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Chapter 4 
INTERNATIONAL TRADE 
(CORE) 
Kalaiyarasi Danabalan 
Aโ€™ level (economics)
Topic covered 
๏‚š Principles of absolute and comparative advantage 
๏‚š Arguments for free trade and motives for protection 
๏‚š Types of protection 
๏‚š Types of economic integration 
๏‚š Terms of trade 
๏‚š Components of the balance of payments
The Principle of International Trade 
๏‚š Refer to as multinational trade. 
๏‚š Their principles of absolute and, particularly, of comparative advantage have modern 
relevance in the objectives of the World Trade Organization (WTO), which exists to 
promote free trade amongst all of its member countries. 
๏‚š Trade will take place when countries have a clear-cut or absolute advantage over other 
countries in they produce. 
๏‚š Trade can also be beneficial where a country may not / comparative advantage in the 
production of a particular good over another country, trade can produce gains for both 
partners.
INTERNATIONAL TRADE 
Free trade - system of trade policy that allows traders to trade across national boundaries 
without interference from the respective governments. 
There are 2 reasons of free trade 
๏‚š Domestic Non-availability: A nation trades because it lacks the raw materials, climate, 
specialist labour, capital or technology needed to manufacture a particular good. Trade 
allows a greater variety of goods and services. 
๏‚š Cost effectiveness: It is cheaper to buy from other countries rather than producing 
themselves.
๏‚š Reciprocal absolute advantage- one country is better at producing one product, the 
other is superior in the production of the other. 
๏‚š Comparative advantage โ€“ trade between two countries should still take place and be 
mutually beneficial provided the domestic opportunity cost of production differ.
Benefits of Free Trade 
๏‚š Lower prices for consumers 
๏‚š Greater choice for consumers 
๏‚š benefit from economies of scale 
๏‚š acquire needed resources 
๏‚š efficient allocation of resources 
๏‚š Increased competition 
๏‚š Source of foreign exchange
FREE TRADE DIAGRAM 
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=65UcSx_LrZI#t=62
EXPORTS & IMPORTS / VISIBLE TRADE AND 
INVISIBLE TRADE 
๏‚š EXPORTS (X)- the movement of goods / commodities out of the country. 
๏‚š IMPORTS (M) โ€“ the movement of goods / commodities into the country. 
๏‚š VISIBLE TRADE โ€“ involves trading of goods which can be touched & weighed. Examples 
include trade in goods such as oil, machinery, foods, clothes etc. 
๏ฑ Visible exports- selling of tangible goods which can be touched & weighed to other 
countries. 
๏ฑ Visible imports - buying of tangible goods which can be touched and weighed from other 
countries. 
๏‚š INVISIBLE TRADE โ€“ involves the M &X of services rather than goods. Ex :- banking, tourism, 
education. 
๏‚š Balance of trade - It is the difference between the value of visible exports and value of 
visible imports of a country. 
X>M - the country will have a Surplus balance of trade. 
M>X - the country will have an Unfavourable balance of trade.
ABSOLUTE ADVANTAGE 
๏‚š A country has an absolute advantage over another in producing a good, if it can 
produce that good using fewer resources than another country. 
๏‚š if one unit of labor in Australia can produce 80 units of wool or 20 units of wine; while in 
France one unit of labor makes 50 units of wool or 75 units of wine, then Australia has an 
absolute advantage in producing wool and France has an absolute advantage in 
producing wine. 
๏‚š Australia can get more wine with its labor by specializing in wool and trading the wool for 
French wine, while France can benefit by trading wine for wool.
COMPARATIVE ADVANTAGE 
๏‚š A country should specialize in the production of good or service in which it has lower 
opportunity cost and it should import commodities which have a higher opportunity cost 
of production. 
๏‚š A country enjoys a comparative advantage in the production of a good when that good 
can be produced at a lower cost in terms of other goods. 
