xBookUtils.terms['fn_6_1'] = "Actually, if you divide the value of imported clubs from Mexico by the quantity reported in Table 6-1, you will get an average price of $338. That number seems too high for the price of individual golf clubs (suggesting that either the value or the quantity is misreported in 2012), so we have instead used the average price of imported clubs from Mexico in 2011, which was $70.";
xBookUtils.terms['fn_6_2'] = "If you have read Chapter 1, you will know that large countries do indeed trade the most, as seen in the map of world trade.";
xBookUtils.terms['fn_6_3'] = "For simplicity, we assume that marginal costs are constant, but this need not be the case.";
xBookUtils.terms['fn_6_4'] = "Trade was not completely free in 2001 because the tariff reductions under NAFTA were phased in for periods as long as 15 years. Tariff cuts in the agriculture sector in Mexico had the longest phase-in period.";
xBookUtils.terms['fn_6_5'] = "The U.S. spending bill signed by President Obama in 2009 eliminated a pilot program that would have allowed Mexican long-haul trucks to transport cargo throughout the United States. In retaliation, Mexico imposed tariffs on $2.4 billion worth of American goods. See Elisabeth Malkin, “Nafta’s Promise, Unfulfilled,” The New York Times, March 24, 2009, electronic edition.";
xBookUtils.terms['fn_6_6'] = "Labor productivity for the maquiladoras is real value-added per worker and for non-maquiladoras is real output per worker. Both are taken from Gary C. Hufbauer and Jeffrey J. Schott, 2005, NAFTA Revisited: Achievements and Challenges (Washington, D.C.: Peterson Institute for International Economics), Table 1-9, p. 45.";
xBookUtils.terms['fn_6_7'] = "Wage data refer to production workers who are involved in assembly-line and similar activities. Income data refer to all employees, including production and nonproduction workers. Monthly income includes payment from profit-sharing by firms and a Christmas bonus, which are common in Mexico.";
xBookUtils.terms['fn_6_8'] = "Gordon H. Hanson, 2007, “Globalization, Labor Income and Poverty in Mexico.” In Ann Harrison, ed., Globalization and Poverty (Chicago: University of Chicago Press; Washington, D.C.: National Bureau of Economic Research [NBER]), pp. 417–452.";
xBookUtils.terms['fn_6_9'] = "See Margaret McMillan, Alix Peterson Zwane, and Nava Ashraf, 2007, “My Policies or Yours: Does OECD Support for Agriculture Increase Poverty in Developing Countries?” In Ann Harrison, ed., Globalization and Poverty (Chicago: University of Chicago Press; Washington, D.C.: NBER), pp. 183–232.";
xBookUtils.terms['fn_6_10'] = "Christian Broda and David E. Weinstein, 2006, “Globalization and the Gains from Variety,” Quarterly Journal of Economics, 121(2), May, 541–585.";
xBookUtils.terms['fn_6_11'] = "The information in this paragraph is drawn from Gary Clyde Hufbauer and Jeffrey J. Schott, 2006, NAFTA Revisited: Achievements and Challenges (Washington, D.C.: Peterson Institute for International Economics), pp. 38–42.";
xBookUtils.terms['fn_6_12'] = "We show in Problem 8 at the end of the chapter that this assumption is accurate.";
xBookUtils.terms['fn_6_13'] = "We are not considering the additional losses if the new job has lower wages than earned previously.";
xBookUtils.terms['fn_6_14'] = "That conclusion comes from John McCallum, 1995, “National Borders Matter,” American Economic Review, 615–623. The 1993 data used in Figure 6-9 derive from James A. Anderson and Eric van Wincoop, 2003, “Gravity with Gravitas: A Solution to the Border Puzzle,” American Economic Review, 170–192.";