13: International Trade Flashcards

1
Q

What is trade?

What are exports?

What are imports?

A

International trade involves the buying and selling of goods and services across international boundaries.

Exports are goods and services and sold produced domestically but sold abroad.

Imports are goods and services from other countries bought for domestic use.

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
2
Q

What is specialisation?

A

Specialisation occurs when an individual, firm or country concentrates production on one or a few goods and services.

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
3
Q

Benefits of trade?

A
  1. Increases in domestic production and consumption as a result of specialisation. e.g. Greece has a large coastline so it is better at producing shipping services whilst Switzerland is landlocked but has the technology to produce good watches.
  2. Economies of scale in production - firms can decrease cost per unit production, thereby becoming more efficient and selling its output at a lower price.
  3. Greater choice for consumers.
  4. Increased competition and greater efficiency in production - due to competition firms try and produce at the lowest possible cost which benefits consumers.
  5. Lower prices for consumers - due to efficiency but also because if another country produces a product at a price cheaper than the domestic price, consumers can benefit from this.
  6. Acquiring resources - countries may need natural resources to produce other things, such as steel to produce cars or oil to produce most things. The UK doesn’t have oil, so it must trade.
  7. Free trade and a more efficient allocation of resources - if trade is free (i.e. no government intervention) it can leads to a more efficient allocation of resources.
  8. New ideas and technology spread
  9. Countries become interdependent reducing the chance of hostilities and violence
  10. Trade is an ‘engine for growth’.
How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
4
Q

Explain the theory of absolute advantage:

A

Adam Smith came up with the theory of absolute advantage. Absolute advantage refers to the ability of one country to produce a good using fewer resources than another country. This country should therefore specialise in the production of this good.

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
5
Q

Explain, using a diagram, the gains from trade arising from a country’s absolute advantage in the production of a good:

A

Draw a PPF graph, one good on x one good on y.
Draw two lines representing the production of two countries. One produces 8 of one good (lets say cars) at 0 of the other (lets say coffee) and 4 coffees at 0 cars. The other country producing 2 cars at 0 coffee but 6 coffees at 0 cars. Country A has comparative advantage in cars and country B has comparative advantage in coffee.

Add up the amount produced in comparative advantage and add up an amount produced anywhere on the PPF for each of them. The comparative advantage will be more.

You can illustrate how much they receive with trade by showing country A gave country B 3 cars in exchange for 3 coffees, as the hypothetical price ratio is 1:1. This leaves A with 5 cars and 3 coffees and B with 3 cars and 3 coffees. Draw these points on the graph.

Due to trade they can produce at a point outside their PPFs.

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
6
Q

What if one country can produce more of both of the goods on the PPF? What does this look like?

A

This means the country has absolute advantage of the production of both goods, this looks like a PPF graph with two lines that do NOT intersect. The country with the flatter line has comparative advantage of the good on the x axis. This is because if country A can produce 21 chickens at 0 cows and 1 cow at 0 chickens, and country B can produce 25 chickens at 0 cows and 20 cows at 0 chickens, it is more advantageous for country B to produce cows, as it can easily trade for chickens since cows are clearly harder to produce and therefore more valuable to country A.

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
7
Q

a) How do you calculate opportunity cost using data?

b) How do you calculate it using the graph?

A

a) Opportunity cost of cows = maximum number of chicken you can make / maximum number of cows

Opportunity cost of chickens = maximum number of cows you can make / maximum number of chicken

They should be reciprocals of each other. Produce the one with the lower opportunity cost.

b) The opportunity cost is simply the slope of the line which can be calculated using ∆x/∆y

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
8
Q

What is the law of comparative advantage?

A

The law of comparative advantage states that as long as opportunity costs in two or more countries differ, it is possible for all countries to gain from specialisation and trade according to their comparative advantage. Thus, the global allocation of resources improves, resulting in greater global output and greater global consumption, allowing countries to produce outside their PPF.

