Title: Welcome MBA 628 Global Trade
1Welcome!MBA 628Global Trade Finance
- Marriott School
- Professor Bryson
- TNRB 616, 422-2526
- http//marriottschool.byu.edu/emp/employee.cfm?emp
pjb3
2Session 1
- Introduce Website
- Note that we will also use Blackboard
- Please review the syllabus before our next
meeting, where you can ask any questions you may
have about policies or procedures.
3Session 1
- Among the major tasks of the course
- CD presentations. I have five basic theory
presentations on a CD available in the computer
lab (360 TNRB). Just take in a blank CD. - They are also available on line at sites listed
in the syllabus.
4Session 1
- The CD does not represent extra work. You will
have one class day off for each CD topic and
quiz, following the plan in the course outline.
That time is to prepare to take the related CD
quiz on Blackboard. - Advantages of the CD. You can study or review
the topics at your own pace and review them as
many (or as few) times as suits you.
5Session 1
- SECTION I, Introduction
- Discuss Why Economics.ppt, which partially
explain my views on economics. - An aside my views on Power Point presentations.
- The ones in the File Directory for the course
are my notes, not reading assignments.
6Session 1
- Let us now take a moment to review why I am an
advocate of free trade. - Its simply because just about all economists
are. You will review the theory from Smith and
Ricardo through contemporary economists. The
theory is clear and powerful.
7Why Economics?Its Nature and Functions
- Prof. Bryson
- Marriott School
8Significance of economics
- Before we got endowments and named business or
management school after rich benefactors, we
often named them - College of Business and Public Administration or
- College of Economics and Business
- In Europe you often have Colleges of Economics
and Business and, sometimes, - Universities of Economics
9Significance of economics
- If you believe economics is important for
business, why? - Economics is to business what mathematics and
physics are to engineering.
10Significance of economics
- What is the conventional definition of economics?
- Economics is the study of the allocation of
scarce resources for the satisfaction of
(unlimited) human wants.
11Alfred Marshall
- Economics is the study of mankind in the
ordinary business of life. - To you, what is the ordinary business of life?
12Alfred Marshall Economics is the study of
mankind in the ordinary business of life.
- Mans character has been moulded by his
every-day work, and the material resources which
he thereby procures, more than by any other
influence unless it be that of his religious
idealsreligious and economic influences have
nowhere been displaced from the front rank even
for a time and they have nearly always been more
important than all others put together. Religious
motives are more intense than economic, but their
direct action seldom extends over so large a part
of life. - Marshall,
Principles of Economics,p.1
13Why is economics so exciting?
- Economics is mathematics and more.
- It is at the core of most things we are
interested in. Beards history, for example. - Economics is a language
- Economics is a system of logic
- Economics is a method of
- prediction and forecasting
14Great Conceptions of Economics
- 1. Decision Optimization. Who optimizes?
- Consumers
- Firms
- Governments and NGOs
- 2. Markets
- 3. Organizations (the New Institutional
Economics)
15Consider Gods Gifts as Resources
- Homes, cars,
- machines and tools,
- human capital, land,
- technologies,
- productive capacities
-
- Human life
- time for labor and service,
- scriptures,
- temples
Spiritual Temporal
16Consider Gods Gifts as Resources
The Lord has said Wherefore, verily I say
unto you that all things unto me are spiritual,
and not at any time have I given unto you a law
which was temporal. my commandments are
spiritual they are not natural nor
temporal. DC 29 34, 35.
17Consider Gods Gifts as Resources
We are stewards, owning nothing. (Psalms
241) The earth is the Lords, and the fullness
thereof the world, and they that dwell therein.
Our responsibility is to take care of (to
allocate) these resources well, increasing them
for the benefit of Gods children and for
building the kingdom.
18My Philosophy of Education
- 1. There are revealed principles of the gospel
that are true. Happy are ye if ye do them. - 2. There are foundation principles of theory.
