International Trade, Globalization and Financial Crisis - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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International Trade, Globalization and Financial Crisis

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International Trade, Globalization and Financial Crisis Impacts on Scale, Distribution, Efficiency and Democracy Current Crisis Origins Dot.com bust real estate boom ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: International Trade, Globalization and Financial Crisis


1
International Trade, Globalization and Financial
Crisis
  • Impacts on Scale, Distribution, Efficiency and
    Democracy

2
What is Globalization?
  • The integration of all national economies into
    one global market, with one set of rules
  • Global market takes precedence over national
    autonomy
  • Supporting institutions are IMF, World Bank,
    World Trade Organization (WTO), NAFTA, etc.
  • Whats a legitimate alternative?

3
What are its defining characteristics?
  • Economic growth (increasing material consumption)
    as sole desirable end
  • Privatization and commodification of public
    services, national and global commons
  • Corporate deregulation and unrestricted movement
    of capital across borders
  • Increased corporate concentration
  • Cultural and economic homogenization

4
What has been the impact of Globalization on
  • Ecological sustainability
  • Distribution of wealth and income
  • Economic output
  • Economic stability
  • Democracy
  • The allocation of scarce resources towards an
    improved quality of life for all people

5
The Theory Behind International Trade
6
Comparative advantage
  • One country can be more efficient at producing
    everything than another country, and still
    benefit from trade with the inefficient country
  • Assumes that trade must be advantageous or else
    countries would not participate.

7
Numerical example
1 rupiah 5 pesos Philippines has absolute
advantage
8
Impacts of comparative advantage
  • More total output and freedom of choice in
    consumption
  • More specialization, and less freedom of choice
    in production (but only desirable end is
    consumption)
  • Some sectors/regions within a country will lose
    out (but winners can compensate losers)

9
Global Markets are good for everyone
  • Markets will end poverty
  • The real losers in Seattle
  • Markets will solve environmental problems
  • Environmental Kuznets curve
  • Population growth and poverty
  • Economic growth is essential
  • Humans are insatiable
  • The Moral Consequences of Economic Growth (B.
    Friedman)
  • Protectionism beggar thy neighbor

10
Comparative or Absolute Advantage?
  • What if capital can flow between countries?
  • Indonesian capitalists will produce fish and
    clothes in the Philippines

11
Numerical example
1 rupiah 5 pesos
12
Absolute advantage
  • There will be more fish and clothes
  • What about employment in Indonesia? Can people
    flow across borders?
  • Is efficient economic production all that
    matters?
  • Can winners compensate losers?
  • If trade is voluntary, how could this happen?
  • e.g. Toxic waste in Abidjan

13
The Facts Behind Globalization
14
What empirical results would we expect under
absolute advantage?
  • Rich get richer, poor get poorer
  • Headlines Number of Hungry Rising, U.N. Says
    By ELIZABETH BECKER Published December 8, 2004
  • Number of hungry and number of poor at record
    levels (though not when measured in percentage
    terms, especially if we include China)
  • Income of poorest countries is falling (World
    Bank statistics)
  • Richest countries accumulating greatest share of
    new wealth
  • 1 of GNP growth in US GNP of 24 poorest nations

15
How does a country get an absolute advantage?
  • Race to the bottom
  • Environment
  • WagesMexican wages 11 of US wages
  • We would expect the countries with the lowest
    wages and most lax environmental standards to
    exhibit economic growth and atrocious
    environmental degradation
  • Headline 9/1/2004 Rivers Run Black, and Chinese
    Die of CancerBy JIM YARDLEY, NYT
  • How does a country develop domestic markets for
    domestic production?

