"I have spent my whole professional life as an international
economist thinking and writing about economic geography, without
being aware of it," begins Paul Krugman in the readable and
anecdotal style that has become a hallmark of his writings. Krugman
observes that his own shortcomings in ignoring economic geography
have been shared by many professional economists, primarily because
of the lack of explanatory models. In Geography and Trade he
provides a stimulating synthesis of ideas in the literature and
describes new models for implementing a study of economic geography
that could change the nature of the field.Economic theory usually
assumes away distance. Krugman argues that it is time to put it
back - that the location of production in space is a key issue both
within and between nations.Paul Krugman is Professor of Economics
at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. He has been a
consultant to the International Monetary Fund, the World Bank, the
United Nations, the Trilateral Commission, and the U.S. State
Department. He is a member of the Group of Thirty. His books
include the recent bestselling Age of Diminished Expectations: U.S.
Economic Policy in the 1990s.
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