These are of particular interest when they are in
harmony with divine principles such as agency,
human dignity, regard for human life, etc.
19- 3. There are interpretations of theorys
implications. These suggest how the theory should
be applied. These interpretations are influenced
by the individuals preferences, educational
background, and experiences.
20- These interpretations may lead to a political
orientation Americans call liberal. The
philosophy here is concern for the little man and
the disadvantaged and often implies - well-financed social programs.
-
- Such interpretations may also lead to a political
orientation of conservatism. The philosophy
here is concern for personal liberty and
independence, with limited government.
211. Principles 2.Theory 3. Interpretation
Liberal and Conservative attitudes
- I am concerned about items 1 and 2. For this
course the emphasis will be on item 2. I want you
to understand the theory. The interpretation is
usually a matter of family and previous
educational experiences.
22Economics and Belief
- I want you to understand, not to believe economic
theory. - Science is the best set of hypotheses available.
These should be accepted skeptically until the
hypothesis can be disproved (rejected) or until
a better hypothesis comes along. - In science, hypotheses must be set up so that
they can be rejected if proved untrue. We accept
them only until someone is able to reject them.
23Economics and Belief
- We shall try very hard to aid the student in
understanding certain economic models. We shall
try not at all to convince him of their truth.
Indeed it would be counter to our purposes to
instill in the student belief in our models.
Belief is appropriate to theology. Science
requires understanding of the theoretical system
that one employs coupled with skepticism as to
its validity. We shall attempt to provide the
reader with the understanding. We trust that he
will provide himself with the skepticism. - Cliff Lloyd, Microeconomic Analysis
24Economics and Abstraction
- Finally, consider the words of the Lord
- 78 Teach ye diligently and my grace shall attend
you, that you may be instructed more perfectly in
theory, in principle, in doctrine, in the law of
the gospel, in all things that pertain unto the
kingdom of God, that are expedient for you to
understand 79 Of things both in heaven and in
the earth, and under the earth things which have
been, things which are, things which must shortly
come to pass things which are at home, things
which are abroad the wars and the perplexities
of the nations, and the judgments which are on
the land and a knowledge also of countries and
of kingdoms (My emphases) DC 88 78, 79.
25On the Beauty of Markets and Trade
- Trade Synonymous with Markets
- Fundamentally, the case for free trade is the
case for the market system. The benefits come in
the form of greater realization of the
efficiencies available from specialization, from
more rapid technology transfer and more
productive allocation of resources, from
comparative advantage, and from the spur of
competition. They show up in higher rates of
economic growth, leading to higher wages and
higher returns to capital, leading to higher
standards of living. - Larry Summers, Past President, Harvard
University, Deputy Secretary of the Treasury,
Clinton Administration
26Session 1
- Henry George was a very famous early American
economist. His greatest work was Progress and
Poverty, 1879. - A little later he wrote a book on the topic of
free trade, Protection or Free Trade An
examination of the tariff question, with especial
regard to the interests of labor. (1886)
27(No Transcript)
28- George found much wrong with the economic
theories of his day, but he agreed with the
growing tradition of free trade. - Consider, as an introduction to the course, some
of his ideas on the topic.
29- I have not only gone over the ground generally
traversed, and examined the arguments commonly
used, butI have sought to discover why
protection retains such popular strength in spite
of all exposures of its fallacies. - Protection or Free Trade, p. 7
30NEAR the window by which I write, a great bull is
tethered by a ring in his nose. Grazing round and
round he has wound his rope about the stake until
now he stands a close prisoner, tantalized by
rich grass he cannot reach, unable even to toss
his head to rid him of the flies that cluster on
his shoulders. Now and again he struggles vainly,
and then, after pitiful bellowings, relapses into
silent misery.
