What Determines a Country’s Comparative Advantage? Exogenous factors are the most obvious.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
4 Trade and Resources: The Heckscher-Ohlin Model 1 Heckscher-Ohlin
Advertisements

1 Welcome to EC 382: International Economics By: Dr. Jacqueline Khorassani Week Three.
Economies of Scale and Comparative Advantage
Monopoly Demand Curve Chapter The Demand Curve Facing a Monopoly Firm  In any market, the industry demand curve is downward- sloping. This is the.
The role of the firm Chapter 4. Trade and Imperfect Competition Intra-industry trade Relevance to international business –MNEs and assumption of imperfect.
Chapter 3 Modern Trade Theories
Costs, Isocost and Isoquant
Monopolistic competition Is Starbuck’s coffee really different from any other?
Chapter 8 Production and Costs
Monopolistic Competition and Trade
Chapter 18 The markets for the factors of production
Why trade? Buy/import resources one is lacking, sell/export those one has in abundance Buy/import goods which are relatively inefficient to produce, sell/export.
3 Gains and Losses from Trade in the Specific-Factors Model 1
Economies of Scale, Imperfect Competition, and International Trade
What’s the difference between monopoly and competition? Monopoly: one firm selling a product Competition: many firms selling same product Other models.
Imperfect Competition, Increasing Returns, and Product Variety
Economies of Scale Economies of Scale make it advantageous for each country to specialize in the production of only limited number of goods & services.
Goods Prices and Factor Prices: The Distributional Consequences of International Trade Nothing is accomplished until someone sells something. (popular.
1 BA 187 – International Trade Specific Factors & Differential Gains from Trade.
Equilibrium in a Monopolistically Competitive Market
Copyright ©2004, South-Western College Publishing International Economics By Robert J. Carbaugh 9th Edition Chapter 3 (A): Sources of Comparative Advantage.
For a long time we were happy with the old trade theory featuring comparative advantage and its more modern trade theorems.
Sources of Comparative Advantage
Trade Under Increasing Returns to Scale
Lectures in Macroeconomics- Charles W. Upton Comparative Advantage.
The Standard Trade Model
MCQ Chapter 8.
HECKSCHER-OHLIN THEORY  What determines comparative advantage?  What are the effects of international trade on the earnings of factors of production?
 relatively small economies of scale  many firms  product differentiation  close but not perfect substitutes  product characteristics, location, services.
Part 7 Further Topics © 2006 Thomson Learning/South-Western.
Preview Types of economies of scale Types of imperfect competition
Factor Endowments and the Heckscher-Ohlin Theory
Questions: (1) Where do the labor demand and supply curves come from? (2) How well do they explain the facts?
2.3 Real and nominal wages Actions of employers (buyers) and employees (sellers) determine wages (prices) These prices act as signals or incentives Part.
Input Demand: The Labor and Land Markets
2 of 23 © 2014 Pearson Education, Inc. 3 of 23 © 2014 Pearson Education, Inc. CHAPTER OUTLINE 10 Input Demand: The Labor and Land Markets Input Markets:
INPUT MARKET.
Chapter 4 Labor Market Equilibrium Copyright © 2010 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. McGraw-Hill/Irwin.
Chapter 28 Labor Demand and Supply (How many laborers should a firm hire, and at what wage?)
Chapter 5 LR Demand for Labor Long run (LR): period of time that is long enough for firm to vary both K and L (in response to  es in: factor prices/demand,
Trade: Factor Availability and Factor Proportions Are Key
Economies of Scale, Imperfect Competition, and International Trade
Examples of rising and falling industries Beef chicken bagel stores smoothies video rental stores drive-in movies.
New Classical Theories of International Trade
Unit 1: Trade Theory Heckscher-Ohlin Model 2/3/2012.
Gießen, Differentiated products Vertical differentiation: different qualities Horizontal differentiation: equal qualities, but consumers.
Costs and Market See chapters 9-10 in Mansfield et al.
Monopolistic Competition Monopoly –one firm –faces downward sloping demand curve Competition –many firms –face flat demand curve –free entry and exit.
Monopolistic Competition. Monopolistic Competition is based upon a number of assumptions Many buyers and many sellers No barriers to entry or exit Differentiated.
Some Practical Questions Is there such a thing called complete specialization? 1.
Supply. Quantity Supplied Amount of any good or service that sellers are willing and able to sell Law of Supply: Other things equal (ceteris paribus),
Slides prepared by Thomas Bishop Copyright © 2009 Pearson Addison-Wesley. All rights reserved. Chapter 4 Resources, Comparative Advantage, and Income Distribution.
©McGraw-Hill Education, 2014
An analysis of the use of AD and AS in macro equilibrium MACRO ECONOMIC EQUILIBRIUM 12.2A.
© 2007 Pearson Addison-Wesley. All rights reserved Chapter 7 Imperfect Competition, Increasing Returns, and Product Variety.
Chapter Seventeen The Gains from International Trade.
Copyright © 2003 Pearson Education, Inc.Slide 6-1  Economies of Scale and Comparative Advantage Assumptions: –There are two countries: Home (the capital-abundant.
Economics 2010 Lecture 12 Competition (II). Competition  Output, Price, and Profit in the Short Run  Output, Price, and Profit in the Long Run  Changing.
International Economics Mordecai E. Kreinin Copyright ©2002 South-Western/Thomson Learning. All rights reserved. Copyright ©2002 South-Western/Thomson.
Slides prepared by Thomas Bishop Copyright © 2009 Pearson Addison-Wesley. All rights reserved. Chapter 6 Economies of Scale, Imperfect Competition, and.
International Economics By Robert J. Carbaugh 9th Edition
Derivation of labor demand in a competitive product and labor market
Costs of Production in the Long-run
ECON 321 INTERNATIONAL ECONOMICS
THE ECONOMY: THE CORE PROJECT
Chapter 2 Inter-Industry Trade Inter-industry trade Inter-firm trade.
ECON 321 INTERNATIONAL ECONOMICS
Presentation transcript:

