ECON202, Maclachlan, Spring Interdependence & Gains from Trade Week 2
ECON202, Maclachlan, Spring Principle #5 Trade can make everyone better off.
ECON202, Maclachlan, Spring What’s the alternative to trade? David Thoreau at Walden Pond.
ECON202, Maclachlan, Spring Autarky A policy of national self-sufficiency and nonreliance on imports or economic aid.
ECON202, Maclachlan, Spring Mercantilism A country should aim to run trade surpluses and increase its monetary assets.
ECON202, Maclachlan, Spring Adam Smith ( ) Critic of mercantilism. Countries should specialize and trade. Specialize where there’s an ABSOLUTE ADVANTAGE
ECON202, Maclachlan, Spring ABSOLUTE ADVANTAGE A region has an absolute advantage if it takes fewer resources to produce a good there than elsewhere. Coffee in Columbia. Computer software in Silicon Valley.
ECON202, Maclachlan, Spring David Ricardo ( ) Theory of comparative advantage. Even without an absolute advantage a region can trade to the benefit of all parties.
Table 1 The Production Opportunities of the Farmer and Rancher Copyright © 2004 South-Western
ECON202, Maclachlan, Spring Figure 1a The Production Possibilities Frontier
ECON202, Maclachlan, Spring Figure 1b The Production Possibilities Frontier
ECON202, Maclachlan, Spring Rancher’s Deal for Farmer Farmer stops producing meat and specializes in potatoes. In a week he can produce … 32 oz of potatoes. Farmer sells 15 oz to Rancher for 5 oz of meat. Farmer ends up with … = 17 oz of potatoes and 5 oz of meat. Farmer is better off.
ECON202, Maclachlan, Spring Rancher’s Plan Spend 6 hrs producing 18 oz of meat. Sell 5 oz and keep 13 oz of meat. Spend 2 hrs producing 12 oz of potatoes. Total potato consumption 15 oz + 12 oz = 27 oz. Total consumption: 13 oz of meat and 27 oz of potatoes.
ECON202, Maclachlan, Spring Figure 2a How Trade Expands the Set of Consumption Opportunities
ECON202, Maclachlan, Spring Figure 2b How Trade Expands the Set of Consumption Opportunities
Table 2 The Gains from Trade: A Summary Copyright © 2004 South-Western
ECON202, Maclachlan, Spring How to determine comparative advantage Look for that good or service for which the OPPORTUNITY COST is lowest. The opportunity cost is the cost of producing in terms of an alternative good.
Table 3 The Opportunity Cost of Meat and Potatoes Copyright © 2004 South-Western