World Languages, asked by simar5910, 19 days ago

marathi question
please tell me fast​

Attachments:

Answers

Answered by αηυяαg
2

The large real wage differentials that can still be observed between developed and developing countries are indicative of the economic gains that can be achieved in terms of global welfare when workers would be allowed to freely cross borders to where their human capital has its greatest return. These welfare gains and the impacts for the distribution of income across owners of capital, workers in migrant-sending countries, the native-born in host countries, and the migrants were already discussed earlier in this chapter by means of Figure 19.2 and Table 19.3. The overall gains are much larger than those that would result from a further reduction of trade barriers between countries. The large real wage differentials that can still be observed between developed and developing countries are indicative of the economic gains that can be achieved in terms of global welfare when workers would be allowed to freely cross borders to where their human capital has its greatest return. These welfare gains and the impacts for the distribution of income across owners of capital, workers in migrant-sending countries, the native-born in host countries, and the migrants were already discussed earlier in this chapter by means of Figure 19.2 and Table 19.3. The overall gains are much larger than those that would result from a further reduction of trade barriers between countries. The large real wage differentials that can still be observed between developed and developing countries are indicative of the economic gains that can be achieved in terms of global welfare when workers would be allowed to freely cross borders to where their human capital has its greatest return. These welfare gains and the impacts for the distribution of income across owners of capital, workers in migrant-sending countries, the native-born in host countries, and the migrants were already discussed earlier in this chapter by means of Figure 19.2 and Table 19.3. The overall gains are much larger than those that would result from a further reduction of trade barriers between countries. The large real wage differentials that can still be observed between developed and developing countries are indicative of the economic gains that can be achieved in terms of global welfare when workers would be allowed to freely cross borders to where their human capital has its greatest return. These welfare gains and the impacts for the distribution of income across owners of capital, workers in migrant-sending countries, the native-born in host countries, and the migrants were already discussed earlier in this chapter by means of Figure 19.2 and Table 19.3. The overall gains are much larger than those that would result from a further reduction of trade barriers between countries. The large real wage differentials that can still be observed between developed and developing countries are indicative of the economic gains that can be achieved in terms of global welfare when workers would be allowed to freely cross borders to where their human capital has its greatest return. These welfare gains and the impacts for the distribution of income across owners of capital, workers in migrant-sending countries, the native-born in host countries, and the migrants were already discussed earlier in this chapter by means of Figure 19.2 and Table 19.3. The overall gains are much larger than those that would result from a further reduction of trade barriers between countries. The large real wage differentials that can still be observed between developed and developing countries are indicative of the economic gains that can be achieved in terms of global welfare when workers would be allowed to freely cross borders to where their human capital has its greatest return. These welfare gains and the impacts for the distribution of income across owners of capital, workers in migrant-sending countries, the native-born in host countries, and the migrants were already discussed earlier in this chapter by means of Figure 19.2 and Table 19.3. The overall gains are much larger than those that would result from a further reduction of trade barriers between countries.

Similar questions
Math, 9 months ago