MGEA05H3 Chapter Notes - Chapter 33: Comparative Advantage, International Trade, Opportunity Cost

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MGEA05H3 Full Course Notes
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MGEA05H3 Full Course Notes
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Open economy: an economy that engages in international trade. Closed economy (autarky: an economy that has no foreign trade. Interpersonal trade: without trade, everyone must be self-sufficient, with trade, people can specialize in what they do well and satisfy other needs by trading. Interregional and international trade: with trade, each individual, region or country is able to concentrate on producing goods and services that it produces efficiently while trading to obtain goods and services that it does not produce efficiently. Absolute advantage: the situation that exists when one country can produce a specific commodity, relative to another country, at lower absolute cost (i. e. produces one unit of product using fewer resources) Comparative advantage: the situation that exists when a country can produce a specific good, relative to another country, with lower opportunity cost (fig 33-2) Difference in slopes of possibilities boundaries reflects differences in comparative advantage. A = wheat produc0on c b = opportunity cost ( cloth produc0on)

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