Abstract
This paper examines the patterns and determinants of Australia's revealed comparative advantage in manufactured exports. The results show that Australia's greatest comparative advantage is in technology-intensive and skill-intensive products. Export competitiveness appears to be positively influenced by the intensity of intra-industry trade, overseas investment, research-and-development expenditure intensity and human-capital intensity. On the other hand, high protection has been a major deterrent to international competitiveness.
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