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International Trade

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Two countries produce two goods, X & Y using two factors of ... Point at which they cross is where trade is balanced, i.e. trade triangles are equal. ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: International Trade


1
International Trade
  • Week 3 - Standard Trade Model and Gains from Trade

2
Standard Trade Model
  • Technology
  • Two countries produce two goods, X Y using two
    factors of production, labor, L and capital, K.
    (2 x 2 x 2 model)
  • Prodn function exhibits constant returns to
    scale, diminishing marginal returns to a factor.
  • Economies have different endowments of the
    factors of prodn.
  • Tastes
  • Economys preferences can be represented by
    community indifference curves.
  • Assume away distortions like taxes, subsidies,
    imperfect competition.

3
Technology Country PPF
  • PPF Shape shows diminishing marg. returns to
    factors of prodn.
  • Iso-Value Lines For given set of relative
    prices, px, shows prodn points with equal value.
  • Perfect Competition Nation chooses highest
    iso-value line given its PPF.

Y
X
4
Trade and Relative Prices
  • Begin with country in autarkic equilibrium
  • relative price (PX/PY)A consump/prodn at point
    A.
  • Opening country to trade changes relative price.
  • Assume Home exports Good X, then new price will
    be steeper than in autarchy (PX/PY)T (PX/PY)A.
  • Home consumes at point C, produces at point Q
  • Increases prodn of Good X (which it exports).
  • Increases consumption of Good Y (which it
    imports).
  • As in Classical Model, opening trade leads to
    gains to both economies. You should be able to
    show that Foreign will also benefit, using a
    similar diagram.

5
Effects of Trade on a Country
Y
UH
A
(PX/PY)A
Prodn Possibilities
X
6
Change in U.S. Employment Resulting from
Foreign Trade, 1970-1980
Source R.Z. Lawrence, Can America Compete?
7
Sources of Gains from Trade
  • Can break a countrys gains from trade into two
    distinct parts.
  • Gains from Exchange (Consumption Gains)
  • Assume trade changes the relative price but the
    country continues to produce at the autarchy
    equilib. Point A.
  • Nation still experiences a gain in welfare due to
    price change measured by move from point A to C1.
  • Gains from Specialization (Production Gains)
  • The change in relative price leads the country to
    change production from Point A to Point Q1.
  • Nation experiences an additional gain in welfare
    due to prodn specialization measured by move
    from point C1 to C2.
  • This is similar to the substitution/wealth effect
    analysis of a price change in microeconomics.

8
Sources of Gains from Trade
Y
Prodn Possibilities
A1
(PX/PY)1
X
9
Sources of the Basis for Trade
10
The Basis for Trade
  • Mutual gains from trade arise in the Standard
    model of trade in essentially two ways
  • Differences in Production Possibilities
  • PPFs may differ across countries in ways that
    give rise to trade due to
  • Differences in Technology
  • Differences in Factor Endowments
  • Differences in Tastes
  • Utility curves across countries can differ in
    ways that give rise to trade even when PPFs are
    identical.
  • Illustrate trade possibilities in these two
    situations

11
Differing Technology/Endowments
Y
X
12
Differing Utility Functions
Assuming identical PPFs for Home Foreign.
Y
X
13
Revealed Comparative Advantage Composition of
Exports Imports of the U.S., Europe, and Japan
in 1990
Source GATT, International Trade, 1991-1992
14
Determining Trade Equilibrium
15
Trade Equilibrium
  • In equilibrium, terms of trade adjust to ensure
    balanced trade between the two countries.
  • Current account 0 in Standard Trade Model
    equilib.
  • Can illustrate trade equilibrium using diagram of
    PPFs and utility curves for the two countries.
  • Both PPFs utility curves differ across
    countries initially. Autarchy relative prices
    differ, leading to potential gains from trade.
  • Trade equalizes relative prices across countries.
  • In equilibrium, this relative price adjusts to
    make trade triangles for each country identical,
    i.e. balanced trade.

16
Determining Trade Equilibrium
Y
PPFH
PPFF
X
17
Relative Demand Supply
  • Alternative, and easier way, to visualize
    equilibrium terms of trade is to use relative
    demand and supply.
  • Relative Demand
  • Increase in PX/PY, relative price of Good X,
    results in relative fall in demand for Good X
    relative to Good Y.
  • Corresponds to move from C1 to C2 on next slide.
  • Relative Supply
  • Increase in PX/PY, relative price of Good X,
    results in movement along the PPF of each country
    from Q1 to Q2.
  • Result is a relative increase in prodn of Good X
    relative to Good Y.

18
Deriving Relative Demand Supply
Relative Price of X
Y
PX/PY
PPF
C1
Q1
(PX/PY)1
X
Relative Quantity of X
(qX qX)/(qY qY)
19
Terms of Trade for Developing and Developed
Countries 1972-1988
Terms of Trade Export Unit Value Import Unit
Value, 1972 100
Source IMF, International Financial Statistics
20
Growth Trade Equilibrium
21
Economic Growth Trade
  • How does economic growth both in our country in
    the rest of the world affect trade?
  • Ambiguity at common sense level
  • Our growth means better able to export to world
    but
  • May mean receive lower prices for our exports.
  • Similar considerations for growth in rest of
    world.
  • We look only at effects of growth on trade,
    particularly a countrys terms-of-trade.
  • Our economic growth increases our GDP directly
    but look at whether effect through trade adds or
    subtracts from this benefit of growth.
  • Similarly growth in another nation has no direct
    effect on us but may benefit or hurt us through
    effect on trade.

