Muendler (2013)
chapter 1: introduction
chapter 2: principle of comparative advantage
chapter 3: competitiveness, comparative advantage and the terms of trade
chapter 4: trade, endowments, and the income distribution
chapter 6: intermediate input trade and offshoring
chapter 14: comparative advantage in capital markets
the average score you achieve on the exams will not matter by itself for your final grade. only your score relative to your classmates matters. if everyone else gets 2 out of 50 points, for instance, while you get 3, your grade will be an A+. if everyone else gets 47 out of 50 points but you get only 45, your grade will be a D. of course, the distribution of raw scores is typically much wider so that final grades are well assigned by the curve. given voluntary withdrawals, the letter grade F is rare and assigned only if a student's performance falls below an absolute minimum, independent of the class-wide raw score distribution.