31- This bull, a very type of massive strength, who,
because he has not wit enough to see how he might
be free, suffers want in sight of plenty, and is
helplessly preyed upon by weaker creatures, seems
to me no unfit emblem of the working masses. - In all lands, men whose toil creates abounding
wealth are pinched with poverty, and, while
advancing civilization opens wider vistas and
awakens new desires, are held down to brutish
levels by animal needs. -
32- Bitterly conscious of injustice, feeling in
their inmost souls that they were made for more
than so narrow a life, they, too, spasmodically
struggle and cry out. But until they trace effect
to cause, until they see how they are fettered
and how they may be freed, their struggles and
outcries are as vain as those of the bull. Nay,
they are vainer. I shall go out and drive the
bull in the way that will untwist his rope. But
who shall drive men into freedom? Till they use
the reason with which they have been gifted,
nothing can avail. For them there is no special
providence. - Protection or Free Trade, p. 9
33- I propose in these pages to examine a vexed
question which must be settled before there can
be any efficient union in political action for
social reformthe question whether protective
tariffs are or are not helpful to those who get
their living by their labor. - The policy of protection is again raising its
head. Here it is evident that the tariff question
is the great political question of the immediate
future. Protection or Free Trade, p. 9
34- For more than a generation the slavery
agitation, the war to which it led and the
problems growing out of that war have absorbed
political attention in the United States. That
era has passed, and a new one is beginning, in
which economic questions must force themselves to
the front. First among these questions, upon
which party lines must soon be drawn and
political discussion must rage, is the tariff
question.one thing or the other must be
trueeither protection does give better
opportunities to labor and raises wages, or it
does not. Protection or Free Trade, p. 11
35- Protections Effects
- Protective tariffs are as much applications of
force as are blockading squadrons, and their
object is the sameto prevent trade. The
difference between the two is that blockading
squadrons are a means whereby nations seek to
prevent their enemies from trading
36- Protections Effects
- protective tariffs are a means whereby nations
attempt to prevent their own people from trading.
What protection teaches us, is to do to ourselves
in time of peace what enemies seek to do to us in
time of war. - Protection or Free Trade, p. 47
37- Protectionisms Bottom Line
- It is as natural for men to trade as it is for
blood to circulate. Man is by nature a trading
animal, impelled to trade by persistent desires,
placed in a world where everything shows that he
was intended to trade, and finding in trade the
possibility of social advance. Without trade man
would be a savage.
38- Where each family raises its own food, builds
its own house, makes its own clothes and
manufactures its own tools, no one can have more
than the barest necessaries of life, and every
local failure of crops must bring famine.
39- A people living in this way will be independent,
but their independence will resemble that of the
beasts. They will be poor, ignorant, and all but
powerless against the forces of nature and the
vicissitudes of the seasons. Protection or Free
Trade, p. 51
40- Effects of Free Trade
- It is where trade could best be carried on that
we find wealth first accumulating and
civilization beginning. It is on accessible
harbors, by navigable rivers and much-traveled
highways that we find cities arising and the arts
and sciences developing.
41- And as trade becomes free and extensiveas roads
are made and navigation improved as pirates and
robbers are extirpated and treaties of peace put
an end to chronic warfareso does wealth augment
and civilization grow. All our great labor-saving
inventions, from that of money to that of the
steam-engine, spring from trade and promote its
extension. Trade has ever been the extinguisher
of war, the eradicator of prejudice, the diffuser
of knowledge.
42- It is by trade that useful seeds and animals,
useful arts and inventions, have been carried
over the world, and that men in one place have
been enabled not only to obtain the products, but
to profit by the observations, discoveries and
inventions of men in other places. . - Protection or Free Trade, pp. 53, 54
- Fini
43Session 2
- Fill out (non-required) information sheets.
- Major tasks of the course
- Team presentation and report. Organize in teams
of five. - Submit your presentation priorities
44Session 2
- Team presentation and report. Negotiate about a
topic - global role of some important country
- an international economic institution (World
Bank, IMF, WTO, OECD) - an international economic problem (the US
payments imbalance, US and EU anti-developmental
agricultural policies, etc.)
