ECO102H1 Lecture Notes - Lecture 21: Absolute Advantage, Comparative Advantage, Factor Endowment

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19 Aug 2016
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ECO102H1 Full Course Notes
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ECO102H1 Full Course Notes
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Trade helps nations to be mutually sufficient: increases quantities of commodities available for consumption. Gains from trade (increased output attributable to specialization based on comparative advantage: trade allows for specialization. Assume two countries and two goods, labour as the only factor of production, constant returns to scale. Sources of gains from trade (long-run growth: difference in climate and natural resources, different factor endowments (population, technological differences. Absolute advantage: one country can produce some commodity at a lower absolute cost than another (in terms of labour input: implies more efficiency (less resources to produce the same output) Opportunity costs determines gains from trade and patterns of trade: if oca = ocb -> no gains from trade (no comparative advantage, if oca ocb -> gains from trade if specialize. The closer the international terms of trade are to domestic terms, the smaller the benefit from trade.

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