xBookUtils.terms['fn_10_1'] = "“Trade facilitation” measures, referred to in the quote, mean the streamlining of customs procedures so as to increase the flow of international trade.";
xBookUtils.terms['fn_10_2'] = "In the United States, export tariffs are prohibited by Clause 5 of the U.S. Constitution.";
xBookUtils.terms['fn_10_3'] = "Margaret McMillan, Alix Peterson Zwane, and Nava Ashraf, 2007, “My Policies or Yours: Have OECD Agricultural Policies Affected Incomes in Developing Countries?” In Ann Harrison, Globalization and Poverty [Chicago: University of Chicago Press and National Bureau of Economic Research (NBER)], pp. 183–232.";
xBookUtils.terms['fn_10_4'] = "The G8 countries consist of Canada, France, Germany, Italy, Japan, Russia, the United Kingdom, and the United States. In addition, the European Union as a whole is represented at the G8.";
xBookUtils.terms['fn_10_5'] = "The six other minerals are coke, fluorspar, magnesium, manganese, silicon carbide, and silicon metal. The information in this paragraph and the next is drawn from Keith Bradsher, “In Victory for the West, W.T.O. Orders China to Stop Export Taxes on Minerals,” The New York Times, January 30, 2012, and “Rare Earth Trade Case Against China May Be Too Late” The New York Times, March 13, 2012.";
xBookUtils.terms['fn_10_6'] = "There are 17 rare earth minerals, consisting of the 15 lanthanides along with yttrium and scandium. The material in this paragraph is drawn from Jacob Marder, “The Rare Earth Metal Industry,” University of California, Davis.";
xBookUtils.terms['fn_10_7'] = "See Kyle Wiens, “A Visit to the Only American Mine for Rare Earth Metals”, The Atlantic, February 21, 2012, electronic edition.";
xBookUtils.terms['fn_10_8'] = "The numbers we are using in the payoff matrix are made up for convenience, but they illustrate the idea of competition between the firms for the sale of a new aircraft.";
xBookUtils.terms['fn_10_9'] = "The book and movie A Beautiful Mind describes the career of John Nash.";
xBookUtils.terms['fn_10_10'] = "Notice that if the initial equilibrium was one in which Airbus produced and Boeing did not, then the only effect of the subsidy would be to make this equilibrium unique; it would not change the decision of either firm. Moreover, the effect on total European welfare would be zero because the subsidy would be just a transfer from the European government to Airbus.";