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Trade. Growth of trade In 1991, the US exported $365 billion and Imported $450 billion By 2004 those numbers had increased to $1.151 trillion in exports.

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Presentation on theme: "Trade. Growth of trade In 1991, the US exported $365 billion and Imported $450 billion By 2004 those numbers had increased to $1.151 trillion in exports."— Presentation transcript:

1 Trade

2 Growth of trade In 1991, the US exported $365 billion and Imported $450 billion By 2004 those numbers had increased to $1.151 trillion in exports and $1.398 trillion in imports That left a trade imbalance of about $247 billion because exports < imports

3 Why do Nations Trade? Economists over the centuries have tried to explain why nations trade. Adam Smith set the tone for our discussion when he said that “in a free market, nations trade because both will benefit.”

4 Models for Trade: Absolute Advantage Economists in the early 19 th century came up with a model called: Absolute Advantage In Absolute Advantage, one nation clearly produces more of one product while another nation clearly produces more of another.

5 Absolute Advantage Example on the board

6 Models for Trade: Comparative Advantage Economists noticed that some nations could make more of both products, and so the idea of Comparative Advantage was developed.

7 Comparative Advantage A nation that specializes in the product in which they have a comparative advantage can then trade for the other product.

8 Barter Pepsi and the Soviet Union

9 The impact of Trade on Xrates

10 Newer Theories Comparative advantage comes from “factor endowment” Factors of Production (land, labor, capital) determine which products a country can produce with an advantage

11 Factor Endowment Japan has a huge population, but a relatively small land area. They have a comparative advantage making products which require labor but not land, like electronics. Australia, with a large land area but smaller population, produces wool, which requires land but not as much labor.

12 Other Theories of Trade Overlapping demand: It seems as though nations with similar incomes demand similar products. So we trade with Japan, Britain and Canada more than with Nepal, India and Zaire.

13 Protectionism Despite the clear advantages to specialization and trade (more products at lower prices), many countries attempt to set up barriers to trade to protect domestic producers.

14 Tariffs One such barrier is a tariff, or a tax on imports. The example on the board shows the impact of a tariff on prices and quantities.

15 Quotas Quotas are limits on imports

16 Arguments for trade barriers Save American jobs Stop unfair trade practices Safeguard National Security Protect Infant Industries Protect Environment Stop slave labor Tariffs raise revenue for government

17 Arguments for Free Trade Consume more stuff at lower prices

18 Efforts to Promote Free Trade GATT --- General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade – Reciprocity “give and get” – Non-discrimination one and all get same rights – Lowers tariffs and reduces quotas WTO --- World Trade Organization – Hears complaints from members – Enforces agreements

19 Regional Efforts EU --- European Union – Create a 550 million person economic community – Common currency and no trade restrictions NAFTA --- North American Free Trade Agreement – Canada, Mexico and the United States

20 Recent Trade agreements CAFTA --- Central America Free Trade Agreement

21 Review Sheet Test next Wednesday


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