Title: International Economics
1International Economics
- University of Helsinki
- September 24th October 19th, 2007
2Practicalities
- Lecturer Matti Sarvimäki
- matti.sarvimaki_at_vatt.fi / (09) 703 2953
- Lectures Mondays 12-14, Wednesdays 14-16
- Fridays 10-12 at Economicum
- Wed 3rd cancelled, extra lecture TBA
- Exam 9.11.2007 at 12-14 U40 lecture room 1
- Retake 7.12.2007 at 12-14 Porthania III
3Requirements
- Lectures
- Krugman (1993) What Do Undergrads Need to Know
About Trade? The American Economic Review 83(2)
2326 (available from JSTOR) - There are two textbooks that are likely to be
helpful (one by Krugman Obstfeld another by
Appleyard Field). Both are called International
Economics. The course covers most of the first
half of the books (trade theory and policy) and
the books cover most of the material I will
present during the lectures.
4Outline
- The course
- Basic Trade Models
- Introduction to Trade Policy
- Further Topics
- This lecture Introduction
- Stylised facts
- What models do
- Mercantilism and Adam Smith
- (introduction to comparative advantage)
5World Trade 1820-1992
World Exports/GDP (in 1990 constant dollars,
percent)
Source Rodrik (2000), original data from
Maddison (1995)
6Real GDP per capita (population weighted
averages, 1950-2000)
Source Calculations from Penn World Table, data
available at http//pwt.econ.upenn.edu/
7World Inequality 1820-1992 (mean logarithmic
deviation)
Source Bourguignon Morrisson (2002). See also
Human Developments Trends in http//www.gapminder.
org/, in particular slides 1/15 and 2/11.
8Change in the U.S. Real Wages(per percentile
between 1970 and 2002 )
Change in real wages 19702002
Percentile
Source Smith (2006)
9Openness to Trade, GDP per capita and population
(2000)
Source Calculations from Penn World Table, data
available at http//pwt.econ.upenn.edu/
10Openness to Trade, GDP per capita and population
(2000)
Source Calculations from Penn World Table, data
available at http//pwt.econ.upenn.edu/
11Openness to Trade and GDP per capita over time
(Finland, 1950-2000)
Source Calculations from Penn World Table, data
available at http//pwt.econ.upenn.edu/
12Openness to Trade and GDP per capita over time
(Selected countries, 1950-2000)
13Changes in Openness to Trade and changes in GDP
per capita (1950/60 - 1990/00)
Source Calculations from Penn World Table, data
available at http//pwt.econ.upenn.edu/
14Changes in Openness to Trade and GDP per capita
(1950/60 - 1990/00)
Source Calculations from Penn World Table, data
available at http//pwt.econ.upenn.edu/
15Leading Merchandise Traders (2004, excluding
intra-EU trade)
Billions of dollars, Source WTO http//www.wto.or
g/english/res_e/statis_e/its2005_e/section1_e/i06.
xls
16Structure of Trade (Finland, 2000)
Billons of dollars, Source Calculations from the
NBER-United Nations Trade Data. Data available at
http//cid.econ.ucdavis.edu/. Stata code
available by request (from me). In 2000,
Finlands GDP was about 130 billion dollars.
17Finlands Top 6 Trading Partners, 2000
Billons of dollars, NBER-United Nations Trade Data
18Structure of Bilateral Trade (Finland, 2000)
Billons of dollars, NBER-United Nations Trade Data
19Structure of Trade (Finland 1962, 1989, 2000)
20Economic Theory / Models
- . . . just talking plausibly about economics is
not the same as having a real understanding for
that you need crisp, tightly argued models. - Paul Krugman (1996)
- Models reduce a complex problem to a few
essentials and illustrate the relationships
between them. A good model is one which is wide
in scope and unexpected in implications. - John Kay (2003)
- The ideas of economists and political
philosophers, both when they are right and when
they are wrong, are more powerful than is
commonly understood. Indeed, the world is ruled
by little else. - John Maynard Keynes (1936)
21Economic Models as Simplifications
- The point of economic models is to simplify the
complex reality in order to understand it. A good
model is such that - it is easy to understand (simple)
- it increases the understanding of reality
- Mathematics is the language of economics. The
point is to be consistent and to make assumptions
transparent. In this course we use geometry to
make the math more intuitive - Gibbard Varian (1978) describe models as
caricatures, approximations, stories with a
specific structure etc. Models typically ask
what would happen if this and this was the
case? and exaggerate to make a point
22Example London
23A model of London
24Another model of London
25Economic Models as Imitations
- a "theory" is not a collection of
assertions about the behavior of the actual
economy but rather an explicit set of
instructions for building a parallel or analogue
system A "good" model, from this point of
view, will not be exactly more "real" than a poor
one, but will provide better imitations. Of
course, what one means by a "better imitation"
will depend on the particular questions to which
one wishes answers. Lucas (1980) - For an example of this kind of model in trade
contest, visit www.gtap.agecon.purdue.edu - However, in this course we will concentrate on
models that are best described as caricatures.