Example 
Northland and Southland produce and consume two goods, Food and Clothes. The 
productive capacities and efficiencies of the countries are such that if both countries 
devoted all their resources to Food production, output would be as follows:
๏‚š Northland: 100 tonnes 
๏‚š Southland: 200 tonnes 
If all the resources of the countries were allocated to the production of clothes, output would 
be: 
๏‚š Northland: 100 tonnes 
๏‚š Southland: 100 tonnes
๏‚š each has constant opportunity costs of production between the two products and both 
economies have full employment at all times. All factors of production are mobile within the 
countries between clothing and food industries, but are immobile between the countries. The 
price mechanism must be working to provide perfect competition. 
๏‚š Southland has an absolute advantage over Northland in the production of Food. Both 
countries are equally efficient in the production of clothes. There seems to be no mutual 
benefit in trade between the economies. 
๏‚š The opportunity costs shows otherwise. Northland's opportunity cost of producing one tonne of 
Food is one tonne of Clothes and vice versa. Southland's opportunity cost of one tonne of 
Food is 0.5 tonne of Clothes. The opportunity cost of one tonne of Clothes is 2 tonnes of Food. 
๏‚š Southland has a comparative advantage in food production, because of its lower opportunity 
cost of production with respect to Northland. Northland has a comparative advantage over 
Southland in the production of clothes, the opportunity cost of which is higher in Southland 
with respect to Food than in Northland.
To show these different opportunity costs lead to mutual benefit if the 
countries specialize production and trade, consider the countries 
produce and consume only domestically. The volumes are: 
Foods Cloths 
Northland 50 50 
Southland 100 50 
World total 150 100
Production & consumption before trade 
๏‚š he exchange price will be somewhere between the two. The remainder of the example 
works with an international trading price of one tonne of Food for 2/3 tonne of Clothes. 
๏‚š If both specialize in the goods in which they have comparative advantage, their outputs 
will be 
Food Clothes 
Northland 0 100 
Southland 200 0 
World total 200 100
Production & Consumption after Trade 
๏‚š World production of food increased. Clothing production remained the same. Using the 
exchange rate of one tonne of Food for 2/3 tonne of Clothes, Northland and Southland 
are able to trade to yield the following level of consumption : 
๏‚š Northland traded 50 tonnes of Clothing for 75 tonnes of Food. Both benefited, and now 
consume at points outside their production possibility frontiers. 
Food Clothes 
Northland 75 50 
Southland 125 50 
World total 200 100
Limitations of Theory of Absolute 
Advantage 
The theory is based on unrealistic assumptions: 
๏‚š Factors of production are immobile and fixed 
๏‚š Technology is fixed 
๏‚š There is perfect competition 
๏‚š Resources are fully employed 
๏‚š Imports and exports balance each other 
๏‚š There is free trade 
Cost of Transportation has been ignored 
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RpfV0Oerfr8
Summary of the Principles of Absolute and 
Comparative Advantage 
๏‚š There are just two countries involved in trade. 
๏‚š Each can produce just two products. 
๏‚š Productivity differs between them, so varying quantities of each are produced. 
๏‚š Production costs and opportunity costs are constant for each product.
PRINCIPLES OF INTERNATIONAL TRADE 
๏‚š The production possibility frontiers are linear. 
๏‚š The exchange rate operating for international transactions must be between respective 
domestic opportunity cost ratios. 
๏‚š No transport cost are charged. 
๏‚š The two country, two-product assumption is again a long way from reality in the 21st 
century. 
๏‚š Production cost are most unlikely to be constant. 
๏‚š There are no restrictions on free trade between those countries which possess absolute 
and comparative advantage.
Other explanation & determinants of trade 
flows 
๏‚š Competitive advantage- focuses on the actual production cost and how in reality, firms 
are continuously striving to reduce their unit costs. 
๏‚š Factor endowment โ€“ this model of trade stresses the importance of the quantity and 
quality of the production factors. 
