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Economics 2010. Rober Martinez-Espineira. Lecture 4 Growth and Trade. Growth and Trade. QUIZ1 WEEK 5 (Fri OCT 14th). Growth and Trade. Economic growth Gains from trade The evolution of trading arrangements. Economic Growth. economic growth = expansion of production possibilities
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Economics 2010 Rober Martinez-Espineira Lecture 4 Growth and Trade
Growth and Trade • QUIZ1 WEEK 5 (Fri OCT 14th)
Growth and Trade • Economic growth • Gains from trade • The evolution of trading arrangements
Economic Growth • economic growth = expansion of production possibilities • Why do production possibilities expand?
Economic Growth • The two key factors that influence economic growth are: • technological progress • capital accumulation
Determinants of Economic Growth • Technological progress (development of new and better ways to produce goods and services and development of new goods) • Capital accumulation growth of capital resources
Economic Growth • Economic growth in a factory • Install more capital or adopt new technology
Economic Growth • Economic growth in a household • Invest in human capital (or other types of capital: buy a washing machine!)
Economic Growth • Economic growth in a nation • Invest in new technologies, and capital, including human capital,
Gains from trade • Everyone gains from trade • Trade is not a zero-sum game • The source of gain is comparative advantage • A person has a comparative advantage in producing a particular good if that person can produce the good at a lower opportunity cost than anyone else
Gains from trade • Mark can produce jeans or skirts • For Mark, 1 skirt costs 0.5 jeans • Or, 1 pair of jeans costs 2 skirts
Gains from trade • Marjorie can produce jeans or skirts • For Marjorie, 1 skirt costs 0.08 jeans • Or, 1 pair of jeans costs 12.5 skirts
Gains from trade • Let’s look at these two PPFs on a single picture • Suppose each produces the same quantities
Gains from trade • How can they gain from trade? • By specializing in the activity at which they have a comparative advantage
Gains from trade • They can now exchange (trade) jeans and skirts. • Suppose Marjorie sells Mark 12.5 thousand skirts for 2.5 thousand jeans
Gains from trade • Mark now gets skirts at a cost of 0.2 pairs of jeans per skirt • His opportunity cost of producing skirts is 0.5 pairs of jeans per skirt
Gains from trade • Marjorie now gets jeans at a cost of 5 skirts per pair of jeans • Her own opportunity cost of producing jeans is 12.5 skirts per pair of jeans
Gains from trade • They each can operate outside their individual production possibilities frontiers
Evolution of trading arrangements • Note that, just as in the example you have in your book • These gains form a trade apply also when one of the traders has an absolute advantage in the production of both goods relative to the other person!
Gains from Trade: one person has the absolute advantage at making both goods Liz's Smoothie Bar In an hour, Liz can produce 40 smoothies or 40 salads. Liz's opportunity cost of producing 1 smoothie is 1 salad. Liz's opportunity cost of producing 1 salad is 1 smoothie. Liz’s customers buy salads and smoothies in equal number, so she produces 20 smoothies and 20 salads an hour.
Gains from Trade Joe's Smoothie Bar In an hour, Joe can produce 6 smoothies or 30 salads. Joe's opportunity cost of producing 1 smoothie is 5 salads. Joe's opportunity cost ofproducing 1 salad is 1/5 smoothie. Joe spends 10 minutes making salads and 50 minutes making smoothies, so he produces 5 smoothies and 5 salads an hour.
Gains from Trade • Liz’s Absolute Advantage • Absolute advantage • When one person is more productive than another person in several or even all activities. • Liz is four times as productive as Joe—Liz can produce 20 smoothies and 20 salads an hour and Joe can produce only 5 smoothies and 5 salads an hour.
Gains from Trade • Liz’s Comparative Advantage • Liz’s opportunity cost of a smoothie is 1 salad. • Joe’s opportunity cost of a smoothie is 5 salads. • Liz’s opportunity cost of a smoothie is less than Joe’s, so Liz has a comparative advantage in producing smoothies.
Gains from Trade • Joe’s Comparative Advantage • Joe’s opportunity cost of a salad is 1/5 smoothie. • Liz’s opportunity cost of a salad is 1 smoothie. • Joe’s opportunity cost of a salad is less than Liz’s, so Joe has a comparative advantage in producing salads.
Gains from Trade • Achieving Gains from Trade • Liz and Joe produce more of the good in which they have a comparative advantage: • Liz produces 35 smoothies and 5 salads. • Joe produces 30 salads.
Gains from Trade • Liz and Joe trade: • Liz sells Joe 10 smoothies and buys 20 salads. • Joe sells Liz 20 salads and buys 10 smoothies. • After trade: • Liz has 25 smoothies and 10 salads. • Joe has 25 smoothies and 10 salads.
Gains from Trade • Gains from trade: • Liz gains 5 smoothies and 5 salads an hour—she originally produced 20 smoothies and 20 salads. • Joe gains 5 smoothies and 5 salads an hour—he originally produced 5 smoothies and 5 salads.
Gains From Trade • Figure 2.7 shows the gains from trade. • Joe initially produces at point A on his PPF. • Liz initially produces at point A on her PPF.
Gains From Trade • Joe’s opportunity cost of producing a salad is less than Liz’s. • So Joe has a comparative advantage in producing salad.
Gains From Trade • Liz’s opportunity cost of producing a smoothie is less than Joe’s. • So Liz has a comparative advantage in producing smoothies.
Gains From Trade • If Joe specializes in producing salad, he produces 30 salads an hour at point B on his PPF.
Gains From Trade • If Liz produces 25 smoothies and 5 salad an hour, she produces at point B on her PPF.
Gains From Trade • They exchange salads for smoothies along the red “Trade line.” The price of a salad is 2 smoothies or the price of a smoothie is ½ of a salad.
Gains From Trade • Joe buys smoothies from Liz and moves to point C—a point outside his PPF. • Liz buys salads from Joe and moves to point C—a point outside her PPF.
Gains From Trade • Dynamic Comparative Advantage • Learning-by-doing occurs when a person (or nation) specializes and by repeatedly producing a particular good or service becomes more productive in that activity and lowers its opportunity cost of producing that good over time. • Dynamic comparative advantage occurs when a person (or nation) gains a comparative advantage from learning-by-doing.
Evolution of trading arrangements • Trade between nations is similar to trade between Mark and Marjorie • Trade among millions of people has evolved social mechanisms and institutions to facilitate that trade • markets • property rights • money
Property rights are social arrangements that regulate the ownership, use and disposal of resources. • A market is any institution that enables buyers and sellers to get information and trade with each other. They help co-ordinate individual decisions through price adjustments.
Key terms • opportunity cost • absolute advantage • comparative advantage • specialization • trade • property rights • market
Next • Any questions about today’s stuff? • Demand and Supply • Read Parkin’s Chapters 3 and 4!!!