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ECO 121 MACROECONOMICS Lecture Three Aisha Khan Section L & M Spring 2010.

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Presentation on theme: "ECO 121 MACROECONOMICS Lecture Three Aisha Khan Section L & M Spring 2010."— Presentation transcript:

1 ECO 121 MACROECONOMICS Lecture Three Aisha Khan Section L & M Spring 2010

2 US in the Global Economy  M&B Chapter 5  Global Economy

3 International Linkages  Goods and Services flow (trade flows)  Capital and labor flows (resource flows)  Information and Technology flows  Financial flows  What is a trade balance?

4 US and World Trade  Volume  Trend in volume for the US and the World  Dependence  Trade Patterns  Trade deficit in goods  Trade surplus in services  Financial linkages

5 But WHY Trade?  Economically?  Specialization  Concentrating your productive efforts on a limited range of tasks for effective and efficient performance  Division of Labor

6 Absolute Advantage  One country is said to have an absolute advantage over another in the production of a particular good if it can produce a given quantity with less total resources

7 Comparative Advantage  A country has a comparative advantage in producing a good if the opportunity cost of producing that good in terms of other goods is lower in that country than it is in other countries.

8 Example CottonPotatoes US60100 Pakistan105 Trade between two nations: The amount of output produced with one unit of resources

9  US needs to give up 0.6 cotton bundles to produce 1 bag of potatoes  Pakistan needs to give up 2 cotton bundles to produce 1 bag of potatoes  Comparative Advantage: US (potatoes)  US needs to give up 1.6 bags of potatoes to get 1 cotton bundle  Pakistan needs to give up 0.5 bags of potatoes to get 1 cotton bundle  Comparative Advantage: Pak (cotton) CottonPotatoes US60100 Pakistan105

10 Trade Advantages Standard of Living DevelopmentOutput Efficiency and Productivity

11 Trade and its impact

12 Foreign Exchange Market  Exchange of goods and services requires the exchange in currency  The foreign exchange market helps determine the exchange rate / price at which currency will be exchanged  Competitive  Links all domestic prices to foreign prices

13  Exchange rates also fluctuate  Appreciation  Gain in value of currency  Impacts: cheaper imports, expensive exports  Depreciation  Loss in value of currency  Impacts: cheaper exports, expensive imports

14 Why intervene in trade?  Domestic industry protection (protectionism)  Costs to society (higher than world prices)  Political considerations  Religious, cultural norms

15 Intervention  Protective Tariffs  Import quotas  Non-tariff barriers  Export subsidies

16 Rapid Trade Growth  Regardless of intervention  Transportation technology  Communications technology  General decline in Tariffs and restrictions

17 Trade Agreements  Objective:  To avoid the backfiring of intervention in trade  To facilitate mutually concerned countries

18 History in Trade Institutions  Reciprocal Trade Agreement Act 1934  Started downward trend in tariffs  Only between two countries  Negotiating authority  Generalized reductions  General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade  Rounds of agreement to reduce trade barriers  Uruguay Round 1995

19 World Trade Organization  Uruguay Round succeeded as WTO  Critical of WTO  Created to expand international trade and allow investment to move around laws that protect resources  Labor and environment laws

20 Trade Blocs  European Union  North American Free Trade Agreement

21 EU, NAFTA, etc  longer-term advantages  internal economies of scale  external economies of scale  better terms of trade  increased competition between members  longer-term disadvantages  certain regions of the union may suffer  possibility of oligopolistic collusion  administrative costs


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