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
9
Q

What happens in the case of parallel PPCs?

A

These do not usually occur in real life but it means the two countries have identical opportunity costs for the production of the two goods. No country has comparative advantage and so they will not benefit from specialisation or trade.

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
10
Q

Describe the sources of comparative advantage:

A

Countries have comparative advantage over another country because of factor endowments, meaning differences in quantities and qualities of factors of production, and in levels of technology. For example countries with more technological advancements, countries with more temperate climates, more educated workers etc.

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
11
Q

limitations of comparative advantage:

A
  1. The theory of comparative advantage depends on many unrealistic assumptions:
  2. It is unrealistic to ignore transportation costs.
  3. Specialisation may not allow necessary structural changes in the economy.
  4. Trade on the basis of comparative advantage may lead to excessive specialisation.
How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
12
Q

The theory of comparative advantage depends on many unrealistic assumptions:

A
  1. Factors of production are immobile and fixed - IRL FOP are constantly changing.
  2. Technology is fixed - IRL technology is continuously improving.
  3. There is perfect competition - this is rarely ever the case.
  4. There is full employment of all resources - no countries produce on their PPFs.
  5. Imports and exports balance each other out - IRL there are trade deficits.
  6. There is free trade - in reality there is strong government intervention in markets that influences quantities of imports and exports.
How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
13
Q

How might the law of comparative advantage not allow necessary structural changes in the economy?

A

It may be beneficial for developing countries in the future to produce more industrial goods and services, despite having comparative advantage in agricultural products now. As they become more developed, their comparative advantages may change. If they follow the law of comparative advantage strictly, it may not lead to economic growth in the future. Also certain resources are becoming more scarce, and therefore more valuable. If a country has these resources it is best to use them for production.

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
14
Q

Why might trade on the basis of comparative advantage not lead to excessive specialisation?

A

If a country only has comparative advantage in one or a few products thy may become dependent on this product. This means if the export prices fall for this product, the countries entire economy could be affected negatively. Furthermore if a country is reliant on agricultural products, as many first world countries are, they may be terribly affected by fluctuations in weather.

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
15
Q

Brief history of the WTO:

A

During the great depression in the 1930s countries imposed tariffs to increase domestic production which lead to retaliatory tariffs, causing tariff wars which damaged international trade. In 1947 the general agreement on tariffs and trade (GATT) was established as a response to liberalise trade. This later became the World Trade organisation in 1994.

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
16
Q

Functions and objectives of WTO:

A
  1. It administers TWO trade agreements.
  2. It provides a forum for trade negotiations.
  3. It handles trade disputes.
  4. It monitors national trade policies
  5. It provides technical assistance and training for developing countries
  6. It facilitates co-operation with other international organisations.
17
Q

What principles is the trading system promoted by the WTO based on:

A
  1. Non-discrimination
  2. Free trade
  3. Predictability
  4. Promotion of fair competition
  5. Development and economic reform should be encouraged
18
Q

What is free trade?

A

Free trade refers to the absence of government intervention of any kind in international trade so that trade takes place without restrictions.

19
Q

What is trade protection?

A

Trade protection refers to the the imposition of trade restrictions by the government to prevent the free entry of imports in order to protect the domestic economy.

20
Q

Describe a world trade diagram:

A

P on y, Q on x.
Looks like a normal supply demand curve but S is labelled Sd (domestic supply) and D is labelled Dd (domestic demand.
Pd = domestic price
Pw = world price

The world price is a horizontal line if the countries production is small so cannot influence the world price. Supply is perfectly elastic therefore.

21
Q

Explain a world trade diagram where the world price is higher than the domestic price: (the countries production cannot influence the price)

A

P on y, Q on x.
Looks like a normal supply demand curve but S is labelled Sd (domestic supply) and D is labelled Dd (domestic demand.
P domestic is where Dd and Sd intersect.
Wp is a horizontal line above that. label this curve Wp = world supply curve
Therefore draw a line down from where Wp meets Dd and Sd and show that at Wp there is excess supply.
Since the domestic price is lower than the world price, this country has comparative advantage in the production of the good as it can produce it more efficiently.
This means the country should export.
Label the difference between Qd and Qs exports.