16
Unavoidable Environmental Costs of Trade
  • Transportation
  • Global warming
  • Oceanic pollution
  • Dependence on fossil fuels
  • Spread of weed species (especially aquatic)
  • Asian longhorn beetle
  • San Francisco Bay
  • Salmon bacteria

17
NAFTA and the Environment
  • Environmental side agreement
  • Environmental Kuznets Curve
  • Actual results in Mexico from 1985-1999Gallagher,
    GDAE
  • Rural erosion increased 89 as small farmers
    cultivated more in response to decreasing prices
  • Municipal solid waste increased 108
  • Water pollution29
  • Urban air pollution97

18
NAFTA and the Environment
  • Chapter 11
  • Metalclad corporation
  • Toxic dump site or natural protected area?
  • MTBE, MME
  • WTO similar
  • Turtle excluder devices
  • Marine mammal protection act

19
NAFTA and the Environment
  • Growing corn exports from US

20
NAFTA and Distribution
  • Who are poorest in Mexico?
  • 22 of Mexico's labor force in small ag.
  • What do we export to Mexico?
  • Corn prices dropped 45 in Mexico (US subsidies
    average 20,000/farmer/year)
  • Tortilla prices increased in Mexico
  • Mexican farmers produced more, not less
  • What does Mexico export to US?
  • Whats the impact on unions, wages?

21
NAFTA and Distribution
  • Significant decline in real wages in Mexico
    (minimum wage down 23 under NAFTA)
  • Number of households in poverty increased 80
    between 1984-1999, 75 living in poverty
  • Over half of rural Mexico in extreme poverty
  • Record increase in number of billionaires

22
NAFTA and Efficiency
  • Exports up in Mexico, but imports up by more
  • Rate of growth less than 1 per capita per year
    (1985-1999) vs. 3.4 under import substitution
    industrialization.

23
NAFTA and Efficiency
  • Environmental impacts
  • Financial costs of degradation from 1988-1999 10
    of GDP (36 billion/yr)Gallagher, GDAE
  • Economic growth 14 billion/yr
  • Distributional impacts
  • Law of diminishing marginal utility

24
Announcements
  • 4 groups turned in PS5, all have received
    comments
  • Remaining groups should consider themselves to be
    failing the class currently. I have no qualms
    about giving failing grades.
  • Make an appointment to meet with me if you need
    to.
  • Participation counts. Many of you are earning
    failing grades on participation skipping class,
    not contributing in classF
  • Dont skip class on Thursday

25
Globalization and Stability Financial contagion
  • What is contagion?
  • Speculative flows
  • 2 trillion per day, vs. 36 Trillion global GNP
  • What does speculation contribute to economic
    output?
  • Speculators are harmless as bubbles on a steady
    stream of enterprise. But the position is serious
    if enterprise becomes a bubble on the whirlpool
    of speculation. When the capital development of a
    country becomes the by-product of the activities
    of a casino, the job is likely to be ill-done.
  • John Maynard Keynes

26
Causes of Financial Meltdowns
  • Speculative bubbles
  • Moral hazard
  • Fundamentals wrong
  • High current account deficits
  • Excessive money creation
  • NYT Headlines Fed Plans to Inject Another 1
    Trillion to Aid the Economy
  • Overvalued exchange rates
  • Relative to what?

27
(No Transcript)
28
Causes of Contagion
  • Freedom of capital to go where it wants
  • Hot money
  • Imperfect information
  • Herd behavior, animal spirits, Reflexivity
  • Positive feedback loops and multiple equilibria
  • Selling short

29
Examples of Contagion
30
LA debt crisis (1982)
  • ISI and the energy crunch
  • Petro-dollars
  • Reagonomics
  • Capital flight, exchange rate depreciation
  • Switch from ISI to Export promotion,
    implementation of Washington Consensus
  • The lost decade

31
Tequila crisis (1994)
  • Clintons comments
  • Uprising and assassination
  • Political uncertainty
  • Tesobonos
  • Capital flight and devaluation

32
Asian flu (1997)
  • Real estate bubble
  • Financial speculation, Soros and devaluation
  • Impacts of devaluation on debt
  • Impacts on trade competitors
  • IMF role interest rates, taxes, government
    spending, bailouts
  • Malaysias response

33
Impacts on Democracy
  • Structural adjustment programs
  • Brazils elections

34
Current Crisis
  • Origins
  • Dot.com bust? real estate boom
  • Exotic derivatives and imperfect information
  • Financial speculation
  • From liquidity crisis to liquidity surplus
  • Contagion

35
Policy Options
  • Tobin Tax
  • Speculation tax
  • Restricting capital flows
  • Higher marginal tax brackets and more equitable
    distribution
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