3D printing: The final frontier for international trade in goods?
The evidence to date suggests that 3D printing might actually complement trade in goods.
The evidence to date suggests that 3D printing might actually complement trade in goods.
Effective place-based policies need to deliver desired spatial economic cohesion while minimizing resource waste and secondary distortions.
Global trade has proved to be less vulnerable than many initially feared and may help drive the recovery.
Big data can help detecting high-potential export products to support diversification.