ECON-1007EL Chapter Notes - Chapter 33: International Trade, Comparative Advantage

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Chapter 33: The Gains from International Trade
Definitions
Open Economy
An economy that engages in international trade
Closed Economy
An economy that has no foreign trade
Gains from Trade
The increased output attributable to the specialization according to
comparative advantage that is made possible by trade
Absolute Advantage
The situation that exists when no one country can produce some
commodity at lower absolute cost than another country
Comparative Advantage
The situation that exists when a country can produce a good with less
forgone output of other goods than can another country.
Learning by Doing
The reduction in unit costs that often results as workers learn through
repeatedly performing the same tasks. It causes a downward shift in the
average cost curve.
Terms of Trade
The ratio of the average price of a country’s exports to the average price of
its imports
Equations
  
  
Key Points
Without trade, everyone must be self-sufficient; with trade, people can specialize in what
they do well and satisfy other needs by trading.
With trade, each individual, region, or country is able to concentrate on producing goods
services that it produces efficiently while trading to obtain goods and services that it does
not produce efficiently.
The gains from specialization and trade depend on the pattern of comparative, not
absolute, advantage.
World output increases if countries specialize in the production of the goods in which
they have a comparative advantage.
Specialization of production against the pattern of comparative advantage leads to a
decline in total world output.
In industries with significant scale economies, small countries that do not trade will have
low levels of output and therefore high costs. With international trade, however, small
countries can produce for the large global market and thus produce at lower costs.
International trade therefore allows small countries to reap the benefits of scale
economies.
According to the Heckscher-Ohlin theory, countries have comparative advantages in the
production of goods that use intensively the factors of production with which they are
abundantly endowed.
A country’s comparative advantage is influenced by various aspects of its climate.
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Document Summary

The increased output attributable to the specialization according to comparative advantage that is made possible by trade. The situation that exists when no one country can produce some commodity at lower absolute cost than another country. Comparative advantage the situation that exists when a country can produce a good with less. Key points forgone output of other goods than can another country. The reduction in unit costs that often results as workers learn through repeatedly performing the same tasks. It causes a downward shift in the average cost curve. In industries with significant scale economies, small countries that do not trade will have low levels of output and therefore high costs. With international trade, however, small countries can produce for the large global market and thus produce at lower costs. Aside from the differences caused by these transport costs, there is a single world price: countries export the goods for which they are low-cost producers.

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