๏‚š Government policy โ€“ a government may decide that it does not wish to over-specialize & 
that its best strategy is to diversify production so that it has a range of products available in 
the event of any dislocation / supplies interruption.
Protectionism 
๏‚š Policy of protecting domestic industries against foreign competition by means of tariffs, 
subsidies, import quotas, or other handicaps placed on imports. 
๏‚š Government-levied tariffs, raise the price of imported articles, making them less attractive 
to consumers than cheaper domestic products. 
๏‚š Import quotas, which limit the quantities of goods that can be imported, are another 
protectionist device.
Tariff (tax on imports) 
๏‚š tax on foreign goods upon importation. Tariff rates vary according to the type of goods 
imported. Import tariffs will increase the cost to importers, and increase the price of 
imported goods in the local markets, thus lowering the quantity of goods imported.
Impacts of Tariffs 
๏‚š Tariffs lead to higher prices for imports and thus Imports fall 
๏‚š Domestic consumers have to pay higher prices and buy less. 
๏‚š Domestic producers gain, as they get higher prices and sell larger quantities. As 
we can see in the diagram domestic production increases from 0Q1 to 0Q2. 
Moreover their revenue increases from PwQ1 to Pw+TQ2 
๏‚š Higher domestic production leads to increased domestic employment. 
๏‚š Government now gains from tariff revenues, which can be represented by โ€˜eโ€™ in 
the diagram 
๏‚š Tariffs are regressive in nature and thus worsen income distribution. 
๏‚š Exporting countries lose due to fall in exports.
Quotas (restriction on the maximum 
import quantity) 
๏‚š Import quotas - sets a physical limit on the quantity of a good that can be imported into a country 
in a given period of time. This leads to a reduction in the quantity imported and therefore 
increases the market price of imported goods.
Effects of Quotas 
๏‚š Domestic production increases from 0Q1 to 0Q1+Q3Q4. 
๏‚š Domestic consumption fall from 0Q2 to 0Q4 
๏‚š Imports fall from Q1Q2 to Q1Q3 
๏‚š Consumers end up paying more. Before quota was imposed they were paying Pw, but now 
they are paying Pw+Quota 
๏‚š Domestic producers gain as they sell more at higher prices (Pw+Quota) 
๏‚š Domestic employment increases as domestic production rises. 
๏‚š Government gets quota revenues 
๏‚š Domestic society is worse off due to decrease in consumption and production by less efficient 
producers 
๏‚š Exporting countries lose revenue 
๏‚š Quotas result in global misallocation of resources as goods are being produced by inefficient 
producers. 
๏‚š J and K represents the dead weight loss of welfare to the society, as J represents production by 
inefficient producers and K represents the loss of consumer surplus.
Subsidies 
๏‚š government subsidies (in the form of lump-sum payments or cheap loans) are sometimes 
given to local firms that cannot compete well against foreign imports.
Effects of Subsidies 
๏‚š Consumption of the good is not affected. Consumption remains at Q3. 
๏‚š Taxpayers lose as the tax revenue collected is being used for subsidies 
๏‚š Domestic producers gain as the production increases from 0Q1 to 0Q3. 
๏‚š Employment increases as more is being produced domestically. 
๏‚š Exporting countries are worse off 
๏‚š Global misallocation of resources as inefficient producers are now producing 
goods.
Other protection policy 
๏‚š Administrative Barriers 
Countries are sometimes accused of using their various administrative rules (eg. regarding 
food safety, environmental standards, electrical safety, etc.) as a way to introduce barriers to 
imports. 
๏‚š Embargo 
An embargo is the prohibition of commerce and trade with a certain country, in order to 
isolate it and to put its government into a difficult internal situation, given that the effects of 
the embargo are often able to make its economy suffer from the initiative. 
