ECONOMICS 3150B Lecture 10 October 25, 2005 - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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ECONOMICS 3150B Lecture 10 October 25, 2005

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Differences in availabilities of products (goods, services) ... Trade costs: keep relative and absolute prices from equalizing ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: ECONOMICS 3150B Lecture 10 October 25, 2005


1
ECONOMICS 3150BLecture 10October 25, 2005
2
Basis for Trade
  • Differences in relative prices
  • P1/P2A ? P1/P2B
  • Countries differ
  • Resources
  • Culture, tastes
  • Demographics
  • Incentives/motivation
  • Differences in availabilities of products (goods,
    services)
  • Companies create competitive advantages

3
Optimization Solution 2
  • Optimal level of production of two products Y1,
    Y2
  • Maximize value of output
  • Max P1Y1 P2Y2
  • S.t. PPF
  • PPF and income lines
  • Max utility
  • Max U(Y1, Y2)
  • S.t. PPF
  • Solution GE model with perfect competition ? P1,
    P2, C1, C2, Y1, Y2

4
Basis for Trade
  • Different relative prices
  • Different technologies different p.f.,
    different states of technology
  • Different relative quantities of factors of
    production
  • Different tastes different utility functions
  • Absence of perfect competition monopolistic
    markets
  • Different products
  • Different factors of production
  • Absence of perfect competition
  • Low trade costs
  • Transportation costs
  • Trade barriers
  • Other hedging, insurance, etc.

5
Basis for Trade
  • Bottom Line firms produce goods
  • Firms need info on products (characteristics,
    p.f.) technology
  • Agents need info on relative and absolute prices
    and access to distribution channels in foreign
    countries
  • Value chain production of final product entails
    various intermediate stages examples gasoline
    at retail PCs autos
  • Trade in intermediate products

6
Changes in Relative Prices
  • Equilibrium P2/P1 will change if
  • Change in shape of PPF
  • Change in relative availabilities of X1, X2
  • Change in production functions
  • Change in state of technology
  • Changes in tastes

7
Comparative Advantage Models
  • 1. Single Factor, Ricardian Model
  • Assumptions
  • One factor of production X1
  • Two goods Y1, Y2
  • Constant returns to scale ??Y F(?X1)
  • PF Yi ?i1 X1 ?i1 units of product i per
    unit of factor of production 1
  • Resulting PPF
  • Y1/ ?i1 Y2/ ?21 ? 0X1
  • Opportunity cost of Y1 in terms of Y2 ?21/ ?11
  • No adjustment problems since sole factor of
    production can move costlessly and
    instantaneously between products

8
Single Factor Ricardian Model
  • Utility maximization ? optimal production and
    consumption point, P1, P2
  • Slope of straight line PFF
  • P2/P1
  • ?11/ ?21
  • Relationship between relative prices and
    opportunity costs

9
Single Factor Ricardian Model
  • Two countries, two products, one factor of
    production
  • Conditions for pre-trade relative prices to
    differ i.e. P1/P2A ? P1/P2B
  • Different production functions ?i1(A) ? ?i1(B)
  • Different tastes will not produce different
    relative prices
  • Comparative advantage
  • Country has comparative advantage in product with
    lower relative opportunity cost
  • Country A has comparative advantage in product 1
    if
  • ?21/ ?11 A lt ?21/ ?11B
  • P1/P2A lt P1/P2B

10
Single Factor Ricardian Model
  • Trade between A and B will equalize relative
    prices ? P1/P2A P1/P2B
  • Equilibrium relative prices post-trade between
    original pre-trade ratios
  • If A is large country and B a small country,
    equilibrium relative prices post-trade closer to
    pre-trade ratio in A
  • Specialization small country, not necessarily
    for large country
  • Terms of trade price of exported product
    relative to price of imported product
  • For country P1/P2

11
Single Factor Ricardian Model
  • Gains from trade
  • Consumption, production pre-trade and
    post-trade
  • Exports, imports
  • Higher level of utility, higher level of real
    income/GDP
  • Equilibrium in currency market will result in
    current account balance 0
  • Total value of exports total value of imports
  • D/S of countrys currency depend upon current
    account transactions only
  • For Country A P1AEX(Y1) P2BIM(Y2)E
  • With no trade costs P1A P1BE and P2A P2BE

12
Single Factor Ricardian Model
  • Example Canada-US
  • Assumptions
  • X1 labour measured in person-hours
  • W(C) C 10/hr
  • W(US) US 10/hr
  • E 1.00

13
Canada-US Example
  • US has absolute advantage in both products
  • ?11 (US) gt ?11 (C) and ?21 (US) gt ?21 (C)
  • However ?11 / ?21 C gt ?11 / ?21 US
  • Relative prices pre-trade
  • P1/P2C lt P1/P2US
  • P2/P1C gt P2/P1US
  • Canada has comparative advantage in Y1, US in Y2
  • At E 1 P1CE gt P1US and P2CE gt P2US
  • E will have to decrease (depreciation) in order
    for trade to occur
  • Limits for new equilibrium E 0.33 ? 0.83
  • Relationship to productivity
  • Canada exports Y1, imports Y2

14
Canada-US Example
  • Assume equilibrium E 0.65
  • P1CE US 1.30 lt P1US US 1.67 and P2CE US
    6.50 gt P2US US 3.33
  • P1C ? and P1US ?
  • P2C ? and P2US ?
  • Post-trade P1/P2C P1/P2US
  • Wage rates do not change in each countrys
    currency, but Canadian wage rate declines in US
  • Pre-trade _at_ E1, Canadian wage rate US 10/hr
  • Post-trade _at_ E0.65, Canadian wage rate US
    6.50/hr
  • Trade occurs even with lower Canadian wage rate ?
    offset by higher productivity of US labour
  • Trade costs keep relative and absolute prices
    from equalizing
  • Create a wedge large enough, no trade takes
    place (non-traded goods)

15
Canada-US Example
  • Conclusions
  • Extreme degree of specialization
  • No impact on distribution of income within each
    country no losers (full employment, one factor
    of production)
  • Gains from trade
  • No explanation of differences in production
    functions and relative and absolute
    productivities
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