1 / 32

Chapter 34

Chapter 34. International Trade and Comparative Advantage. No nation was ever ruined by trade. BENJAMIN FRANKLIN. Table 1. Labor costs in industrialized countries as a percentage of U.S. labor costs. Why Trade?. Countries – differences: Resources Distributed unequally across planet

chesna
Download Presentation

Chapter 34

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Chapter 34 International Trade and Comparative Advantage No nation was ever ruined by trade. BENJAMIN FRANKLIN

  2. Table 1 Labor costs in industrialized countries as a percentage of U.S. labor costs

  3. Why Trade? • Countries – differences: • Resources • Distributed unequally across planet • Natural endowments • Climate, terrain • Skills of labor force • Specialization in production

  4. Why Trade? • Specialization, country • Devotes energies & resources • Small proportion of world’s productive activities • Trade • To exploit advantages of specialization • Voluntary exchange • Everybody gains

  5. Trade is a win-win situation • Voluntary exchange / trade • Redistribute products • Both parties – gain • Hold more preferred combinations of goods • Than they held before • Applies to • Nations • Individuals

  6. International vs. Intranational Trade • Intranational trade • Gain from specialization and free trade • 50 states of U.S. • Single national government • Same currency ($) • Labor & capital mobility

  7. International vs. Intranational Trade • International trade • Gain from specialization and free trade • Political factors • Different governments • Many currencies • Impediments to labor & capital mobility • Immigration quotas • Restricted employment to foreigners • Foreign investment - risk

  8. The Law of Comparative Advantage • Absolute advantage • One country – over another • Produce a good • Use smaller quantities of resources • Comparative advantage • One country - over another • Production of particular good • Relative to other goods • Less inefficiently

  9. Principle of comparative advantage • David Ricardo (1772–1823) • Classical economist • Countries - gain from trade • Even if one is more efficient • Than the other • In every industry • One - absolute advantage • Producing every commodity

  10. Principle of comparative advantage • Country - absolute disadvantage • Relative to another country • Production of every good • Has a comparative advantage • Good - least inefficient • Most efficient patterns of production • Comparative advantage – matters • Absolute advantage – doesn’t matter

  11. Table 2 Alternative outputs from one year of labor input

  12. Table 3 Example of the gains from trade

  13. The Law of Comparative Advantage • Specialization & exchange • Change in production arrangements • World productivity – increase • Every country does • What it can do best • All countries – benefit • Increase production • Every commodity • No increase in • Amounts of resources used

  14. Figure 1 Production possibilities frontiers for two countries (per million years of labor) 60 50 U.S. production possibilities frontier Japanese production possibilities frontier 40 Television sets (millions) 30 U S N J 20 10 0 10 20 30 40 50 60 Computers (millions)

  15. The Law of Comparative Advantage • Country - absolute advantage • Higher per-capita production possibilities frontier • Difference in comparative advantage • Difference in slopes of production possibilities frontiers • Very similar countries • May gain little from trade • Very different countries • Large gains from trade

  16. The Law of Comparative Advantage • Two countries • Voluntarily trade two goods • With one another • Rate of exchange • Between goods • Must fall - in between price ratios • Prevail - in the absence of trade • Incomplete specialization • Some countries – too small • Production possibilities frontiers - curved

  17. Figure 2 The gains from trade Japanese production possibilities Japanese consumption possibilities U.S. production possibilities 60 60 U.S. consumption possibilities 50 50 40 40 30 30 Television sets Television sets A U S N P J 20 20 10 10 0 0 10 10 20 20 30 30 40 40 50 60 Computers Computers (a) Japan (b) United states

  18. Tariffs, Quotas, & other Interferences • Mercantilism - doctrine • Exports – good for a country • Imports – harmful • 1930s – protectionist, U.S. • Past 60 years, U.S. – decrease • Tariffs • Trade barriers

  19. Tariffs, Quotas, & other Interferences • Control trade • Tariffs • Tax on imports • Quotas • Legal limit on imports • Export subsidies • Government payment to exporter • Reduce price • Compete in foreign markets

  20. Tariffs, Quotas, & other Interferences • Tariffs vs. Quotas • Both • Reduce international trade • Increase price • Domestically produced goods • Tariffs • Profits from higher price • Foreign & domestic sellers • Quotas • Some of the profits • Revenue to government of importing country

  21. Tariffs, Quotas, & other Interferences • Tariffs vs. Quotas • Tariffs • Promote efficiency • Quotas • May be • Political favoritism • Corruption • Preference for tariffs over quotas

  22. Why Inhibit Trade? • Gaining a price advantage • For domestic firms • Tariffs/quotas – benefit • Particular domestic industries • Country - able to impose them • Without fear of retaliation • When every country uses tariffs/quotas • Every country - likely to lose in long run

  23. Why Inhibit Trade? • Protecting particular industries • Limit foreign competition • Preserve employment - protected industry • High cost • Consumers • Economy

  24. Table 4 Estimated costs of protectionism to consumers

  25. Why Inhibit Trade? • Free-trade & Government assistance • Temporary protection from sudden changes • Trade adjustment assistance • Special unemployment benefits • Loans • Retraining programs • Other aid • To workers & firms - harmed by foreign competition

  26. Why Inhibit Trade? • National defense • Produce own national defense equipment • Other noneconomic considerations • Political • Infant-industry argument • Stands up only if • Glowing profit prospects • Private funds – unavailable

  27. Can Cheap Imports Hurt a Country? • Dumping • Selling goods in a foreign market • At lower prices • Than those charged in home market

  28. Supply, Demand, and Pricing in World Trade • Free trade, equilibrium price • Balance world supply and demand • Quantity exported by one country • Must = quantity imported by the other country • Price – same in both countries

  29. Figure 3 Supply-demand equilibrium: international wheat trade Importing country’s supply Exporting country’s supply Exporting country’s demand 2.50 Price of wheat per bushel Price of wheat per bushel $3.25 G B A H E D F C Imports Exports Importing country’s demand Quantity of Wheat Quantity of Wheat (b) Importing country (a) Exporting country

  30. How tariffs and quotas work • Tariffs • Raise prices • Reduce quantity of imports demanded • Quotas • Reduce supply • Raise prices

  31. How tariffs and quotas work • Quotas - Reduce volume of trade • Raise price – importing country • Reduce price – exporting country • Tariffs • Quantity exported by one country • Must = quantity imported by the other country • Price paid (consumers, importing country) • = Tariff + price received (suppliers, exporting country)

  32. Figure 4 Quotas and tariffs in international trade Importing country’s supply Price of wheat per bushel Price of wheat per bushel Exporting country’s demand Exporting country’s supply $2.50 2.50 $3.25 2.00 B A D Q R S T C Importing country’s demand 80 50 85 87.5 57.5 115 125 95 Quantity of Wheat Quantity of Wheat (b) Importing country (a) Exporting country

More Related