Volume One 1. Pre-classical views of trade 2. Classical theory of the gains from trade Volume Two 3. Neoclassical theory of international trade 4. Protectionist responses to classical free-trade doctrines 5. Journal articles on international trade from 1919 to 1930 (including articles by Frank W. Taussig, James W. Angell, Frank D.
Graham and John H. Williams) Volume Three 6. The exchange of the German transfer problem (J. M. Keynes, Bertil Ohlin and Jacques Rueff); and studies of international capital movements Volume Four 7. Primary sources of the modern Heckscher-Ohlin-Samuelson factor-proportions theory of international trade 8. Developments in modern trade theory in the 1930s (Wassily Leontief and Abba P. Lerner) Volume Five 9.
General equilibrium in international trade (Theodore Yntema, Jacob Mosak, Lione McKenzie) Volume Six 10. International exchange rates (including material by Ricardo, Gustav Cassel, Elizabeth Caroline van Dorp, Ludwig von Mises, John Maynard Keynes and Ralph Hawtrey) Volume Seven 11. The emergence of Keynesian open-economy macroeconomics Volume Eight 12. Absorption, elasticity, and monetary approaches to the foreign exchanges and balance of payments Volume Nine 13. Fixed versus flexible exchange rates 14. The Mundell-Fleming or IS-LM-BP approach to open economy macroeconomics Volume Ten 15. Developments in international trade theorylt;/STRONG>9. General equilibrium in international trade (Theodore Yntema, Jacob Mosak, Lione McKenzie) Volume Six 10.
International exchange rates (including material by Ricardo, Gustav Cassel, Elizabeth Caroline van Dorp, Ludwig von Mises, John Maynard Keynes and Ralph Hawtrey) Volume Seven 11. The emergence of Keynesian open-economy macroeconomics Volume Eight 12. Absorption, elasticity, and monetary approaches to the foreign exchanges and balance of payments Volume Nine 13. Fixed versus flexible exchange rates 14. The Mundell-Fleming or IS-LM-BP approach to open economy macroeconomics Volume Ten 15. Developments in international trade theory.