NATIONAL BUREAU OF ECONOMIC RESEARCH
NATIONAL BUREAU OF ECONOMIC RESEARCH

The Regionalization of the World Economy

Jeffrey A. Frankel, editor

Published in January 1998 by University of Chicago Press
© 1998 by the National Bureau of Economic Research

Order from Amazon.com
286 pages
ISBN: 0-226-25995-1

Table of Contents

1. Front matter, The Regionalization of the World Economy: Jeffrey A. Frankel (p. -12 - 0) (bibliographic info) (download)

Introduction to "Regionalization of the World Economy, The": Jeffrey A. Frankel (p. 1 - 6) (bibliographic info) (download)

2. Determinants of Bilateral Trade: Does Gravity Work in a Neoclassical World?: Alan Deardorff (p. 7 - 32) (bibliographic info) (download)

3. The Role of History in Bilateral Trade Flows: Barry Eichengreen, Douglas A. Irwin (p. 33 - 62) (bibliographic info) (download)

4. Why Do Countries Seek Regional Trade Agreements?: John Whalley (p. 63 - 90) (bibliographic info) (download)

5. Continental Trading Blocs: Are They Natural or Supernatural?: Jeffrey A. Frankel, Ernesto Stein, Shang-Jin Wei (p. 91 - 120) (bibliographic info) (download)

6. The Welfare Implications of Trading Blocs among Countries with Different Endowments: Antonio Spilimbergo, Ernesto Stein (p. 121 - 152) (bibliographic info) (download)

7. Regional Patterns in the Law of One Price: The Roles of Geography versus Currencies: Charles Engel, John Rogers (p. 153 - 188) (bibliographic info) (download)

8. Regionalization of World Trade and Currencies: Economics and Politics: Jeffrey A. Frankel, Shang-Jin Wei (p. 189 - 226) (bibliographic info) (download)

9. Tariff Phase-Outs: Theory and Evidence from GATT and NAFTA: Carsten Kowalczyk, Donald R. Davis (p. 227 - 258) (bibliographic info) (download)

Overview: Anne O. Krueger (p. 259 - 274) (bibliographic info) (download)

Contributors: (p. 275 - 276) (bibliographic info) (download)

Author Index: (p. 277 - 280) (bibliographic info) (download)

Subject Index: (p. 281 - 285) (bibliographic info) (download)

 
Publications
Activities
Meetings
Data
People
About

National Bureau of Economic Research, 1050 Massachusetts Ave., Cambridge, MA 02138; 617-868-3900; email: info@nber.org