ABSTRACT

When can a country be said to benefit from free trade?
This question has obsessed economists for more than 200 years, and a definitive answer has never been provided. Continuing the influential work begun in The Gains from Trade and the Gains from Aid, (Routledge 1995), Murray Kemp here presents the recent progress he and his co-workers have made in tackling this important question.

chapter |4 pages

Introduction

part |2 pages

PART I The gains from trade under perfect competition

chapter 2|8 pages

Trade gains in chaotic equilibria

chapter 11|4 pages

Partial preferential trading associations

chapter 14|6 pages

An antiquarian note on optimal tariffs

chapter 15|4 pages

Smuggling and optimal commercial policy

part |2 pages

PART III Background papers

chapter 23|5 pages

Some properties of egalitarian economies

chapter 25|4 pages

Pareto's compensation principle