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International Economics & Trade Theory. CIA4U – Unit 5. Globalization. DEFINED: the increasing international flow of “stuff” goods & services production and manufacturing people information & ideas culture diseases. Globalization. International trade theory tells us:
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International Economics & Trade Theory CIA4U – Unit 5
Globalization • DEFINED: the increasing international flow of “stuff” • goods & services • production and manufacturing • people • information & ideas • culture • diseases
Globalization • International trade theory tells us: • increased trade between countries will make us ALL better off • trade is good • specialization is good • trade barriers (tariffs, taxes, fees) are bad (economically-speaking) • Similar to “free market” theory
Globalization and Trade Theory • David Ricardo – 1817 • outlined mutual benefits of trade • Example: • Two nations, England and Portugal; two goods being produced – wine and cloth • Ceteris paribus conditions: • full employment • full use of resources • no changes in technology • perfect competition • no international migration of resources
Globalization and Trade Theory – An Example • If they dedicated all resources to wine: • England: 100 bottles • Portugal: 400 bottles • If they dedicated all resources to cloth: • England: 100 tonnes • Portugal: 200 tonnes
Globalization and Trade Theory • With the same amount of labour, Portugal is better able to produce both goods • This is called an absolute advantage • Think about each country’s opportunity cost • Portugal’s OC of 400 wine = not making 200 cloth (2 wine: 1 cloth) • England’s OC of 100 wine = not making 100 cloth (1 wine: 1 cloth) • Who should make wine? • Who should make cloth?
Globalization and Trade Theory • Thus: • England is less productive (ceteris paribus) overall than Portugal, but at home is less worse at producing cloth than wine • Might seem like Portugal should just make its own cloth and wine… • BUT • if England specializes in making cloth (called its comparative advantage) • Portugal specializes in wine • The two countries trade their products, and both are overall better off!
Was it Worth it? • Pre-trade and specialization • England: 50 wine, 50 cloth • Portugal: 200 wine, 100 cloth • Post-trade and specialization • England: 75 wine, 50 cloth • Portugal: 225 wine, 100 cloth
Globalization and Current Issues • Classify world’s countries in three levels of development: • Industrialized/developed (i.e. Canada, France, Japan) • Newly industralized (i.e. Mexico, China) • Developing (i.e. Kenya) or underdeveloped (i.e. Sierra Leone)
Issues • What do “rich” countries have to trade? What do they want? • What do “poor” countries have to trade? What do they want?
Simulation • Carry out trade simulation • Debrief • Positives? Negatives?