Robert C. Feenstra is Professor of Economics at the University of California, Davis. He received his B.A. in 1977 from the University of British Columbia, Canada, and his Ph.D. in economics from MIT in 1981. Feenstra has been teaching international trade at the undergraduate and graduate levels at UC Davis since 1986, where he holds the C. Bryan Cameron Distinguished Chair in International Economics. Feenstra is a research associate of the National Bureau of Economic Research, where he directs the International Trade and Investment research program. He is the author of Offshoring in the Global Economy and Product Variety and the Gains from Trade (MIT Press, 2010). Feenstra received the Bernhard Harms Prize from the Institute for World Economics, Kiel, Germany, in 2006, and delivered the Ohlin Lectures at the Stockholm School of Economics in 2008. He lives in Davis, California, with his wife Gail, and has two grown children: Heather, who is a genetic counselor; and Evan, who recently graduated from Pitzer College.
International Economics Feenstra And Taylor Pdf Download
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This course provides an intermediate-level introduction to international macroeconomics and finance. To start with, it presents the balance of payments and shows its economic significance. It then goes on to analyse theories of exchange rate determination. The final part of the course is devoted to currency and debt crises of the last decades and to the financial imbalance that has built up between the Asian economies and the United States.
The lecture notes for this course can be downloaded from Moodle. They serve as an orientation. This means that they are not complete and that the course material will be studied in more detail during the classes. Most importantly, reading of assigned chapters (for each topic there will be a clear reference) from the ollowing international economics textbooks is essential:
The lecture notes for this course can be downloaded from the homepage of the professor. They serve as an orientation. This means that they are not complete and that the course material will be studied in more detail during the classes. The following international economics textbooks are not needed for the course, but they may be useful as references:
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