International Economics
International economics is the field of economics that is concerned with the economic interactions of different nations as well as the economic interactions between nations and international institutions. The research usually explores a wide range of global issues in the areas of international trade, development studies, international financial flows, international aid and technical assistance for developing countries, international migration and human rights, and exchange rate regimes.INTEREST(S)
Trade and its changing patternsImpacts of FDIExports DiversificationODI governanceExchange rateTrade negotiation
VISION
To explore the economic interactions of different nations as well as the economic interactions between nations and international institutions for sustainable development
MISSION
To investigate the effects upon economic activity from international differences in productive resources and consumer preferences .
MEMBER(S)
Effect of Foreign Investments on Ethical Outcomes in Developing Countries
Multinational corporations are playing a pivotal role in shaping the socio-economic development of developing countries. This paper explores how knowledge acquisition in African subsidiaries can gener...
Effect of GHG emissions on health status in South and South-East Asian Countries
Using a dynamic health production function (HPF) of eight lower middle-income South and South-East Asian countries and employing a panel Autoregressive Distributive Lag (ARDL) model we estimate long-r...
Effect of return migrants from South Korea to Bangladesh: a qualitative study of labour market reintegration
We are investigating the work experiences of Bangladeshi return migrants who were in South Korea as unskilled workers. We employ a mixed method research design and apply career adaptability theory to ...
The behavioral dynamics of affluence-driven inflation: who creates and who bears the loss?
The study has tested several hypotheses using conventional macroeconomic theories, the World Inequality Database (WID) data of 38 OECD countries, and econometric models.
The Place Premium Paradox in Evaluating the Theories of Migration Through the Lens of Remittances
Traditional models in international economics predict different results of the impact of education and skills on migrants' income or remittances. According to the new model of Place Premium Paradox based on human capital theory, low-skilled migrants earn more than high-skilled professionals. This result is supported by the remittances that they send to their home countries. This study investigates the migration–remittances paradox by testing whether creative labour mobility and ethical remittance frameworks can transform migration challenges into sustainable development. This study is based on 109-country panel data for the period 2000–2024. It examined whether migration enhances labour productivity, schooling, and innovation, and whether remittances generate measurable welfare gains. This analysis applies Driscoll–Kraay fixed effects, System GMM, and Panel VAR models to test three theory-derived hypotheses. Results show development gains arise from income flows rather than skill-based spillovers.