๏‚š Anti-dumping legislation 
Supporters of anti-dumping laws argue that they prevent "dumping" of cheaper foreign 
goods that would cause local firms to close down. However, in practice, anti-dumping laws 
are usually used to impose trade tariffs on foreign exporters.
ECONOMIC INTEGRATION 
๏‚š Trade unification between different states by the partial or full abolishing of 
customs tariffs on trade taking place within the borders of each state. 
๏‚š This is meant in turn to lead to lower prices for distributors and consumers (as no 
customs duties are paid within the integrated area) and the goal is to increase 
trade. 
๏‚š Trade agreement โ€“ A contract/agreement/pact between two or more nations 
that outlines how they will work together to ensure mutual benefit in the field of 
trade and investment. Trade agreements are either bilateral, involving only two 
countries, or multilateral, involving more than two countries. 
๏‚š Trade bloc - a type of intergovernmental agreement, where regional barriers to 
trade, (tariffs and non-tariff barriers) are reduced or eliminated among the 
participating states.
Types of Trade Blocs 
๏‚š Preferential Trade agreement โ€“ A trading bloc that gives preferential access to certain 
products from the participating countries. This is done by reducing tariffs but not by 
abolishing them completely. A PTA can be established through a trade pact. It is the first 
stage of economic integration. 
๏‚š Free Trade Areas - A trade bloc whose member countries have signed a free-trade 
agreement (FTA), which eliminates tariffs, import quotas, and preferences on most (if not 
all) goods and services traded between them.
๏‚š Customs Union- An agreement among countries to have free 
trade among themselves and to adopt common external 
barriers against any other country interested in exporting to 
these countries. 
๏‚š Common Market - A type of custom union where there are 
common policies on product regulation, and free movement 
of goods and services, capital and labour. All common 
markets and economic and monetary unions are also 
customs unions
Economic & Monetary Unions 
๏‚š A common market with common currency 
๏‚š Where more than two countries use the same currency. 
Advantages of single currency 
๏‚š Reduces the level of transaction cost. 
๏‚š When trading among each other the countries need not worry about possible exchange rate fluctuations. 
๏‚š It is easier to make price comparisons between countries. 
๏‚š Greater FDI is attracted because of reduced transactions costs, reduced uncertainty and the large size of single 
currency market. 
Disadvantages of single currency 
๏‚š Individual countries lose the ability to set interest rates. 
๏‚š Individual countries cannot depreciate or devalue its currency value. 
๏‚š Huge cost involved such as physical changing, reprogramming computers, producing new price lists etc.
The terms of Trade 
๏‚š The exchange Rate operating for international transaction must be between the 
respective domestic opportunity cost ratios. 
๏‚š It measures the rate at which the goods of one country exchange for the goods of 
another. 
๏‚š The consumption combinations possible through specialization and trade at these terms of 
trade are represented by each countryโ€™s trading possibility curve (TPC). 
๏‚š Trading possibilities exist that exceed domestic production possibilities. Countries can still 
do much better through trade than trying to produce everything for themselves. 
๏‚š The terms of trade are represented as an index of the ratio of export prices and import 
prices :- 
Terms of Trade index = ํ’Šํ’ํ’…ํ’†ํ’™ ํ’ํ’‡ ํ’†ํ’™ํ’‘ํ’ํ’“ํ’• ํ’‘ํ’“ํ’Šํ’„ํ’†ํ’” 
ํ’Šํ’ํ’…ํ’†ํ’™ ํ’ํ’‡ ํ’Šํ’Žํ’‘ํ’ํ’“ํ’• ํ’‘ํ’“ํ’Šํ’„ํ’†ํ’” 
x 100

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International Trade

  • 1. Chapter 4 INTERNATIONAL TRADE (CORE) Kalaiyarasi Danabalan Aโ€™ level (economics)
  • 2. Topic covered ๏‚š Principles of absolute and comparative advantage ๏‚š Arguments for free trade and motives for protection ๏‚š Types of protection ๏‚š Types of economic integration ๏‚š Terms of trade ๏‚š Components of the balance of payments
  • 3. The Principle of International Trade ๏‚š Refer to as multinational trade. ๏‚š Their principles of absolute and, particularly, of comparative advantage have modern relevance in the objectives of the World Trade Organization (WTO), which exists to promote free trade amongst all of its member countries. ๏‚š Trade will take place when countries have a clear-cut or absolute advantage over other countries in they produce. ๏‚š Trade can also be beneficial where a country may not / comparative advantage in the production of a particular good over another country, trade can produce gains for both partners.
