Tema 1. Neoclassical Predictions and Economic
History
1.1. The Heckscher-Ohlin
model.
1.2. Neoclassic Predictions and Robert Lucas.
1.3. When did globalization begin?
2.1. Transportation Costs.
2.2. Information and Contract Enforcement.
2.3. The Political factor.
Tema 3. Pre-Industrial International Commerce:
1000–1750
3.1. Northern
Commerce, in the Baltic and
3.2. The Portuguese and Spanish Empires, 1420–1600.
3.3. English Overseas Trade.
Tema 4. Pre-Industrial Money and Capital
Markets: 1000–1750
4.1. Banking,
credit, and finance, 1280–1520.
4.2. The European Price Revolution Era c.1540-c. 1640: The Problem
of Inflation and Economic Growth in Early-Modern
4.3. Financial integration in the Middle Ages.
II. MODERN INTERNATIONAL ECONOMIC
HISTORY
Tema 5. Globalization and the industrial
revolution
5.1. Form mercantilism
to the first global era.
5.2. Industrialization in the Core: From Corn Laws to free Trade.
5.3.
Tema 6. Globalization in the Periphery: De-industrialization
and Protection
6.1. The De-industrialization
of
6.2. Tariff Barriers in
6.3. The role of the commodity lottery and implications for
development and inequality.
Tema 7. Emergence of Global Factor Markets:
Labor and Capital
7.1. The age
of mass migration.
7.2. Convergence of prices.
7.3. Money and capital markets.
Tema 8. Globalization Backlash in the 20th
Century
8.1. The Great
Depression.
8.2. Regionalization and the postwar order.
8.3. De globalization from the periphery.
Tema 9. The second global era
9.1. The emergence
of
9.2. The new
impact of migration movements.
9.3. Globalization and inequality as if all citizens mattered:
the gender approach.
Tema 10. Globalization and inequality in
the log run
10.1. When
and why do countries converge?
10.2. When and why do countries diverge?
10.3. Does globalization make the world more unequal?
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- Class participation (10%). Class discussion is an essential
component of this tutorial. Be prepared to discuss the assigned
readings in class.
- Group assignment (20%). You will be required to prepare a
1 hour presentation in groups of 3-4 students about one of the
topics listed below.
- Final exam (70%).