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STANDARDS: SS6E8 Analyze the benefits of and barriers to voluntary trade in Europe. Explain how specialization encourages trade between countries. Compare.

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Presentation on theme: "STANDARDS: SS6E8 Analyze the benefits of and barriers to voluntary trade in Europe. Explain how specialization encourages trade between countries. Compare."— Presentation transcript:

1 STANDARDS: SS6E8 Analyze the benefits of and barriers to voluntary trade in Europe. Explain how specialization encourages trade between countries. Compare and contrast different types of trade barriers such as tariffs, quotas, and embargoes. Explain why international trade requires a system for exchanging currencies between nations. © Brain Wrinkles

2 Specialization, Trade Barriers, & Currency Exchange
Ame Europe’s VOLUNTARY TRADE Specialization, Trade Barriers, & Currency Exchange © Brain Wrinkles

3 Specialization © Brain Wrinkles

4 Why Trade? Voluntary trade occurs when different countries choose to engage in the exchange of goods with one another. Countries trade goods because no country has all the resources necessary to produce every single thing its people need. Voluntary trade is good for countries because it lets a country sell its own resources and buy the resources it needs. © Brain Wrinkles

5 Specialization Because countries cannot produce all of the goods/services that they need, they must specialize in what they do best. Specialization is an efficient way to work, and the cost of items produced is lower. It increases trade because a country can get what it needs at the lowest cost when produced by someone who specializes in producing that item. © Brain Wrinkles

6 How It Works For example, Italy is home to highly skilled industrial workers, engineers, and scientists. The country also has many industrial factories. As a result, Italy specializes in the manufacturing of automobiles. © Brain Wrinkles

7 Ferrari Assembly Line in Italy
© Brain Wrinkles

8 Trade Barriers © Brain Wrinkles

9 Barriers Trade barriers are natural or man-made obstacles to voluntary trade. Natural trade barriers include mountain ranges, deserts, rainforests, or lack of access to bodies of water. In Europe, the Alps make it difficult for northern Italy to trade with Switzerland. The countries are building tunnels through the mountains to help make trade easier. Political trade barriers are policies passed by a government to regulate trade. © Brain Wrinkles

10 Italian Alps © Brain Wrinkles

11 Barriers Trade is an important part of every country’s economy.
However, countries sometimes set up trade barriers to restrict trade because they want to produce their own goods and sell them in their own country. To limit or control trade, countries set up trade barriers, such as tariffs, quotas, and trade embargoes. © Brain Wrinkles

12 Tariffs Tariffs are taxes placed on imported goods.
Tariffs are used to protect a country’s own businesses from foreign competition. The added tax makes an imported good more expensive, thus encouraging the country’s consumers to buy domestically produced items. © Brain Wrinkles

13 Tariffs When countries outside of the European Union want to sell their goods in the EU, they must pay tariffs. This makes the non-EU products more expensive than the products made by EU members. Which would you buy? Example: If a US company wants to export fruit to a country in the EU, the US company must pay a tariff which makes US fruit more expensive. © Brain Wrinkles

14 Quotas Quotas are restrictions on the amount of a good that can be imported into a country. They are used to prevent too much of a good from entering a country. When there is too much of a good, prices fall and businesses don’t make a profit. Quotas limits the amount of goods available, which causes prices to rise. They help protect a country’s own businesses from foreign competition. © Brain Wrinkles

15 Quotas The European Union places a quota on the amount of steel that can be imported from certain countries. The effect is similar to a tariff, because it makes steel from those countries harder to get, and more expensive. This helps steel producers within EU sell more steel. © Brain Wrinkles

16 Embargo Embargoes are a political barrier to trade.
In an embargo, a nation forbids trade with another country. Refusing to trade with another country is a way to hurt it economically. © Brain Wrinkles

17 Embargo Recently, the European Union began placing embargoes on the sale of certain weapons and other technologies to Iran. This was done because the countries of the EU suspected Iran was trying to build nuclear bombs. EU countries hope that the embargo will make it difficult for Iran to build this type of weapon. © Brain Wrinkles

18 Currency Exchange © Brain Wrinkles

19 Currency Exchange Currency is something that is assigned value and can be used to purchase goods and services in a market. Because countries have different forms of currency, international trade requires a system for exchanging currencies between nations. Money from one country must be converted into the currency of another country to pay for goods in that country. © Brain Wrinkles

20 © Brain Wrinkles

21 Exchange Rate What the currency of a nation is worth in terms of another country’s currency is called the exchange rate. For example, an exchange rate of Russian rubles to the US dollar means that Russian rubles are worth the same as 1 US dollar. Foreign exchange makes it easier to trade all around the world. © Brain Wrinkles

22 Exchange Rate Against US Dollar
Nation Currency Exchange Rate Against US Dollar Switzerland Swiss Franc .97 Russia Russian Ruble 58.27 Denmark Danish Krone 6.66 United Kingdom British Pound .78 European Union Euro .89 © Brain Wrinkles

23 Exchange Rate When a nation’s economy changes, so does the value of its currency. Because of this, exchange rates are constantly changing. © Brain Wrinkles


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