  • 4. INTERNATIONAL TRADE Free trade - system of trade policy that allows traders to trade across national boundaries without interference from the respective governments. There are 2 reasons of free trade ๏‚š Domestic Non-availability: A nation trades because it lacks the raw materials, climate, specialist labour, capital or technology needed to manufacture a particular good. Trade allows a greater variety of goods and services. ๏‚š Cost effectiveness: It is cheaper to buy from other countries rather than producing themselves.
  • 5. ๏‚š Reciprocal absolute advantage- one country is better at producing one product, the other is superior in the production of the other. ๏‚š Comparative advantage โ€“ trade between two countries should still take place and be mutually beneficial provided the domestic opportunity cost of production differ.
  • 6. Benefits of Free Trade ๏‚š Lower prices for consumers ๏‚š Greater choice for consumers ๏‚š benefit from economies of scale ๏‚š acquire needed resources ๏‚š efficient allocation of resources ๏‚š Increased competition ๏‚š Source of foreign exchange
  • 7. FREE TRADE DIAGRAM http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=65UcSx_LrZI#t=62
  • 8. EXPORTS & IMPORTS / VISIBLE TRADE AND INVISIBLE TRADE ๏‚š EXPORTS (X)- the movement of goods / commodities out of the country. ๏‚š IMPORTS (M) โ€“ the movement of goods / commodities into the country. ๏‚š VISIBLE TRADE โ€“ involves trading of goods which can be touched & weighed. Examples include trade in goods such as oil, machinery, foods, clothes etc. ๏ฑ Visible exports- selling of tangible goods which can be touched & weighed to other countries. ๏ฑ Visible imports - buying of tangible goods which can be touched and weighed from other countries. ๏‚š INVISIBLE TRADE โ€“ involves the M &X of services rather than goods. Ex :- banking, tourism, education. ๏‚š Balance of trade - It is the difference between the value of visible exports and value of visible imports of a country. X>M - the country will have a Surplus balance of trade. M>X - the country will have an Unfavourable balance of trade.
  • 9. ABSOLUTE ADVANTAGE ๏‚š A country has an absolute advantage over another in producing a good, if it can produce that good using fewer resources than another country. ๏‚š if one unit of labor in Australia can produce 80 units of wool or 20 units of wine; while in France one unit of labor makes 50 units of wool or 75 units of wine, then Australia has an absolute advantage in producing wool and France has an absolute advantage in producing wine. ๏‚š Australia can get more wine with its labor by specializing in wool and trading the wool for French wine, while France can benefit by trading wine for wool.
