Abstract
This study observed rapidly rising shares of manufactured and electronic goods in
Korea’s total exports and a trend decline in Korea’s terms of
trade over the period of this study (1967-2001), in accordance with the
Prebisch-Singer hypothesis. Contrary to the expectation of Prebisch, the increasing
proportion of manufactured and electronic goods in Korea’s exports exerted
no favourable influence on the course of Korea’s terms of trade. In fact,
this study supports the later extension to the Prebisch-Singer hypothesis, that
rather than an emphasis on relations between types of
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