What Determines a Country’s Comparative Advantage? Exogenous factors are the most obvious

Climate (long growing season)

Natural Resources (petroleum reserves)

But there are also endogenous factors: education, skills, capital,... Implies that comparative advantage can change over time: electronic goods to pharmaceutical goods to internet software to ….

Let’s take a closer look at how capital (K) and labor (L) affect comparative advantage –Definitions: capital abundant country: has high K/L labor abundant country: has low K/L capital intensive production: uses high K/L labor intensive production: uses low K/L Capital abundant countries: comparative advantage in capital intensive production Labor abundant countries: comparative advantage in labor intensive production

Factor Price Equalization Factor prices: –wage rate for labor –rental rate for capital Factor price equalization: even if factors are not mobile, factor prices will tend to equalize with trade

What causes factor price equalization? suppose U.S. has high K/L suppose Mexico has low K/L then opening up trade will shift –U.S. production toward capital intensive goods thus demand for capital rises in U.S –M. production toward labor intensive goods thus demand for labor rises in Mexico U.S. wages fall and Mexican wages rise –that is a move toward factor price equalization –assumes ceteris paribus, productivity would rise

Gains from Expanded Markets Theory combines two features of production –economies of scale (declining ATC over the relevant range of production) –product differentiation: leads to monopolistic competition Focuses on intraindustry trade (same industry) –comparative advantage focuses on interindustry trade (different industries)

Getting a sense of the gains from expanded markets

Now let’s develop a model to show the gains from expanded markets First derive a relationship between –the number of firms, –the size of the market –costs per unit (ATC) Second, derive a relationship between the number of firms and the price Third, combine the two relationships

Now, summarize the results using a new curve

Recall results from monopolistic competition model Product differentiation Firms face downward sloping demand curve With more firms in the industry, the demand curve shifts –and gets flatter (a point we did not emphasize earlier), so the price falls –sketch this by hand:

Now, summarize the result that more firms lead to a lower price in another new curve

Put the two new curves in the same diagram; look at the long run equilibrium

Finally, open up the economy; curve shifts showing effect of a larger market

End of Lecture