Appleyard-Field’s International Economics 4e text is a mid-level International Economics textbook that offers a consistent level of analysis and treatment of the two main subdivisions of international economics—international trade theory and policy and international monetary theory and policy. Comprehensive and clear, the text helps students move beyond recognition toward and understanding of current and future international events.
This edition reflects the latest theoretical developments with a continued emphasis on current applications. This distinctive approach has readers claiming, If it’s clear, concise, and contemporary, it has to be Carbaugh.
This new edition of the well-known and bestselling text, International Economics contains a comprehensive treatment of the theoretical and practical aspects of the subject applied to both developed and less- developed countries.
Comprehensive and clear, International Economics helps students move beyond recognition toward an understanding of current and future international events through real world examples featured throughout the text.
The new edition has been refocused, revised, and thoroughly updated.
This is a comprehensive and up to date textbook ideal for both undergraduate and graduate trade courses. This new edition includes the latest on globalization, economic geography as well as a trade integration and wage inequality.
This classic text has sold well for a half century because it covers all the conventional areas of international economics in an easy-to-understand manner. The 13th edition continues to provide...
Ideal for a one-semester course in international economics, this book is accessible to those within and outside of economics programs.
This textbook describes and predicts production, trade and investment across countries.
Most of the existing textbooks on international economics - a widely taught and ighly popular subject - are long and too detailed and advanced for many students. This book, first...
Lawson doctrine The view, attributed to Nigel Lawson, U.K. Chancellor of the Exchequer in the 1980s, that a current account deficit (page 88) that results from a shift in private-sector savings or investment, is not a cause for concern.