ECON1102 Lecture Notes - Lecture 8: Capital Control, Free Trade, Risk Aversion

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26 May 2018
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TOPIC 8 OPEN ECONOMY MACROECONOMICS
OPENNESS AND TRADE
Openness has three distinct dimensions:
1. Openness in goods markets. Free trade restrictions include tariffs and quotas.
2. Openness in financial markets. Capital controls place restrictions on the ownership of foreign
assets.
3. Openness in factor marketsthe ability of firms to choose where to locate production, and workers
to choose where to work.
EXPORTS AND IMPORTS
- Exports and imports averaged 20% & 17% of GDP from 1900-50. After the commodity boom of the
1950s, the ratios fell below 15% in 1960, but grew steadily to 21% & 22% in 2008. In the past ten
years they have fallen again a little.
- In 2008, 78% of Australian exports were agricultural & mining commodities. 75% of imports were
manufactures. Thus Australia is sensitive to world commodity prices.
- The main factors behind differences in export ratios are geography and country size.
- Countries can have export ratios larger than the value of their GDP because exports and imports
may include exports and imports of intermediate goods.
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- On the one hand, the Australian economy is not as exportdependent as many other countries are
currently
- But the trend has been upward and the export sector has a greater domestic impact on GDP and
income here since domestic AD is relatively small and because our exports are so concentrated in a
few key sectors like mining.
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Document Summary

Openness has three distinct dimensions: openness in goods markets. Free trade restrictions include tariffs and quotas: openness in financial markets. Capital controls place restrictions on the ownership of foreign assets: openness in factor markets the ability of firms to choose where to locate production, and workers to choose where to work. Exports and imports averaged 20% & 17% of gdp from 1900-50. 1950s, the ratios fell below 15% in 1960, but grew steadily to 21% & 22% in 2008. In the past ten years they have fallen again a little. In 2008, 78% of australian exports were agricultural & mining commodities. Thus australia is sensitive to world commodity prices. The main factors behind differences in export ratios are geography and country size. Countries can have export ratios larger than the value of their gdp because exports and imports may include exports and imports of intermediate goods.

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