26International Economics
- What is different in comparison to ordinary
economics? The institutional setting (national
policies, currencies etc) nothing else, really. - International economics typically divided
- international trade and international money.
- In this course we will concentrate on the former.
HSE provides a similar course that concentrates
on the latter. - The study of international trade is often
expanded to study international capital, labour
flows and diffusion of technology.
27Evolution of Trade Theory
- Mercantilism (1500)
- Classical Political Economy
- Price-Specie-Flow Mechanism (Hume, 1752)
- Absolute Advantage (Smith, 1776)
- Comparative Advantage (Ricardo, 1817)
- Neo-Classical Economics
- Heckscher-Ohlin Model (1919, 1933) and extensions
- Modern Economics
- Economies of scale, imperfect competition
28Mercantilism
- Diffuse collection of economic thought
- Mostly written by merchants and businessmen
- Appears in economics virtually always as a target
of critique. However, the mercantilist mindset
has not vanished among many non-economists - The word mercantilist is still used for a person
opposing free trade based on traditional
arguments - For short discussion, see Appleyard Field
(chapter 2). If youre more interested, see
Landreth Colander (2002)
29Mercantilist View of the Economy
- Nations wealth holdings of precious metals
- Zero-sum economy
- Favourable balance of trade
- i.e. exports good, imports bad
- Implicit assumption that the economy was
operating at less than full employment - Conclusion Economic activity should be
regulated
30Mercantilist Policy Recommendations
- International
- Tariffs Quotas on imports
- Subsidies on exports
- Exclusive trading rights
- Government control on exchange of precious metals
- Domestic
- Regulating production (exclusive product
charters, tax exemptions, subsidies, special
privileges) - Regulating labour (crafts guilds, low wages,
subsidies for children, financial incentives for
marriage)
31Adam Smith
- ... He generally, indeed, neither intends to
promote the public interest, nor knows how much
he is promoting it ... he intends only his own
gain, and he is in this, as in many other cases,
led by an invisible hand to promote an end which
was no part of his intention. - Smith (1776)
- Somehow all of the activities seem to get
coordinated. Theres a taxi to get you to the
airport. Theres butter and cheese for lunch on
the airplane. There are refineries to make the
airplane fuel and trucks to transport it, cement
for the runways, electricity for the escalators,
and most important of all, passengers who want to
fly where the airplanes are going. if you are
in a mood to be amazed, it can amaze you that the
system works at all. Schelling (1978)
32Smiths View of the Economic System
- Nations wealth Production capacity
- Positive-sum economy
- Self-interest combined with competition serves
public interest - Division of labour increases productivity
- Conclusion Policy of laissez faire promotes
economic growth
33Labour theory of value
- The amount of labour required to produce a good
determines its value - Lets assume that it takes two hours to produce A
and an hour to produce B ? A is two times more
valuable than B - The prevailing value theory until 1870s
- Main problem Does not consider utility
- Other problems measurement, differing skills,
how to deal with capital, land and profits
34Smith on Trade Absolute Advantage
35Absolute AdvantageRelative Prices in Autarky
- Autarky price of wine in terms of cloth
- England 1 bbl. wine 4 yd. cloth
- Portugal 1 bbl. wine 1,5 yd. cloth
- Autarky price of cloth in terms of wine
- England 1 yd. cloth 0,25 bbl. wine
- Portugal 1 yd. cloth 0,67 bbl. wine
- ? England has absolute advantage in cloth,
Portugal in wine
36Absolute AdvantageRationale for Trade
- If international trade is allowed
- England wants to buy wine if it costs less than 4
yard of cloth per barrel of wine - Portugal wants to sell wine if it gets more than
1,5 yard of cloth per barrel of wine - ? Both are willing to trade for any price
between 1,5 - 4 yard per barrel
37References
- Gibbard Varian (1978) Economic models. Journal
of Philosophy 75664677 - Bourguignon Morrisson (2002) Inequality Among
World Citizens 1820-1992. American Economic
Review. Vol. 92, No. 4 - Heckscher (1919) The Effect of Foreign Trade on
the Distribution of Income, Ekonomisk Tidskrift. - Hume (1752) Of the Balance of Trade. Availabe at
www.utilitarian.net/hume/ - Kay (2003) The Truth about Markets. Allan Lane.
Published in the U.S. as Culture and Prosperity
by HarperBusiness. - Keynes (1936) The General Theory of Employment,
Interest, and Money. - Krugman (1993) What Do Undergrads Need to Know
About Trade? The American Economic Review. Vol.
83(2) 2326 - Krugman (1996) Pop Internationalism. MIT Press.
- Landreth Colander (2002) History of Economic
Thought. Houghton Mifflin Company. - Lucas (1980) Methods and Problems in Business
Cycle Theory. Journal of Money, Credit and
Banking 12 696-715 - Ohlin (1933) Interregional and International
Trade. - Ricardo (1817) On the Priciples of Political
Economy. - Schelling (1978) Micromotives and macrobehavior.
W. W. Norton - Smith, A. (1776) An Inquiry into the Nature and
Causes of the Wealth of Nations. - Smith, J. (2006) Immigrants and the Labor
Market. Journal of Labor Economics 24(2)