CORPORATE TAXES AND THE UNITED STATES BALANCE OF TRADE: REPLY

1973 ◽  
Vol 26 (4) ◽  
pp. 655-655
Author(s):  
MAURICE D. WEINROBE
1928 ◽  
Vol 38 (151) ◽  
pp. 487
Author(s):  
J. M. Keynes

1996 ◽  
Vol 4 (3) ◽  
pp. 73-87
Author(s):  
Alan J. Dubinsky ◽  
Abdalla Hanafy

Exporting has become a popular means for businesses to augment sales and profitability and for countries to improve their gross domestic product and balance of trade. As a complement to export selling, high-level government officials increasingly are providing export promotional assistance to their nations’ industries. Much of what is known about this “high-level government selling, “ however, is based on conventional wisdom and anecdotal evidence. This article reports the results of a study that examined non-U.S. politicians’ export selling efforts. Data were obtained from surveys of foreign embassy diplomats in the United States. Findings offer insights into what government officials are doing to stimulate sales of their countries’ exports.


Author(s):  
William Brown

Let us suppose France and the United States to enter into a convention with us to issue pieces of gold of the same weight and fineness as our sovereign—that is, containing 113 grains of fine gold; the three countries would then have a common standard of gold money. Let us examine whether, in the face of the operations of commerce, the international quality of value of these coins could at all times be maintained. The temporary balance of trade is always fluctuating in favour of one or the other country; a permanent balance against any country is impossible.


2001 ◽  
Vol 17 (1) ◽  
pp. 71-107 ◽  
Author(s):  
Sandra Kuntz Ficker

This article aims at reconstructing the yearly values of the bilateral trade between Mexico and the United States in the era of liberal capitalism, that is, between 1870 and 1929. It provides with new series of commodity imports and exports, specie flows, and the balance of trade between the two nations. Based upon the new series, the article analyses the evolution of bilateral trade and the role of the United States in Mexico's external commerce. It follows the process by which the United States became Mexico's main trading partner, and points to some of the forces that drove this process. Este trabajo se propone reconstruir los valores anuales del comercio bilateral entre Mééxico y Estados Unidos en la era del capitalismo liberal, esto es, entre 1870 y 1929.Ofrece nuevas series anuales de las importaciones y exportaciones de mercancíías, de los flujos de metáálico y de la balanza comercial entre las dos naciones. Con base en las nuevas series, el artíículo analiza la evolucióón del comercio bilateraly elpapelde Estados Unidos en elcomercio exterior de Mééxico. Al hacerlo, sigue el proceso por el cual Estados Unidos se convirtióó en el principal socio comercial de Mééxico, y apunta a algunos de los factores que impulsaron ese proceso.


2021 ◽  
Vol 12 (3) ◽  
pp. 88
Author(s):  
Thai Nguyen Quang ◽  
Trinh Bui

In recent years, although the balance of trade in goods of Vietnam has always been surplus for many years but the real domestic economy has been also deficit. People were thrilled for that achievement. The study attempts to estimate how the trade flows between the four countries Vietnam, China, the United State (US) and the Europe (EU) induce to output and value added of each country?The research used inter - country input - output model between those countries for analyzing the effects of trade flow to the economy of each country, especially for Vietnam.


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