22
Q

Explain a world trade diagram where the world price is higher than the domestic price: (the country’s production cannot influence the price):

A

P on y, Q on x.
Looks like a normal supply demand curve but S is labelled Sd (domestic supply) and D is labelled Dd (domestic demand.
P domestic is where Dd and Sd intersect.
Wp is a horizontal line below that. label this curve Wp = world supply curve
Therefore draw a line down from where Wp meets Dd and Sd and show that at Wp there is excess demand.
The domestic price is higher than the world price meaning this country has comparative disadvantage in the production of the good, its production of the good is less efficient than other countries.
This means the country should import.
Label the difference between Qd and Qs imports.

23
Q

Define a tariff:

A

A tariff is a tax on imported goods. The purpose of tariffs is to protect domestic industry and/or raise revenues for the government.

24
Q

Graphic effects of a tariff:

A

P on y, Q on x.
Looks like a normal supply demand curve but S is labelled Sd (domestic supply) and D is labelled Dd (domestic demand.
P domestic is where Dd and Sd intersect.
Wp is a horizontal line below that. label this curve Wp = world supply curve.
Show where the Ws curve meets Dd and Sd. call this Q1 and Q4.
Then show another line under Pd, which is Wp + tariff. Show where this line meets with Dd and Sd. Call these Q2 and Q3.
Show that the difference between Qd and Qs has shrunk. Label the difference between Q1 and Q4 imports before tariff and between Q3 and Q4 imports after tariff.

where imports are (between Q3 and Q4) and the difference between Wp and Wp + tariff. That square is government revenue. The triangles next to that are welfare loss.

25
Q

Effects of tariffs:

A
  1. Domestic consumers are worse off. P increases from Pw to Pw + t and they can only buy a smaller quantity, Q3 rather than Q4.
  2. Domestic producers are better off:
    Qs increases from Q2 to Q3 and at a higher price (Wp + tariff).
  3. Domestic employment increases. More production = more jobs.
  4. The government gains tax revenue. This is equal to the tariff * imports (Q4 - Q3).
  5. Loss of production efficiency. The reason the world price is lower is because it is more efficient than the producing country, govt intervention increases domestic production which is less efficient.
  6. Foreign producers are worse off. They receive Pw but the Qd falls from Q4 - Q1 to Q3 - Q2.
  7. A global misallocation of resources.
  8. Domestic income distribution worsens because it works like a regressive tax.

consumer surplus reduced producer surplus increased

26
Q

What is an import quota?

A

A legal limit to the quantity of a good that can be imported over a particular time period.

27
Q

How does an import quota effect the graph?

A

P on y, Q on x.
Looks like a normal supply demand curve but S is labelled Sd (domestic supply) and D is labelled Dd (domestic demand.
P domestic is where Dd and Sd intersect.
Wp is a horizontal line below that. label this curve Wp = world supply curve.
Label where Wp meets the curves as Q1 and Q4.
The government implements a quota (a limit to imports) which shifts the supply to the right. Draw this only above the Wp line as no one will supply below.
Where this new supply surve (Sdq = supply domestic plus quota) meets demand is Pq and Q3. At this level, where it meets demand is Q2.
Imports used to be Q4 - Q1 and now they are Q3 - Q2.
Welfare loss is the area between Pq and Pw between Q and Q4 (two triangles and a rectangle, ignore the split).

