Title: Chapter 4 Trade Model Extensions and Applications
1Chapter 4 Trade Model Extensions and Applications
- Key words
- Business services ????
- Distribution of income ????
- Dynamic comparative advantage ??????
- Economies of scale ????
- Environmental regulation ????
- Factor-endowment theory ?????
- Industrial policy ????
- Interindustry specialization ??????
- interindustry trade ?????
2- Leontief paradox ??????
- Polluter-pays principle ???????
- Product life cycle theory ????????
- Specific-factors theory ??????
- Theory of overlapping demands ??????
- Transportation costs ????
34.1 Factor-endowment theory
- Factor-endowment theory
- The factor endowments underlay a nations
comparative advantage. - Factor-endowment theory is also known as the
Heckscher-Ohlin theory. -
4- The factor-endowment theory states that
comparative advantage is explained exclusively by
differences in relative national supply
conditions. In particular, theory highlights the
role of nations resource endowments (such as
labor and capital) as the key determinant of
comparative advantage.
54.1.1 Factor-price equalization
- Factor-price equalization
- With trade, the price of land tends to
equalize in the two trading partners. So the
conclution is that by redirecting demand away
from the scarce factor and toward the abundant
factor in each country, trade leads toward factor
price equalization. In each country, the cheap
factor becomes more expensive, and the expensive
factor becomes cheaper.
64.1.2 Trade the distribution of income
- Not only trade does affect a countrys total
income level, but also it affects the internal
distribution of income among the owners of
resources. - The increase in the returns to each countrys
abundant factor comes at the expense of the
scarce factors returns.
7- According to the factor-endowment theory,
increased trade could worsen inequalities in
wages even while increasing national income.
84.2 Does trade make the poor even poorer?
9Additional wages,in percent, earned by college
graduates compared with those who didnt attend
college
70
60
50
40
30
75
80
85
90
95
1973
10- The wage gap between skilled and unskilled
workers widened in the United States between the
1970s and 1990s. - Is trade harming low-skilled workers?
- If so, is this an argument for protectionsim?
- The answer is
- The combination of trade, technology,
education, immigration, and union weakness has
held down wages for unskilled American workers.
11- Sources of Inequality
- Contribution of various factors to wage
inequality in percent
Technological change
37.7
37.7
Unexplained
Trade
10.1
Stagnant Minimum wage
7.2
Decline of unions
4.4
2.9
Immigration
12- Trade does have some effect on U.S.wage
stagnation, but not nearly as great an effect as
technological change, most economists maintain
that within-industry shifts in labor demand, away
from less educated workers, are the most
important factors behind the declining wages of
the less educated.Such shifts appear to be the
result of economy-wide technological and
organizational changes in how work is performed. - Even if the impact is small, trade indeed seems
to have some adverse effect in aggravating wage
inequality. In many ways, the effects of trade
are similar to those of technological advance
both increase national income but can worsen
inequality.
134.3 Are actual trade patterns explained by the
factor-endowment theory?
- In the United States capital was relatively
abundant and labor was relatively scarce.
According to the factor-endowment theory, the
United States should export capital-intensive
goods and its import-competing goods should be
labor-intensive. - Leontief paradox
- Leontief found that the capital/labor ratio
for U.S. export industries was lower than that of
its import-competing industries. Leontief
concluded that exports were less
capital-intensive than import-competing
goods!These findings, which contradicted the
predictions of the factor-endowment theory,
became known as the Leontief paradox.
14- Early versions of the Heckscher-Ohlin model
emphasized relative endowments of capital, labor,
and natural resources as sources of comparative
advantage. More recently, researchers have
increasingly focused on the importance of worker
skills in the creation of comparative advantage. - Investments in skill, education, and training,
which enhance a workers productivity, create
human capital in much the same manner that
investments in machinery create physical capital.
154.4 Economies of scale and specialization
- Another explanation of trade patterns involves
efficiencies of large-scale production, which
reduce a firms per-unit costs.This is known as
economies of scale.
164.5 Theory of overlapping demands
- Theory of overlapping demands
- Linder hypothesis explain which types of
nations will most likely trade with each other. - Nations with similar per capita incomes will
have overlapping demand structures and will
likely consume similar types of manufactured
goods. Wealthy(industrial) nations will likely
trade with other wealthy nations, and poor
(developing) nations will likely trade with other
poor nations.
174.6 Intraindustry trade
- Interindustry trade is bases on interindustry
specialization Each nation specializes in a
particular industry in which it enjoys a
comparative advantage. Asn resources shift to the
industry with a comparative advantage, certain
other industris having comparative disadvantages
contract. Resources thus move geographically to
the industry where comparative costs are lowest.
As a result of specialization, a nation
experiences a growing dissimilarity between the
products that it exports and the products that it
imports.
184.7 Product cycles
- Product life cycle theory
- This theory focuses on the role of
technological innovation as a key determinant of
trade patterns in manufactured products.
According to this theory, many manufactured goods
such as electronic products and office machinery
undergo a predictable trade cycle. During this
cycle, the home country initially is an exporter,
then loses its competitive advantage VIS-A-VIS
194.8 Dynamic comparative advantageIndustrial
policy
- A variety of government policies can be used to
foster the development and revitalization of
industries, RD subsidies, loan guarantees,
low-interest-rate loans, and trade protection.
Creating comparative advantage requires
government to identify the winners and
encourage resources to move into industries with
the highest growth prospects.
204.9 Boeing, Airbus, and Industrial Policy
- 4.9.1 Subsides to an infant enterprise
- 4.9.2 Launch-Aid Subsidies
214.10 Environmental regulatory policies and
international competitiveness
- It should be noted, that most industrialized
nations are greater polluters than
less-industrialized nations. Developing nations
contend that industrial nations, rather than
undertaking radical domestic environmental policy
changes that threaten their own economic growth,
attempt to impose stringent environmental
standards on developing nations without any
assistance in paying for them lack of
compensation lessens the opportunity for
less-industrialized nations to grow.
22NAFTANorth American Free Trade Area
234.11 Trade in business services
- The export advantage in many services, as
revealed by existing patterns of trade in
services, appear to lie with the developed
countries. Empirical evidence suggests that many
traded services tend to be intensive in the use
of both technology and capital, whether human or
physical. This seems to give the developed
countries a competitive edge. The United States,
for example, has often been characterized as
having a comparative advantage in business
services this advantage reflects the
longstanding position of the United States as a
net exporter of technology and know-how.
244.12 Transportation costs
- Trade effects
- Compared with free trade in the absence of
transportation costs, when transportation costs
are included the high-cost importing country will
produce more, consume less, and import less. The
low-cost exporting country will produce less,
consume more, and export less. Transportation
costs, therefore, tend to reduce the volume of
trade, the degree of specialization in production
among the nations concerned, and thus the gains
from trade.