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Working Paper

IDS working papers;47

Skill, Trade and International Inequality

Published on 1 January 1996

Heckscher-Ohlin trade theory suggests that greater openness enlarges inter-country differences in stocks of skill (or human capital), which new growth theory suggests would cause inter-country divergence of per capita incomes.

Econometric analysis of data on about 90 countries during 1960-90 confirms that greater openness tends to cause divergence of secondary and tertiary enrolment rates between more-educated and less-educated countries, and also between land-scarce and land-abundant countries. These findings may have implications for the optimal choice of trade policies by poor countries.

Publication details

published by
IDS
authors
Wood, A. and Ridao-Cano, C.
journal
IDS Working Paper, issue 47
isbn
1 85864 110 1
language
English

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