28
Q

Effects of a quota:

A
  1. Increase in Qs (Q1 to Q2), decrease in Qd (Q4 to Q3), decrease in imports (Q4 - Q1 to Q3 - Q2)
  2. Domestic consumers worse off as price raises to Pq and the quantity they receive drops from Q4 to Q3.
  3. Domestic producers are better off as the price rises from Pw to Pq and Qs increases from Q1 to Q2.
  4. Domestic employment increases
  5. The government is unaffected.
  6. Domestic income distribution worsens.
  7. Increased inefficiency in production.
  8. The exporting countries receive import licenses so they may be worse of or better off depending on how much quota revenue they receive.
  9. A global misallocation of resources.
29
Q

Production subsidies effect on the world trade graph:

A

P on y, Q on x.
Looks like a normal supply demand curve but S is labelled Sd (domestic supply) and D is labelled Dd (domestic demand.
P domestic is where Dd and Sd intersect.
Wp is a horizontal line below that. label this curve Wp = world supply curve.
The subsidy shifts supply to the right as it has the same effect as a reduction in the price of production. The good continues to sell as Pw but more are supplied so where Pw meets Sds this is Q2. (Q1 and Q2 are the Qs and Qd without the subsidy).
Qd remains the same, but the amount of imports decreases from Q3 - Q1 to Q3 - Q2.

30
Q

Effects of a production subsidy on trade:

A
  1. Domestic producers are better off as they supply more at the same price (from Q1 to Q2).
  2. Domestic consumers remain the same as they still buy Q3 at Pw.
  3. Negative effect on the government budget because of the revenue needed for the subsidy.
  4. Taxpayers are worse off. The revenue had opportunity costs.
  5. Domestic employment increases.
  6. Increased inefficiency in production.
  7. The exporting countries are worse off.
  8. A global misallocation of resources results.
31
Q

Why do economists prefer subsidies to tariffs or quotas?

A

Subsidies do not have negative effects on consumption unlike tariffs or quotas. With tariffs and quotas less consumers receive the good and for a higher price. This therefore does not promote income inequality, as tariffs and quotas have the same effect as a regressive tax.

32
Q

Real world example of subsidies:

A

In a period of 9 years the EU and US have spent 32 billion on cotton subsidies.

33
Q

What are export subsidies?

A

A subsidy paid for each unit of a good that is exported meaning the price is lower than other countries domestic prices which leads to a huge resources misallocation. For this reason the WTO has deemed export subsidies illegal.

34
Q

Qualified arguments for trade barriers:

A
  1. Infant industries - trade protection may be needed temporarily to protect infant industries who are unable to compete with world prices due to economies of scale. Once the industry can reap the benefits of economies of scale, the protection can be removed. This argument iainly used by developing countries.
    Downsides: It is hard to predict which industries will achieve economies of scale and sometimes trade protection remains long after the industry has matured.
  2. Strategic trade policy - used by developed countries to protect certain industries that are believed to be valuable later with regards to economic growth. This is done until they reach economies of scale. Such as Japan’s success in semiconductors. This involves not just protectionism but interventionist supply side policies like tax advantages.
    Downsides: same as above.
  3. National security - items for national defence such as aircrafts and weapons, should be protected in case of war.
    Downsides: steel industry is indirectly for defence. Trump uses non-economic arguments for economic gain.
  4. Health, safety and environmental standards - each country has different standards. However sometimes this is used as a form of ‘hidden’ protection.
  5. It may be best for developing countries to diversify.
35
Q

Questionable arguments for tariffs:

A
  1. Government revenue - they are a regressive type of tax so it promotes income inequality.
  2. It is a way to overcome balance of payment deficit which is when imports are larger than exports but other countries may retaliate.
  3. Anti-dumping - dumping is selling a good in international markets at a price lower than the cost of producing it. Tariffs are therefore a response to this. However it is very hard to prove when dumping is occurring and many countries use this as an excuse.
  4. Protection of domestic jobs - this leads to an increase in unemployment in exporting countries, who may retaliate. Other policies (fiscal, monetary. supply-side) may be more appropriate.
36
Q

Incorrect arguments for tariffs?

A

Wage protection argument - countries with low wages can produce at a lower cost which is unfair to developed countries. This adheres to the law of comparative advantage however as these places have comparative advantage.