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Theories of International Trade

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Title: Theories of International Trade


1
Theories of International Trade
  • AG BM 338
  • Agribusiness in the Global Economy

2
LEARNING OBJECTIVES
  • After todays class, you should be able to
  • Understand classical theories of international
    trade
  • Understand modern theories of international trade
  • Draw implications for action

3
Trade Balance
  • trade deficit - An economic condition in which a
    nation imports more than it exports
  • trade surplus - An economic condition
  • in which a nation exports more than it imports
  • balance of trade - The aggregation of buying
    (importing) and selling (exporting) by both sides
    leads to the country-level trade surplus or
    deficit.

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Trade Theories
  • classical trade theories - major theories
    typically studied consist of mercantilism,
    absolute advantage, and comparative advantage
  • modern trade theories - major theories typically
    studied consist of product life cycle, strategic
    trade, and national competitive advantage

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The Age of Mercantilism
  • Between 1600 and 1800 most of Western Europe
    pursued a policy of mercantilism
  • What was mercantilism?
  • Belief that exports should exceed imports
  • Bullionism the belief that the economic health
    of a nation was measured by the amount of
    precious metals (gold and silver) it possessed
  • Colonialism colonies were viewed as sources of
    raw materials
  • Heavy government control of trade, with the
    goals of trade being the goals of governments

9
Absolute Advantage
  • Producing a good with fewer inputs (capital,
    labor, land, raw materials, etc.) per unit of
    output than other countries
  • If input prices are the same in two countries,
    the country with an absolute advantage in a good
    will have a lower unit cost of production for
    that good
  • Adam Smith, The Wealth of Nations, 1776
  • A country should produce and export products in
    which it has an absolute advantage
  • A country should import products in which it has
    an absolute disadvantage

10
Absolute Advantage Problems
  • What about a country (like the U.S.) that has an
    absolute advantage in most products?
  • How can it possibly produce enough of everything
    to satisfy the whole world?
  • As production increased, competition for scarce
    inputs would drive up production costs, taking
    away many absolute advantages
  • What about a country (like Nepal) that has an
    absolute disadvantage in nearly all products?
  • Why should its resources sit around unused?
  • As production fell, prices of inputs would fall,
    lowering production costs and creating some
    absolute advantages

11
Comparative Advantage
  • Producing a good at a lower opportunity cost
    than another country
  • Inputs used in the production of one good arent
    available for the production of other goods
  • When a country produces a good, what does it
    give up in foregone production of other goods?
  • David Ricardo, The Principles of Political
    Economy and Taxation, 1817
  • A country should produce and export products in
    which it has a comparative advantage
  • A country should import products in which it has
    an comparative disadvantage

12
Opportunity Cost
  • opportunity cost - the cost of pursuing one
    activity in terms of the foregone return on the
    next-best alternative activity
  • Examples
  • The opportunity cost of going to college is what
    you could have earned working full-time instead
  • The opportunity cost of using a plant to
    manufacture one product is what the company could
    have earned manufacturing another product at the
    plant instead

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Numerical Example
  • One input (labor)
  • Two goods (corn, timber)
  • Two countries (A, B)
  • Which country has an absolute advantage in
  • Corn production?
  • Timber production?
  • Which country has a comparative advantage in
  • Corn production?
  • Timber production?

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More on Comparative Advantage
  • Even a country at an absolute disadvantage in
    everything will have a comparative advantage in
    something
  • Each country specializes in the production and
    export of what it does relatively well
  • Prices of goods and inputs in a free-market
    economy will adjust in order to lead to this
    outcome

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More on Comparative Advantage
  • Countries rely on imports to meet consumer
    demands for goods in which they dont have a
    comparative advantage
  • A country can achieve consumption levels beyond
    what it could achieve on its own
  • Government policy can alter free-market outcomes
    (import tariffs, import quotas, export subsidies,
    etc.)

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Some Definitions
  • factor endowments - extent to which different
    countries possess various factors, such as labor,
    land, and technology
  • resource mobility - assumption that a resource
  • removed from one industry can be moved to another

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Factor Proportions (Heckscher-Ohlin) Trade Theory
  • A country that is relatively abundant in a
    factor of production should export goods that use
    a lot of that factor in the production process,
    and import other goods
  • Example a country like China with a lot of
    labor should export labor-intensive goods
  • Why? If a factor is relatively abundant, it will
    be relatively cheap, and a country will be more
    globally competitive in products that use a lot
    of that factor

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Modern Trade Theories
  • product life cycle theory - economic theory that
    accounts for changes in the patterns of trade
    over time
  • strategic trade theory - theory that suggests
    that
  • strategic intervention by governments in certain
    industries can enhance their odds for
    international success
  • first-mover advantages - Advantages that first
    entrants enjoy and do not share with late
    entrants
  • strategic trade policy - Economic policies that
    provide companies a strategic advantage through
    government
  • subsidies

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Modern Trade Theories
  • Theory of national competitive advantage of
    industries (or diamond theory)
  • The theory that the competitive advantage of
    certain industries in different nations depends
    on four aspects that form a diamond
  • Competitive advantage is created by technological
    and institutional change, not just inherited from
    a countrys natural endowments

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IN-CLASS EXERCISE
  • In groups of 3-5 people
  • Come up with three examples of imported foods
    eaten by people in your group
  • Are there alternatives sources for these foods
    either domestically produced or from different
    countries than the ones you purchase from?
  • If so, what factors influence your purchase
    decisions?
  • Present your findings to the class
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