Gysin Realty Group LLC 3655 Liberty Rd S, Salem, OR 97302 (971)6000205 (Phone), (971)6000241 (Cell)
Languages:
German Spanish
Description:
Hello! Hola! I grew up in the Monmouth area and when I finished high school, left to Europe for two years and then to Portland State University for a degree in Foreign Languages. I focused on German and Spanish. While in Portland I worked with a few investors to buy and hold residential and commercial properties. We did sell a few of those early businesses and properties, though. I met Dusty Rose during that time and we eventually married (in Boston, on the Green Monster at Fenway Park) and moved to Quito, Ecuador. We lived in the Andes Mountains and adventured throughout South America for two years. From there Sofia, Bulgaria was home for a couple of years. Abuja, Nigeria was our third international post and we stayed there for three years. After such a long time abroad, we both decided we should adventure around the Northwest, our home, for some years. So, here we are back in Oregon. Dusty Rose teaches high school Math and I joined the professional Real Estate industry. I work with the Gysin Realty Group, LLC office on Liberty Road S Salem, Oregon I'm here to help. I'm honest and loyal. I'm capable and can handle your scenario, whether selling or buying! Gordon Hanson Gysin Realty Group, LLC 3655 Liberty Rd S Salem, Or 97361
lobalization has brought many benefits, to be sure, but the losses have been more persistent and more concentrated than the optimists expected. In a widely cited study, David Autor, David Dorn, and Gordon Hanson examine what the authors call the China shock, and reach a number of pessimistic conclusions:
Date: Nov 28, 2016
Category: Business
Source: Google
One of the most important trade deals in the world lives — but so does anti-globalization sentiment
And there actually is some empirical evidence to back up those grievances. Back in January, labor economists David Autor, David Dorn, and Gordon Hanson published a paper showing that increased trade with China actually caused some big problems for US workers.
Date: Oct 27, 2016
Category: World
Source: Google
WHY IT MATTERS: Debate showed how divisive trade has become
Even some economists are having second thoughts about free trade. David Autor of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Gordon Hanson of the University of California, San Diego, and David Dorn of the University of Zurich looked at the American workers most exposed to competition from China.
Mexico is our teammate, said economist Gordon Hanson, director of the Center on Global Transformation at the University of California San Diego. When you look at manufacturing in the U.S., you have to look at manufacturing in the U.S., Canada and Mexico.
Date: Aug 21, 2016
Category: Business
Source: Google
Perspective: Worst may be over for American workers
Economists David Autor, David Dorn and Gordon Hanson have found that, between 1990 and 2007, the American communities most exposed to Chinese competition saw their manufacturing workers pushed into persistent unemployment, their non-manufacturing workers pushed into accepting lower wages, and everyo
ge on American communities across the country, damage from which they have yet to recover. As the economists David Autor, David Dorn, and Gordon Hanson have documented, what they call the China shockbeginning in 1991 and lasting into this centurydemolished manufacturing in much of the U.S. Workers i
Date: Feb 15, 2016
Category: U.S.
Source: Google
The Economics of Immigration: Who Wins, Who Loses and Why
To put it simply, if American workers and firms can figure out how to do their jobs more efficiently, well see economic growth. And according to University of California economist Gordon Hanson, immigrants specifically high-skilled immigrants are great for innovation. Immigrants are more likel
leaders and publications to dismiss these sentiments as raw politics. But there's more to them. In a recent NBER paper, "The China Syndrome," economists David Autor, David Dorn, and Gordon Hanson, who cannot be accused of shilling for anyone, examine the effects of Chinese import competition on the U.S.