  • 10. COMPARATIVE ADVANTAGE ๏‚š A country should specialize in the production of good or service in which it has lower opportunity cost and it should import commodities which have a higher opportunity cost of production. ๏‚š A country enjoys a comparative advantage in the production of a good when that good can be produced at a lower cost in terms of other goods. Example Northland and Southland produce and consume two goods, Food and Clothes. The productive capacities and efficiencies of the countries are such that if both countries devoted all their resources to Food production, output would be as follows:
  • 11. ๏‚š Northland: 100 tonnes ๏‚š Southland: 200 tonnes If all the resources of the countries were allocated to the production of clothes, output would be: ๏‚š Northland: 100 tonnes ๏‚š Southland: 100 tonnes
  • 12. ๏‚š each has constant opportunity costs of production between the two products and both economies have full employment at all times. All factors of production are mobile within the countries between clothing and food industries, but are immobile between the countries. The price mechanism must be working to provide perfect competition. ๏‚š Southland has an absolute advantage over Northland in the production of Food. Both countries are equally efficient in the production of clothes. There seems to be no mutual benefit in trade between the economies. ๏‚š The opportunity costs shows otherwise. Northland's opportunity cost of producing one tonne of Food is one tonne of Clothes and vice versa. Southland's opportunity cost of one tonne of Food is 0.5 tonne of Clothes. The opportunity cost of one tonne of Clothes is 2 tonnes of Food. ๏‚š Southland has a comparative advantage in food production, because of its lower opportunity cost of production with respect to Northland. Northland has a comparative advantage over Southland in the production of clothes, the opportunity cost of which is higher in Southland with respect to Food than in Northland.
  • 13. To show these different opportunity costs lead to mutual benefit if the countries specialize production and trade, consider the countries produce and consume only domestically. The volumes are: Foods Cloths Northland 50 50 Southland 100 50 World total 150 100
  • 14. Production & consumption before trade ๏‚š he exchange price will be somewhere between the two. The remainder of the example works with an international trading price of one tonne of Food for 2/3 tonne of Clothes. ๏‚š If both specialize in the goods in which they have comparative advantage, their outputs will be Food Clothes Northland 0 100 Southland 200 0 World total 200 100
  • 15. Production & Consumption after Trade ๏‚š World production of food increased. Clothing production remained the same. Using the exchange rate of one tonne of Food for 2/3 tonne of Clothes, Northland and Southland are able to trade to yield the following level of consumption : ๏‚š Northland traded 50 tonnes of Clothing for 75 tonnes of Food. Both benefited, and now consume at points outside their production possibility frontiers. Food Clothes Northland 75 50 Southland 125 50 World total 200 100
  • 16. Limitations of Theory of Absolute Advantage The theory is based on unrealistic assumptions: ๏‚š Factors of production are immobile and fixed ๏‚š Technology is fixed ๏‚š There is perfect competition ๏‚š Resources are fully employed ๏‚š Imports and exports balance each other ๏‚š There is free trade Cost of Transportation has been ignored http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RpfV0Oerfr8
  • 17. Summary of the Principles of Absolute and Comparative Advantage ๏‚š There are just two countries involved in trade. ๏‚š Each can produce just two products. ๏‚š Productivity differs between them, so varying quantities of each are produced. ๏‚š Production costs and opportunity costs are constant for each product.
  • 18. PRINCIPLES OF INTERNATIONAL TRADE ๏‚š The production possibility frontiers are linear. ๏‚š The exchange rate operating for international transactions must be between respective domestic opportunity cost ratios. ๏‚š No transport cost are charged. ๏‚š The two country, two-product assumption is again a long way from reality in the 21st century. ๏‚š Production cost are most unlikely to be constant. ๏‚š There are no restrictions on free trade between those countries which possess absolute and comparative advantage.
  • 19. Other explanation & determinants of trade flows ๏‚š Competitive advantage- focuses on the actual production cost and how in reality, firms are continuously striving to reduce their unit costs. ๏‚š Factor endowment โ€“ this model of trade stresses the importance of the quantity and quality of the production factors. ๏‚š Government policy โ€“ a government may decide that it does not wish to over-specialize & that its best strategy is to diversify production so that it has a range of products available in the event of any dislocation / supplies interruption.
  • 20. Protectionism ๏‚š Policy of protecting domestic industries against foreign competition by means of tariffs, subsidies, import quotas, or other handicaps placed on imports. ๏‚š Government-levied tariffs, raise the price of imported articles, making them less attractive to consumers than cheaper domestic products. ๏‚š Import quotas, which limit the quantities of goods that can be imported, are another protectionist device.
