- countries.
Nontradables tend to be labor-intensive; therefore,
because labor is less
expensive in poor
countries and is used
mostly for
nontradables, nontradables...
- the
consumption may be
cheaper in some
countries than others,
because nontradables (especially land and labor) are
cheaper in less-developed countries....
-
Tradability is the
property of a good or
service that can be sold in
another location distant from
where it was produced. A good that is not
tradable is...
- Strauss, Jack (1999), "Productivity Differentials, the
Relative Price of
Nontradables and Real
Exchange Rates",
Journal of
International Money and Finance...
- to use
fiscal restraint,
especially in the form of
spending cuts on
nontradables, so as to
lower aggregate demand and curb the
inflationary impact of...
- wage
growth being repressed and
linked to the
productivity growth of
nontradable goods in a
country with
undervalued currency. In such a country, the...
-
Underlying Principles and Structure" (PDF). June 2006. p. 7. "Zero-Coupon
Nontradable Su****".
Retrieved 14
March 2017. Jamaldeen,
Islamic Finance For Dummies...
- Not
Fully Integrated Aug 1993:
International Evidence on
Tradables and
Nontradable Inflation Mar 1993: The
Determinants of
Realignment Expectations Under...
-
headquartered firms,
particularly small,
highly leveraged firms that
produce nontradable goods. Home bias also
creates some less
obvious problems for investors:...