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Series:Proceedings  Bank:Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas 

Conference Paper
Can the tide turn?

Proceedings , Issue Oct , Pages 239-248

Conference Paper
Implications of North American free trade for infrastructure and migration on the Texas-Mexico border

Proceedings

Conference Paper
The Legacy of Milton and Rose Friedman's Free to Choose: Economic Liberalism at the Turn of the 21st Century - Remarks

Proceedings , Issue Oct , Pages xi-xii

Conference Paper
The toughest battleground: schools

Over four decades ago, Milton Friedman published Capitalism and Freedom (Friedman 1962). This insightful little book traveled across a broad range of important topics collected around the theme of how government can best operate within a free society. The message was expanded two decades later in Free to Choose (Friedman and Friedman 1980). At the time, the battle of the ideas introduced by these books was being waged by nations, nations that were willing to contemplate war over how societies should be organized. As we look back on how the world has changed since then, I wonder if anybody ...
Proceedings , Issue Oct , Pages 21-35

Conference Paper
The trade, migration, and development nexus

This paper deals with migrants' role in stimulating development in their countries of origin, outlining the three major channels through which migration can affect development: recruitment, remittances, and returns. It next turns to the North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA), assessing the relevance of the Mexico-United States migration hump for migration, trade, and development elsewhere. The paper concludes that migrants can accelerate development in their countries of origin but finds nothing mechanical or automatic about the migration and development linkage. Countries growing and ...
Proceedings

Conference Paper
Inequality and schooling responses to globalization forces: lessons from history

Given the intensity of the current debate about the impact of globalization on brain drain in the Third World and inequality in the First World, it might be useful to look at these forces during the first global century, ending in 1914. This paper reviews what we know about the impact of trade and mass migration on low-wage, labor-abundant European economies and high-wage, labor-scarce overseas New World economies. It reviews the distribution impact everywhere in the Atlantic economy, the extent of the European brain drain, and the schooling responses in both Europe and the United States.
Proceedings

Conference Paper
Trade policy and income distribution

Proceedings

Conference Paper
Preliminary results: the impact of a free trade agreement with Mexico on Texas

Proceedings

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Darby, Michael R. 2 items

Hollifield, James F. 2 items

Orrenius, Pia M. 2 items

Osang, Thomas 2 items

Zucker, Lynne G. 2 items

anonymous 2 items

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