It was derived in 1941 from within the framework of the
Heckscher–Ohlin model by
Wolfgang Stolper and
Paul Samuelson, but has subsequently been derived in less restricted models. As a term, it is applied to all cases where the effect is seen.
Ronald W. Jones and
José Scheinkman show that under very general conditions the factor returns change with output prices as predicted by the theorem. If considering the change in real returns under increased
international trade a robust finding of the theorem is that returns to the scarce factor will go down,
ceteris paribus. An additional robust corollary of the theorem is that a
compensation to the scarce factor exists which will overcome this effect and make increased trade
Pareto optimal. The original
Heckscher–Ohlin model was a two-factor model with a labor market specified by a single number. Therefore, the early versions of the theorem could make no predictions about the effect on the unskilled labor force in a high-income country under trade liberalization. However, more sophisticated models with multiple classes of worker productivity have been shown to produce the Stolper–Samuelson effect within each class of labor: Unskilled workers producing traded goods in a high-skill country will be worse off as international trade increases, because, relative to the world market in the good they produce, an unskilled
first world production-line worker is a less abundant factor of production than capital. The Stolper–Samuelson theorem is closely linked to the
factor price equalization theorem, which states that, regardless of international factor mobility, factor prices will tend to equalize across countries that do not differ in technology. ==Derivation==