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International interdependence: Some long-term trends and recent changes

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  22 May 2009

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Abstract

This paper provides data on long-term changes in international interdependence. Transactions exchanged between societies and states are one possible means of interdependence. Two decades ago Karl Deutsch collected a substantial amount of data which illustrated a long-term decline in transactions since the beginning of the twentieth century. An extension of his time series data points to a possibly important reversal of that trend in recent years. This conclusion is in agreement with other empirical measures of international interdependence.

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Articles
Copyright
Copyright © The IO Foundation 1975

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References

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23 Calculated from the data tape of “World Handbook II,” Charles L. Taylor and Michael C. Hudson, Senior Investigators.

24 Calculated from Union Postale Universelle, Statistique des Services Postaux 1969.

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29 1971 data, Agency for International Development as reported in The World Almanac and Book of Facts 1974, pp. 619–20Google Scholar. U.N. Yearbook of National Accounts Statistics 1972, vol. 3, pp. 3–7. The shift in the source was made in order to replicate as fully as possible the analysis of Deutsch and Russett.

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