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Chapter 5 International Trade and Economic Growth

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... international trade affects the determinants of long-run technological progress. ... Production function Y = f(K,L) with diminishing returns. ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Chapter 5 International Trade and Economic Growth


1
Chapter 5International Trade and Economic
Growth
  • The international trading system...has enhanced
    competition and nurtured what Joseph Schumpeter a
    number of decades ago called creative
    destruction, the continuous scrapping of old
    technologies to make way for the new.
  • (Alan Greenspan, 2001)

2
The Goals of this Chapter
  • Extend the analysis of trade beyond the
    traditional static models of international trade
    and analyze the relationship between
    international trade and economic growth.
  • Show how the power of compounding makes
    international trades effect on economic growth
    much more important for human welfare than the
    static gains in welfare.
  • Familiarize students with the recent statistical
    evidence on the relationship between trade and
    economic growth.
  • Introduce the Solow growth model and use it show
    how international trade affects economic growth
    when investment is subject to diminishing returns
    and depreciation.
  • Explain the Schumpeterian model of technological
    progress and use it to show how international
    trade affects the determinants of long-run
    technological progress.

3
Trade and Growth Achieve Similar Gains in Welfare
  • Trade and growth both enable the economy to reach
    a higher indifference curve.
  • Trade leads to a new consumption point at C.
  • Growth leads to a new consumption point at D.
  • Both points lie on the same higher indifference
    curve.

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  • An economy with the red production possibilities
    frontier can reach the indifference curve I2 with
    trade.
  • However, it takes continued growth (a large shift
    in the indifference curve) to reach the much
    higher level of welfare given by I20.
  • Can trade help stimulate such economic growth?

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10
The Power of Compounding
  • If per capita real GDP (PCGDP) grows at an annual
    rate of R, then after T years PCGDP will be
  • PCGDPT PCGDPt0(1 R)T (5-1)

11
The Power of Compounding
  • For a country with a per capita real GDP of
    2,000, a 2.5 percent annual growth rate implies
    that in 10 years per capita real GDP will grow
    to
  • PCGDPt10 2000(1 .025)10 2,560

12
The Power of Compounding
  • Suppose that another country grows a little
    faster at 3.5 percent per year. After ten years,
    this economys per capita real GDP will be
  • PCGDPT10 2000(1 .035)10 2,821
  • After ten years, a difference of 1 per year
    causes a per capita income difference greater
    than 10.

13
The Power of Compounding
  • Two countries that grow at 2.5 percent and 3.5
    percent, respectively, for 100 years will find
    their standards of living growing far apart
  • PCGDPT100 2000(1 .025)100 23,627
  • PCGDPT100 2000(1 .035)100 62,383
  • The power of compounding is great.

14
The statistical analysis of the relationship
between international trade and economic growth
shows that
  • International trade is closely and positively
    related to economic growth.
  • The potential size of trades growth effect is
    large.
  • Statistical analysis thus suggests that
    international trade is very
    important for future human welfare.

15
  • Production function Y f(K,L) with diminishing
    returns.
  • If labor supply is fixed, then the function can
    be written as Y f(K).
  • Diminishing returns implies a decreasing slope
    each additional unit of capital adds less to
    output than the previous unit

16
  • Solow assumes that the saving rate is constant
    and between 0 and 1.
  • The saving function is a reduced image of the
    production (income) function.
  • The saving function depends on the production
    function and the saving rate.

s
17
  • Depreciation is assumed to be a constant fraction
    d of the stock of capital K.
  • Thus, depreciation is a straight-line function of
    K.

d
s
18
  • Saving and investment are equal where the
    depreciation line and the savings function
    intersect.
  • In equilibrium, a capital stock of K results in
    output Y f(K).
  • K and Y are referred to as the steady state
    levels of capital and output/income.

d
s
19
  • The steady state level of K is a stable
    equilibrium.
  • If K lt K, investment exceeds depreciation and K
    grows.
  • If K gt K, depreciation exceeds investment and K
    shrinks.

d
s
20
  • The Solow model depicts an economy with a stable
    equilibrium.
  • Output/income depends on the rate of saving, the
    rate of depreciation, and the shape of the
    production function.

d
s
21
d
s
s
22
  • The static gain from trade raises the production
    function, which raises output to Y g(K).
  • Given a constant saving rate, the saving function
    shifts up proportionately to the production
    function.
  • Trade therefore leads to transitional growth as
    the economy adjusts to a new steady state
    equilibrium at K and Y g(K).

s
s
23
  • Technological progress raises the production
    function
  • Technological progress neutralizes diminishing
    returns output doubles when the capital stock is
    doubled, as from a to b
  • Without technological progress, the increase in
    capital from 1 to 2 would only take the economy
    to point c, where output rises by only 40

24
d
s
s
s
25
Trade and Growth
  • International trade seems to produce only
    temporary growth according to the Solow model.
  • Indeed, the Solow model suggests that continued
    economic growth is not possible without
    technological progress.
  • Hence, for trade to raise standards of living in
    the long run, it must influence technological
    progress.

26
The statistical analysis of the relationship
between international trade and economic growth
shows that
  • International trade is closely and positively
    related to economic growth.
  • The potential size of trades growth effect is
    large.
  • The statistical analysis thus strongly suggests
    that
  • international trade is very important for future
  • human welfare.

