This textbook is designed for use on international economics courses and is suitable for both undergraduate and introductory graduate students. The authors give equal space to the international trade and finance aspects of the subject and fully integrate the relevant theory with empirical evidence. Throughout, the key concepts are related to real world situations and international economic policy issues. Technical detail is minimized and mathematical appendices are provided to supplement an almost wholly verbal and geometric treatment. The book is divided into two parts. Part I, The Microeconomics of the Open Economy, covers the trade theory and policy, market imperfections and the implications for trade policy, trade integration, with special reference to the European Community, trade, factor movements and technological change, and the phenomenon of the Multinational Enterprise. Part II covers the Macroeconomics of the Open Economy. Key concepts are introduced, followed by chapters on models of exchange rate determination, empirical evidence, and key controversies in open economy macroeconomics.
Shelagh Heffernan is a Senior Lecturer in International Finance at the City University Business School. A former Commonwealth Scholar, Dr Heffernan's research interests lie in the field of international economics and finance. She has published a number of research papers and a book,
Sovereign Risk Analysis (1986).
Peter Sinclair is Fellow and Tutor in Economics at Brasenose College, Oxford. He is the author of The Foundations of Macroeconomic and Monetary Theory (1983) and Unemployment: Economic Theory and Evidence (1987), and the editor of Prices, Quantities and Expectations (1987). He is the co-author and co-editor of several other books. Since 1982, he has been a managing editor of Oxford Economic Papers.