ending of >Ricardo's model, and absolute rather than comparative advantage >determines the direction of trade benefits. this theory was well-analyzed by Anwar Shaikh, both in SCIENCE & SOCIETY and in a book edited by Ed Nell titled GROWTH, PROFITS, AND PROPERTY. Jim Devine jdevine@popmail.lmu.edu & http://clawww.lmu.edu/Faculty/JDevine/jdevine.html a.. Next message: John M. Legge: "Capital controls" b.. Previous message: =?iso-8859-1?Q?G._Sebasti=E1n_Menescaldi?=: "(no subject)" c.. In reply to: aldo balardini: "Comparative advantage discussion" ----- Original Message ----- From: gerald_a_levy To: ope-l@galaxy.csuchico.edu Sent: Tuesday, February 11, 2003 4:51 AM Subject: [OPE-L:8453] Re: Comparative advantage: Comparative exploitation Re [8403]: There was an interesting comment on the Kohler paper on the Post-Keynesian Thought (PKT) list by Kazuhiro Kurose (from the Graduate School of Economics and Business Administration at Hokkaido University in Sapporo, Japan): http://csf.colorado.edu/mail/pkt/2003I/msg00298.html He claims that if instead of a two-good model, another good (such as gold) is adopted as numeraire or if there is a three- good model then the principle of comparative advantage lacks generality. Kurose doesn't cite a source, though, for this conclusion. Does anyone know of such a source by Kurose or anyone else? Solidarity, Jerry An article by Gernot Kohler: "Comparative advantage: Comparative exploitation" http://www.atimes.com/atimes/Global_Economy/EA29Dj02.html
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