Title: Chapter 14 Trade Policies for Developing Countries
1Chapter 14 Trade Policies for DevelopingCountries
Link to syllabus
2W. Arthur Lewis, 1915-1990
Born St. Lucia (Caribbean) Educated at LSE Taught
at U. of Manchester, under Hayek, and at
Princeton Adviser to the UN, govt of
Ghana, Nobel Prize, 1979 Economic Development
with Unlimited Supplies of Labor 1954
3Fig. 14.1 page 318. Growth Ratesof GDP
GDP/capita
4Trade Policy Alternatives for Developing
Countries (p. 319)
- Focus on exporting primary products
- Attempt to raise the world prices of primary
products that are exported - Protect and encourage new industries that produce
products sold into the local market - Encourage new industries that produce products
that are exported
5Raul Prebisch, 1901 - 1985
Born in a province of Argentina. Parents were
German immigrants. Studied at University
of Buenos Aires, where he later taught. During
the 1930s he moved from classical orthodoxy to a
form of Keynesianism. In 1948 he was director of
ECLA, and in 1950 promulgated what became known
as the Prebisch-Singer hypothesis,which argued
against free trade because of an alleged trend
toward falling terms of trade for raw materials.
Although he is thought to have favored ISI, he
was often critical of its excesses. From
1964-1969 he led UNCTAD, a UN body which worked
for Third World countries.
6Figure 14.2 page 325Relative price of primary
products
7Import Substituting Industries (p. 333)
- Potential strengths
- Infant industries can grow up
- Developing government can get much-needed revenue
- The countrys international terms of trade can
improve - Information on demand is acquired cheaply
- Actual experience
- Deadweight losses from resource misallocation
- Developing countries practicing or adopting
freer-trade policies grow more quickly
8Figure 14.3 page 329. Cartel as profit maximizing
monopoly
9Oil Price Cycles in the U.S. and Global Economies
P. 369 Bade/Parkin
EYE ON THE PAST
10Erosion of Cartel Power (p. 308)
- Declining demand as buyers respond by switching
to substitutes - Increasing responsiveness of competing supply
from noncartel producers - Declining share of the cartels production in the
world market - Cheating by the cartel members
11Crude Oil Prices
12U.S. Petroleum Production, Consumption, Imports
Source U.S. DoE
13Figure 14.4 page 337Changing mix of exports from
LDCs
14Figure 13.5 page 331Trade reform inTransition
economies
Different text