27
The statistical evidence on trade and growth is
not entirely convincing, however
  • Statistical studies cannot provide definitive
    proof that international trade causes economic
    growth.
  • It is difficult for statistical procedures and
    the available data to accurately distinguish
    between the effects of trade and those of the
    other factors.
  • Statistical research has not yet distinguished
    why trade and growth are positively related.
  • For further insights, we need logical reasoning
    and
  • consistent models that can explain the
    statistical
  • relationship between trade and growth.

28
The Solow Model and Technological Progress
  • The Solow growth model shows that for a given
    production function economic growth will
    eventually stop when the economy reaches its
    steady state.
  • Continued economic growth is only possible if
    the production function continually shifts up,
    which requires continued technological progress.
  • The Solow model highlights the importance of
    technological progress, but it does not explain
    what determines technological change.
  • Several insightful models of models of
    technological progress have been developed to
    complement the Solow growth model.

29
  • Many studies of industrial productivity have
    noted that unit costs tend to decline in
    proportion to accumulated experience.
  • This process is often referred to as learning by
    doing.
  • The learning curve depicts the learning process,
    but it does not explain its causes.

30
The Schumpeterian Model of Technological Progress
  • In Schumpeterian innovation models RD activity
    depends on
  • The productivity with which RD activity
    generates innovations.
  • The costs of acquiring the resources to carry out
    RD activities.
  • The benefits that entrepreneurs expect to reap
    from an innovation.
  • The first two items above determine the costs of
    innovation. The latter item reflects the gains
    from innovation. The equilibrium level of RD
    activity is found by maximizing benefits subject
    to the costs of innovation.

31
  • The quantity of innovations depends on the
    quantity of resources applied to RD activity and
    the productivity of RD activity.
  • Defining q as the quantity of innovations, ß as
    the quantity of resources per innovation, and
    RRD as the resources applied to innovation,
    then q 1/ß(RRD).

ß
32
  • The cost of innovation (CoI) depends on the cost
    of resources and the productivity of RD activity
  • The cost of resources depends on total resources
    R and the demand by innovators RRD
  • Therefore CoI h(RRD, R,
    ß).

ß
33
  • The present value of innovation (PVI) depends on
    the size of the profit box p and on how long a
    successful innovator enjoys its monopoly
    position.
  • The life of a monopoly is the inverse of the
    number of innovations per year, q.
  • Expected profit from an innovation is equal to
  • p/q p/RRD / ß pß / RRD.

p
34
  • PVI is a negative function of the rate of
    interest with which future profit is discounted,
    r, and the amount of resources employed in RD
    activity RRD..
  • PVI is a positive function of the profit markup p
    and the resource requirements in RD activity, ß.
  • The present value of innovation is
    PVI f( p, r, RRD, ß ).

(p, r, ß)
35
  • The intersection of the CoI and PVI curves
    determines the amount of resources devoted to RD
    activity, RRD.
  • The curve 1/ ß in the bottom half of the figure
    relates the amount of resources to the expected
    number of actual innovations.

ß
(p, r, ß)
1/ß
36
  • An increase in p shifts the PVI curve upward to
    PVI1, and, all other things equal, the number of
    resources devoted to innovative activity
    increases.
  • The increase in RRD in turn raises the number of
    innovations per year from q to q1.

1/ß
37
  • An increase in R lowers the cost of resources.
  • The lowering of resource costs imply a downward
    shift in the CoI curve, say to CoI1.
  • This causes profit-motivated entrepreneurs to
    employ more resources in RD, which increases the
    number of innovations q.

1/ß
38
  • A change in ß is complex because it affects all
    curves.
  • An increase in ß rotates the 1/ ß line
    counterclockwise.
  • An increase in ß implies that RD activity
    requires more costly resources, which shifts the
    CoI curve up.
  • The PVI curve also shifts up because creative
    destruction slows when it becomes harder to
    innovate, which makes each innovation that does
    occur more profitable.

1/ ß
1/ß
39
The number of innovations per year is determined
by the function ? q
f( p, r, R, ß )
  • All other things equal, innovation in the economy
    will be greater
  • The larger is the potential profit for the
    successful innovator
  • The more innovators value future gains relative
    to current costs
  • The greater is the supply of resources available
    to innovators
  • The more efficiently innovators use resources in
    RD activity.

40
How Trade Influences Technological Progress
  • For example, integrating two identical economies
    through trade doubles the market, effectively
    shifting the demand curve from D to Dt.
  • The marginal revenue curve also shifts, doubling
    the equilibrium quantity.
  • This doubles the potential profit accruing to
    innovators from p to 2p.

p
41
How Trade Influences Technological Progress
  • The doubling of the profit area, all other things
    equal, shifts the PVI curve up.
  • The amount of resources that profit-seeking
    innovators apply to RD activity expands, and the
    number of innovations rises.

1/ß
42
How Trade Influences Technological Progress
  • The supply of resources in the combined economy
    is doubled, making more resources available to
    innovators.
  • The CoI curve slopes up less steeply because the
    price of resources rises less rapidly.
  • This expands RD activity and innovation further.

1/ß
43
How Trade Influences Technological Progress
  • Trade and specialization furthermore improves the
    allocation of resources, thus increasing the
    effective stock of resources.
  • An effective increase in R lowers the CoI curve.
  • This efficiency of resource use is in addition to
    profit and resource effects already described.

1/ß
44
How Trade Influences Technological Progress
  • Finally, comparative advantage also applies to
    innovative activity.
  • The improvement in the overall productivity of
    innovation decreases ß
  • A decrease in ß shifts all three curves.
  • Shifts in CoI and PVI are likely to cancel each
    other out, but 1/ ß also shifts out, likely
    causing an overall increase in innovation.

1/ß
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