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Econ 433 Advanced International Trade Professor Andrés Rodríguez-Clare.

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Presentation on theme: "Econ 433 Advanced International Trade Professor Andrés Rodríguez-Clare."— Presentation transcript:

1 Econ 433 Advanced International Trade Professor Andrés Rodríguez-Clare

2 International trade Imports: purchase of goods or services from another country. Exports: sale of goods or services to other countries. Reasons for trade

3 Goods and services Goods: includes manufacturing, mining, and agricultural products. Services: includes business services like eBay, customer services, travel, insurance, tourism, and transportation.

4 Differences across industries Share of U.S. Demand served by Imports (2001) –Agricultural: 16% (21%) –Oil: 51% (10%) –Textiles: 12% (11%) –Clothing: 58% (11%) –Transport Equipment: 30% (20%) –Services: 2% (2%)

5 Industry-level effects Apparel employment in the US declined from 1.2 million in 1987 top 300 thousand in 2006 Trade? What else?

6 Inequality has increased

7 Trade is controversial Opposition to trade is strong on both the left and the right According to a Wall Street Journal survey… –Six in 10 Republicans agreed with a statement that free trade has been bd for the U.S. and said they would agree with a Republican candidate who favored tougher regulations to limit imports

8 Trade is controversial On the left, Lou Dobbs (CNN): –“One has to wonder why the effect of putting our middle class in direct competition with the cheapest labor in the world isn’t as clear to them (big business) as it is to most working men and women in this country.”

9 More terminology Trade balance Current account

10 U.S. International Trade in Goods and Services, 1992-2007 In millions of dollars. Balance Exports Imports Year TotalGoods (1)ServicesTotalGoods (1)ServicesTotalGoods (1)Services 2004-607,730-669,57861,8481,160,588807,516353,0721,768,3181,477,094291,224 2005-711,567-787,14975,5821,283,753894,631389,1221,995,3201,681,780313,540 2006-753,283-838,27084,9871,457,0141,023,109433,9052,210,2981,861,380348,918 2007-700,258-819,373119,1151,645,7261,148,481497,2452,345,9831,967,853378,130 Source: U.S. Census Bureau, Foreign Trade Division.

11 Traditional trade

12 New forms of trade

13 The making of a Barbie doll

14 The Basics of World Trade Problems with data? –The whole $2 is counted as an export while only 35 cents of added value. So why is this a big deal? –In 1995, toys imported from China totaled $5.4 billion. –As trade with China continues to grow, China’s apparent trade advantage begins to worry many in the U.S. –When the trade statistics are misleading, it can cause undue controversy.

15 Map of World Trade In 2000 $6.6 trillion in goods crossed international borders.

16 Increasing importance of trade

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18 Why? Reduction in policy barriers. Reduction in transportation costs

19 Share of “open” countries in the world

20 Import duties

21 Transportation costs In 1956 Malcom McLean first designed a transportation system around the packaging of cargo in huge metal boxes that could be loaded and unloaded by cranes…. Dramatic reduction in freight costs

22 Other international flows Foreign Direct Investment (FDI) is the flow of capital across borders when a firm owns a company in another country. Migration is the flow of people across borders as they move from one country to another.

23 Map of Migration Figure 1.5 Foreign-Born Migrants, 2000 (millions)

24 Foreign Direct Investment FDI occurs when a firm in one country owns and controls a company in another country. FDI can embed –capital, –technology, –know-how, –skills, –access to international markets

25 Map of Foreign Direct Investment Figure 1.6 Flows of Foreign Direct Investment, 2000


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