  • 21. Tariff (tax on imports) ๏‚š tax on foreign goods upon importation. Tariff rates vary according to the type of goods imported. Import tariffs will increase the cost to importers, and increase the price of imported goods in the local markets, thus lowering the quantity of goods imported.
  • 22. Impacts of Tariffs ๏‚š Tariffs lead to higher prices for imports and thus Imports fall ๏‚š Domestic consumers have to pay higher prices and buy less. ๏‚š Domestic producers gain, as they get higher prices and sell larger quantities. As we can see in the diagram domestic production increases from 0Q1 to 0Q2. Moreover their revenue increases from PwQ1 to Pw+TQ2 ๏‚š Higher domestic production leads to increased domestic employment. ๏‚š Government now gains from tariff revenues, which can be represented by โ€˜eโ€™ in the diagram ๏‚š Tariffs are regressive in nature and thus worsen income distribution. ๏‚š Exporting countries lose due to fall in exports.
  • 23. Quotas (restriction on the maximum import quantity) ๏‚š Import quotas - sets a physical limit on the quantity of a good that can be imported into a country in a given period of time. This leads to a reduction in the quantity imported and therefore increases the market price of imported goods.
  • 24. Effects of Quotas ๏‚š Domestic production increases from 0Q1 to 0Q1+Q3Q4. ๏‚š Domestic consumption fall from 0Q2 to 0Q4 ๏‚š Imports fall from Q1Q2 to Q1Q3 ๏‚š Consumers end up paying more. Before quota was imposed they were paying Pw, but now they are paying Pw+Quota ๏‚š Domestic producers gain as they sell more at higher prices (Pw+Quota) ๏‚š Domestic employment increases as domestic production rises. ๏‚š Government gets quota revenues ๏‚š Domestic society is worse off due to decrease in consumption and production by less efficient producers ๏‚š Exporting countries lose revenue ๏‚š Quotas result in global misallocation of resources as goods are being produced by inefficient producers. ๏‚š J and K represents the dead weight loss of welfare to the society, as J represents production by inefficient producers and K represents the loss of consumer surplus.
  • 25. Subsidies ๏‚š government subsidies (in the form of lump-sum payments or cheap loans) are sometimes given to local firms that cannot compete well against foreign imports.
  • 26. Effects of Subsidies ๏‚š Consumption of the good is not affected. Consumption remains at Q3. ๏‚š Taxpayers lose as the tax revenue collected is being used for subsidies ๏‚š Domestic producers gain as the production increases from 0Q1 to 0Q3. ๏‚š Employment increases as more is being produced domestically. ๏‚š Exporting countries are worse off ๏‚š Global misallocation of resources as inefficient producers are now producing goods.
  • 27. Other protection policy ๏‚š Administrative Barriers Countries are sometimes accused of using their various administrative rules (eg. regarding food safety, environmental standards, electrical safety, etc.) as a way to introduce barriers to imports. ๏‚š Embargo An embargo is the prohibition of commerce and trade with a certain country, in order to isolate it and to put its government into a difficult internal situation, given that the effects of the embargo are often able to make its economy suffer from the initiative. ๏‚š Anti-dumping legislation Supporters of anti-dumping laws argue that they prevent "dumping" of cheaper foreign goods that would cause local firms to close down. However, in practice, anti-dumping laws are usually used to impose trade tariffs on foreign exporters.
  • 28. ECONOMIC INTEGRATION ๏‚š Trade unification between different states by the partial or full abolishing of customs tariffs on trade taking place within the borders of each state. ๏‚š This is meant in turn to lead to lower prices for distributors and consumers (as no customs duties are paid within the integrated area) and the goal is to increase trade. ๏‚š Trade agreement โ€“ A contract/agreement/pact between two or more nations that outlines how they will work together to ensure mutual benefit in the field of trade and investment. Trade agreements are either bilateral, involving only two countries, or multilateral, involving more than two countries. ๏‚š Trade bloc - a type of intergovernmental agreement, where regional barriers to trade, (tariffs and non-tariff barriers) are reduced or eliminated among the participating states.
