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Four Alternative Policies to Restore Balance of Payments Equilibrium

Econometrica 1952 20(3), 372 open access
Stimulated by Fleming's study on a related subject, the author compares four methods to eliminate balance of payments disequilibria between high-employment countries forming a closed group: (i) "discriminatory" import duties and subsidies, (ii) "discriminatory" duties only or the corresponding quantitative restrictions, (iii) nondiscriminatory duties, and (iv) devaluation or income adaptation. For each an "optimum version" is defined and chosen; they are compared as to (a) the loss in international trade and (b) the distribution of the "direct burden" between the countries (defined as the short-run loss in real expenditure). A number of rather specific simplifications are introduced, all tending to make the case as symmetric as possible with regard to countries and commodities. As a consequence of the high-employment hypothesis and of absence of production substitution, problems of optimum allocation of resources are ruled out; the approach is a short-run one. Only policies (i) and (iv) show no loss of trade, whereas the others do; but in the case of devaluation the "direct burden" is relatively heavier for the deficit countries than in the other three cases.

On a Quantitative Method in Production Planning and Scheduling

Econometrica 1952 20(4), 554
Definitions and axioms based on engineering and economic concepts in production are presented, and then a conceptual model of production is constructed illustrating the methods which the manager uses in planning and scheduling production. Even under the assumed conditions of certainty in demand and prices, it is shown to be a difficult task and one in which optimal solutions are seldom achieved. In order then to indicate the relevance of the model and its eventual possible usefulness, it is compared with industrial practices and with other mathematical models of production.