22
Growth and a Nations PPF
  • Economic growth shifts out a nations PPF.
  • Trade effects occur because growth often biased,
    shifts PPF out more in one good than the other.
  • Export-biased Growth
  • Growth that expands a nations PPF more towards
    its export good.
  • Import-biased Growth
  • Growth that expands a nations PPF more towards
    its import good.

23
Export-Biased Growth and Trade
Relative Price of X
Y
PX/PY
RS0
PPF0
(PX/PY)0
RD0
Q0
X
Relative Quantity of X
(qX qX)/(qY qY)
24
Import-Biased Growth and Trade
Relative Price of X
Y
PX/PY
RS0
PPF0
Q0
(PX/PY)0
RD0
X
Relative Quantity of X
(qX qX)/(qY qY)
25
Economic Growth Welfare
  • Export-biased growth tends to worsen a nations
    terms of trade benefiting the rest of the world.
  • Import-biased growth tends to improve a nations
    terms of trade at the rest of the worlds
    expense.
  • Immiserizing Growth
  • 1950s belief that export-biased growth could
    worsen terms of trade so much that nation worse
    off than if had not grown at all.
  • Requires extreme conditions unlikely to hold in
    real world (large shift, steep RS RD curves)

26
Trade Policy Equilibrium
27
Trade Policy Equilibrium
  • Look at effects of three types of govt policies
    on terms of trade equilibrium.
  • International Income Transfers
  • Pure income transfers (aid) or short run effects
    of changes in international lending.
  • Import Tariffs
  • Taxes levied on nations imports
  • Export Subsidies
  • Payments given to domestic producers of export
    goods.

28
International Income Transfers
  • Income transfer from Home to Foreign.
  • Home expenditure falls, Foreign expenditure
    rises.
  • Net result for RD depends on differences in marg.
    prop. to spend on Good X between Home Foreign.
  • Transfer shifts RD back if donor has higher mps
    on its export than recipient.
  • Donors terms of trade worsen.

Relative Price of X
PX/PY
RS0
(PX/PY)0
RD0
Relative Quantity of X
(qX qX)/(qY qY)
29
Import Tariffs Terms of Trade
  • Both tariffs subsidies drive a wedge between
    prices of goods internationally (external prices)
    domestically (internal prices).
  • Tariff
  • Makes imported goods more expensive within a
    nation than they are outside. This has two
    effects within nation
  • Home producers face lower relative price of Good
    X so produce less X and more Y. (RS falls)
  • Home consumers demand less Y and more X. (RD
    rises)
  • Homes terms of trade improve at expense of
    Foreign.
  • Size of effect depends on how large Home is
    relative to ROW. If country is small then little
    impact on world RD and RS so correspondingly
    small effect on terms of trade

30
Effects of a Import Tariff
Relative Price of X
  • Import tariff decreases internal relative price
    of export good X vs. good Y.
  • Internal price of export good X falls.
  • Home produces less X more Y (RS shifts in).
  • Home consumes less X more Y (RD shifts out).
  • Terms of trade improve for Home and worsen for
    Foreign.

PX/PY
RS0
(PX/PY)0
RD0
Relative Quantity of X
(qX qX)/(qY qY)
31
Effects of a Export Subsidy
  • Export subsidy has exact opposite effect on
    internal versus external prices to an import
    tariff.
  • Internal price of export good X rises.
  • Home produces more X less Y (RS shifts out).
  • Home consumes less X more Y (RD shifts in).
  • Terms of trade worsen for Home and improve for
    Foreign.

Relative Price of X
RS0
PX/PY
(PX/PY)0
RD0
Relative Quantity of X
(qX qX)/(qY qY)
32
Summary of Policy Effects
  • International Distribution of Income
  • Import Tariff
  • Tariff hurts Rest of World by hurting its terms
    of trade.
  • Improves Homes terms of trade BUT leads to
    distortion in prodn consumption (efficiency
    losses).
  • Export Subsidy
  • Subsidy helps ROW by improving its terms of
    trade.
  • Hurts Homes terms of trade AND leads to
    distortion in prodn consumption (efficiency
    losses)
  • In a multi-commodity world
  • Export subsidies to goods we import, improve our
    welfare
  • Import tariffs on goods we export, hurt our
    welfare.

33
Alternative Method to Determine Trade Equilibrium
34
Offer Curves and Trade Equilib.
  • Offer Curve analysis focuses explicitly on a
    countrys exports and imports at any terms of
    trade.
  • Use PPF/Utility function diagram to generate
    difference between consumption and prodn for
    each good at any relative price (its trade
    triangle at each relative price).
  • Offer Curve Diagram summarizes these trade
    triangles with relative price equal to slope of
    ray from origin.
  • Can construct an Offer Curve for each country.
    Point at which they cross is where trade is
    balanced, i.e. trade triangles are equal.
  • Can use to analyze effects of growth or trade
    policy as alternative to relative demand/supply
    approach.

35
Deriving An Offer Curve
Home Imports, CY QY
Foreign Exports, QY CY
Y
C1
Q1
(PX/PY)1
Prodn Possibilities
X
Home Exports, QX CX
Foreign Imports, CX QX
36
Offer Curves Trade Equilibrium
Home Imports, CY QY
Foreign Exports, QY CY
Home Exports, QX CX
Foreign Imports, CX QX
37
Export-Biased Growth and Trade II
Home Imports, CY QY
Foreign Exports, QY CY
Home Country Offer Curves
Y
OC0
OC1
PPF1
C1
PPF0
C0
Q1
Q0
(PX/PY)
X
Home Exports, QX CX
Foreign Imports, CX QX
38
Export-biased Growth Trade II
Home Imports, CY QY
Foreign Exports, QY CY
Home Country OC0
( PX /PY)0
OC1
( PX /PY)1
Home Exports, QX CX
Foreign Imports, CX QX
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