45Session 2
- Please submit your topics priority list with your
team members and team name (I suggest names after
some kind of electronic device).
46Session 2
- Major tasks of the course
- Team report.
- The final reports will all be submitted on
November 30. To provide some preparation time
(either for the final or the written report) and
to provide the fifth CD day, there will also be
no class on that day.
47Session 2
- Make a seating chart.
- Are there any questions on the syllabus?
- You should now begin to review the CD
presentation Markets and prepare for the quiz. - In class we will review the Power Points Balance
of Payments and Foreign Exchange.
48Session 3
- Review team assignments.
- Take the CD quiz on Markets today.
49Session 3
- SECTION II. Trade Theory
- Review Power Points on
- Fixed and Floating Rates, and
- Exchange Rate Determination.
50Session 4
- Review semester schedule, which now includes
class presentations. - In the File Directory, see the Group
Presentations folder. It gives examples of past
presentations. Yours will be posted there in the
course of the semester. - Discuss Power Point Presentation on Comparative
Advantage and - Mercantilism
51Session 4
- Note that there is no class next session. Use
that class time to complete your review of the CD
presentation on Trade Theory and take the CD Quiz
on that topic. Youll find the quiz in
Blackboard. - Review Power Point presentation on Mercantilism.
52Session 5
- Discuss Power Point Presentation on Trade Theory
Genesis (See File Directory) - Review BM Trade and Welfare.ppt
- Note that there is no class tomorrow! Use class
time to take the CD quiz on Trade Theory.
53Session 6
- No class today. Use class time to complete your
review of the CD presentation on Trade Theory and
take the CD Quiz on that topic. Youll find the
quiz in Blackboard.
54Session 7
- Discuss the global petroleum market on the basis
of reading 11 in King. Discuss, as time permits,
the reading by Telhami and Hill, "Does Saudi
Arabia still matter?"
55Session 8
- Trade policy discussion.
- Review steel protection policy
- Discuss the Chinese trade imbalance problem
56Steel Policy The Good, the Bad, and the Ugly
- Many were very surprised when President Bush,
expected to be an advocate for free trade,
listened and responded to the arguments of the
steel industry that steel from foreign producers
was being dumped in the US market. - To level the playing field, tariffs were needed
for a period of time to give the US industry a
chance to regroup, reorganize and cut costs to
become competitive in fierce global competition.
57Steel Policy The Good, the Bad, and the Ugly
- The Bush administration responded by establishing
steep tariffs for a period of a few years. The EU
and other steel producers went ballistic. - The tariffs were ultimately overturned by the WTO
and abandoned.
58Steel Policy The Good, the Bad, and the Ugly
- Some were sure that the steel tariffs were
imposed because Bush hoped to win the steel
states in the next recession. (How well did US
manufacturing like the tariffs?) - Some contended that the exercise was one step
back, two steps forward. (See Bergsten, A
Renaissance for U.S. Trade Policy? in the GTF
reader.) Bush did it to gain fast-track
authority from congress.
59Steel Policy The Good, the Bad, and the Ugly
- What mistakes do Huffbauer and Goodrich think the
Bush administration made in proposing to protect
the steel industry?
60Steel Policy The Good, the Bad, and the Ugly
- One traditional argument for protecting an
industry like steel is that steel is critical for
national defense. Using what you have learned
from Huffbauer and Goodrich, do you think failing
to protect the US steel industry would harm the
US defense? - Why or why not?
61Steel Policy The Good, the Bad, and the Ugly
- What are legacy costs? Why are they important in
dealing with the steel industry? - Devise a non-protectionist national policy to
deal with these costs.
62Session 9
- Trade and the environment
- Trade and labor standards
63Session 10
- Discussion on the WTO and Trade Policy.
- Review the CD presentation on trade policy for
quiz in session 11.
64Session 11
- No class today.
- Take CD quiz on Trade Policy