Title: Chapter 8 HeckscherOhlin Model Winners
1Chapter 8 - Heckscher-Ohlin Model - Winners
Losers from Trade
- This model examines who benefits and who loses
from trade and why? - there is a basis for trade any time there are
difference in supply and/or demand conditions
between two countries - in this model the difference is in each countrys
endowment of a particular factor. - basic idea, country will export good that uses
intensively the factor with which the country is
relatively well endowed.
2Assumptions of model
- 1. two countries, two homogeneous goods, two
homogeneous factors of production - 2. technology is identical between countries
- 3. production is constant returns to scale for
both commodities in both countries - 4. two commodities have different factor
intensities , and the relative factor intensities
are the same for all price ratios - 5. tastes and preferences are the same in both
countries
3Assumptions continued
- 6. perfect competition exists in both countries
- 7. Factors are perfectly mobile within each
country and not mobile between countries - 8. There are no transportation costs
- 9. There are no policies restricting the
movement of goods between countries or
interfering with the market determination of
prices and output
4Factor abundance in various countries
5Commodity Factor intensity and H-O
- production in one good is intensive in a factor
when it uses that factor more intensively than a
second factor in comparison to the relative use
of the two factors in the production of a second
good - K/L in (1)gtK/L in 2 - good one is capital
intensive
6Examples of Commodities and factor intensities
7Edgeworth box and factor abundance
- In the Edgeworth box diagram, factor endowments
are represented by the length of the box. If
there is more labour in country 2, the box for 2
is wider than for country 1.
8Trade with identical tastes and technology
- Trade can take place with both identical tastes
and technology, - if factor endowments are different, then the ppf
also differs by country
9Relative product and factor prices
- If the product prices in autarky are such that in
country 1, the price of the good that uses labour
intensively is higher than the price of the good
that uses capital intensively, then in country 1
w/r is greater than in country 2.
10Factor and price adjustments
- Every relative price in the OUTPUT market is
associated with a corresponding relative price in
the production INPUT market - A price change in the output market therefore
results in a corresponding price change in the
input market - Trade doesnt affect the supply of inputs (or at
least not enough to dominate the overall price
effect) - Trade directly affects the demand for inputs
because these depend on the demand for outputs
11- With trade, demand for the labour intensive good
(for the country that has a comparative advantage
in that good) increases the wage in the country - Therefore, the most abundant factor benefits most
from trade.
12Producer Adjustment to Changing Relative Prices
- Example Labour abundant country
- The increase in demand for labour intensive goods
(from exports), - increases the demand for labour in the country
and - increases the price of labour relative to capital
- Because there is more of the labour intensive
good being produced, and because the wage is
higher, - Production becomes less labour intensive in the
country. (NOTE all labour is employed)
13Producer Adjustment to Changing Relative Prices
- The increase in demand for the labour intensive
good raises the relative price of labour.(w/r)0
to (w/r)1 - In production of both goods, this results in less
labour being used per unit of output. - However, there is an increase in output of the
labour intensive good
14General Equilibrium Adjustment
In country 2, more cloth is produced, less
steel is produced, (w/r) rises.
- In country 1,
- more steel is produced,
- less cloth is produced,
- (w/r) falls.
15Stolper-Samuelson Theorem
- (also known as the factor-price equalization
theorem) - If all the assumptions of the H-O model hold
(e.g. under very specific conditions about the
market and technology), - the relative price of factors will equalize in
the two trading countries - e.g. with trade (w/r)I (w/r)II
16- As price ratios move closer, so do factor prices
- If all assumptions do not hold, some movement may
be expected, but not equality
17Linking the depictions of trade effects
- First, recall that factor intensity is different
by industry cloth labour intensive (K/L lower
at all input prices w/r) - factor intensity is same for each country (at any
given w/r ratio
18Country may be Capital-abundant or Labour abundant
- Either K/L higher in capital abundant, or
- with no trade, (w/r) higher in capital abundant
country - In the graph below, (w/r)0 represents before
trade wage/rental ratio
19Here we have a country that is labour
abundantRELATIVE to partner
- Trade allows labour abundant country to export
labour intensive good and import capital
intensive good.
Steel
Pc/Ps
Pc/Ps
Cloth
20 Labour abundant country adjustment to trade
- with no trade, (w/r)0 lower in labour abundant
country - with trade, more demand for labour as production
of labour-intensive good (Cloth) expands - (w/r)1 is equal across trading countries IF all
H-O assumptions hold