Amar Bhidé


Amar Bhidé is the Lawrence D. Glaubinger Professor of Business at Columbia University. A member of Columbia’s Center on Capitalism and Society, he spearheaded the launch of its eponymous journal, Capitalism and Society (published by the Berkeley Electronic Press) which he now edits (with Prof. Edmund Phelps). He is a member of the Council on Foreign Relations and a Fellow of the Royal Society of Arts (RSA). He served on the faculties of Harvard Business School (from 1988 to 2000) and the University of Chicago’s Graduate School of Business. A former Senior Engagement Manager at McKinsey & Company and Vice President at E. F. Hutton, he served on the staff of the Brady Commission which investigated the stock market crash. His books include The Origin and Evolution of New Businesses (Oxford 2000) and he is currently completing a new one, Prospering Together: The Globalization of Innovation.




Papers Published in World Economics:


A Dynamic Theory of China–U.S. Trade

China's trade surplus with the U.S. is now more than a quarter of the U.S. trade deficit and, with China growing faster than the U.S., raises questions about its future course. Some media commentators term the chronic trade surplus "mercantilist" but offer no persuasive motive for it. Academics taking the classical static view regard the trade surpluses as a policy error. The authors offer a rudimentary model in which trade surplus in the early years is central for an optimal growth trajectory. The novelty derives from two features of underdevelopment shaping trade between backward economies like China and advanced economies like the U.S. First, the initial comparative disadvantages in China are an artifact of the uneven technical advances made by the U.S., so China may be able to erase those disadvantages through technological transfers bought with surpluses of exports over imports in goods and services. Reserves may be accumulated to pay for large lumps of know-how. Second, the diffusion of new products requires learning, which takes time, so the initial dearth of familiarity in China with a range of U.S. consumer goods operates as a drag on import demand for them, which may tip trade balances into surplus.

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