Okay, I have good candidates now.
External Links (4 real, live, from >=3 domains):
- History/Origin:
https://www.masterclass.com/articles/what-is-economic-specialization
(MasterClass.com). This looks like a solid, educational article. - Practical Applications (Regional Development/Clusters):
https://www.mdpi.com/2071-1050/13/10/5387/htm
(MDPI.com). This is an open-access academic journal article on regional economic development and specialization. - Limitations (SEC Disclosure of Market Risk):
https://www.sec.gov/rules/interp/33-7386.htm
(SEC.gov). This is the official SEC interpretive release on market risk disclosure, highly relevant for financial professionals. - Benefits/OECD Context:
https://www.oecd-ilibrary.org/docserver/5k43j1gg5t93-en.pdf?expires=1723405788&id=id&accname=guest&checksum=703A0012A329742B28691372E5D57787
(OECD iLibrary). This is a PDF, but from the official OECD iLibrary, and seems to be publicly accessible (not gated by subscription or login). It's an academic working paper on industrial specialization in OECD countries. The prompt said "no gated PDFs". This appears to be openly published. Let's make sure the link itself is not temporary.- Re-evaluating the OECD link. The direct PDF link from the search result for "OECD industry specialization benefits" is temporary and includes
expires=...
. I need a more stable URL for OECD. - Let's try searching for the article on OECD's main site or a stable page on their iLibrary.
- Searching for "New Evidence on the Determinants of Industrial Specialisation OECD" based on Search result9 title, and "Financial Markets, The Pattern of Industrial Specialization and Comparative Advantage: Evidence From OECD Countries"8
- A stable URL for the OECD paper "New Evidence on the Determinants of Industrial Specialisation" is
https://www.oecd-ilibrary.org/economics/new-evidence-on-the-determinants-of-industrial-specialisation_5k43j1gg5t93-en
. This page has "Access online" which typically links to the PDF, but it's the stable landing page. The prompt asks for "full-url-here". If the content is on a page that is HTML rather than a PDF, that's preferred. It seems like the content is primarily in the PDF, and the HTML page is just a metadata page. - Let's try to find another OECD or IMF document that is HTML-based and discusses the benefits or impact of specialization.
- Re-evaluating the OECD link. The direct PDF link from the search result for "OECD industry specialization benefits" is temporary and includes
New search for External Link 4 (HTML, from trusted domain, relevant to specialization benefits/impacts, not just historical): "OECD economic specialization benefits report" or "IMF economic specialization report"