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Importing High-Risk Capital And Revealing Hidden Comparative Advantages

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  • Tamir Agmon

Abstract

The comparative advantage of a country is determined by its factor intensity. In many cases factors of production can be accumulated over time and thus effect a change in the comparative advantage of a given country. The changes in the accumulation of factors can be a policy decision, or it can arise from other economic developments. The change in the comparative advantage of Israel in the last decade of the 20th century where the country has become a center for innovative new technology was affected by the globalization of the US capital market and the ability of Israeli companies and service organization to build an informational infrastructure that has made it possible to import high-risk specific sector capital to Israel. Importing this type of capital has completed the already existing human capital and makes a potential, hidden, advantage into a business reality. The Israeli experience is evidence to the contribution of international capital movements to economic growth of a small country. It also shows the relations between the international finance model of capital movements and the development economics case for the changing pattern of the comparative advantages of small countries, and the contribution of the capital markets to the process.

Suggested Citation

  • Tamir Agmon, 2004. "Importing High-Risk Capital And Revealing Hidden Comparative Advantages," William Davidson Institute Working Papers Series 724, William Davidson Institute at the University of Michigan.
  • Handle: RePEc:wdi:papers:2004-724
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