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Effects of Industrial Growth on Hong Kong Trade

Ronald Hsia
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Ronald Hsia: Political Science, University of Hong Kong,

The Pakistan Development Review, 1962, vol. 2, issue 4, 559-586

Abstract: Industrial growth with its increasing demand for capital equipment and raw materials and consequent diversification of products is bound to affect the trade-pattern of an economy. The extent of such effects depends on a host of conditions, the more important of which include 1) the size, geographical location, and resource endowments of the economy, 2) the relative importance of external trade, 3) the level of economic development, 4) the motivation and model of industrial development, and 5) the institutional framework. These factors operate, in the case of Hong Kong's industrial growth, to generate greater effects on external trade.

Date: 1962
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