  • 29. Types of Trade Blocs ๏‚š Preferential Trade agreement โ€“ A trading bloc that gives preferential access to certain products from the participating countries. This is done by reducing tariffs but not by abolishing them completely. A PTA can be established through a trade pact. It is the first stage of economic integration. ๏‚š Free Trade Areas - A trade bloc whose member countries have signed a free-trade agreement (FTA), which eliminates tariffs, import quotas, and preferences on most (if not all) goods and services traded between them.
  • 30. ๏‚š Customs Union- An agreement among countries to have free trade among themselves and to adopt common external barriers against any other country interested in exporting to these countries. ๏‚š Common Market - A type of custom union where there are common policies on product regulation, and free movement of goods and services, capital and labour. All common markets and economic and monetary unions are also customs unions
  • 31. Economic & Monetary Unions ๏‚š A common market with common currency ๏‚š Where more than two countries use the same currency. Advantages of single currency ๏‚š Reduces the level of transaction cost. ๏‚š When trading among each other the countries need not worry about possible exchange rate fluctuations. ๏‚š It is easier to make price comparisons between countries. ๏‚š Greater FDI is attracted because of reduced transactions costs, reduced uncertainty and the large size of single currency market. Disadvantages of single currency ๏‚š Individual countries lose the ability to set interest rates. ๏‚š Individual countries cannot depreciate or devalue its currency value. ๏‚š Huge cost involved such as physical changing, reprogramming computers, producing new price lists etc.
  • 32. The terms of Trade ๏‚š The exchange Rate operating for international transaction must be between the respective domestic opportunity cost ratios. ๏‚š It measures the rate at which the goods of one country exchange for the goods of another. ๏‚š The consumption combinations possible through specialization and trade at these terms of trade are represented by each countryโ€™s trading possibility curve (TPC). ๏‚š Trading possibilities exist that exceed domestic production possibilities. Countries can still do much better through trade than trying to produce everything for themselves. ๏‚š The terms of trade are represented as an index of the ratio of export prices and import prices :- Terms of Trade index = ํ’Šํ’ํ’…ํ’†ํ’™ ํ’ํ’‡ ํ’†ํ’™ํ’‘ํ’ํ’“ํ’• ํ’‘ํ’“ํ’Šํ’„ํ’†ํ’” ํ’Šํ’ํ’…ํ’†ํ’™ ํ’ํ’‡ ํ’Šํ’Žํ’‘ํ’ํ’“ํ’• ํ’‘ํ’“ํ’Šํ’„ํ’†ํ’” x 100

Editor's Notes

  1. International trade involves the buying and selling of goods and services across national frontiers (boundry). Trade provides an important link between developed and developing economies. Trade permits countries to specialize in products and commodities which they can produce relatively efficiently. Frtom an accounting standpoint, the balance of payments in an economy is a financial record of all such international transactions.
  2. Country did not engage in world trade, consumers would pay price P and consume quantity Q. When economy engaged in international trade, then the consumer would benefit from international specialization. Under these circumstances prices would fall to Pw. Consumption of the product would rise from Q to Q4. At this price Q1 would be supplied by the domestic producers. This mean the domestic production has fallen from Q to Q1. Imposition of tariff would shift the supply curve upwards. This would increase the price domestic consumers from Pw to Pw+T. Production by domestic producers would increase from Q1 to Q2. So tariffs distrost market forces & prevent consumers from benefiting from all the advantages of international specialization and trade.
  3. - Its effect is to reduce the supply of imports on the domestic market. This will lead to a higher equilibrium price than would occur in a free market. One difference is that whereas the government gains revenue as a result of tariffs, with quotas the increased price paid by consumers results in the foreign firm which supplied the imports earning higher profits.