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Economies of scale, imperfect competition and international trade

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BMW = 60 units Land Rover = 60 units Total: 120 cars. World production: BMW = 120 cars Land Rover = 120 cars. Why Economies of Scale cause trade. Trade: ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Economies of scale, imperfect competition and international trade


1
Economies of scale, imperfect competition and
international trade
  • Ch 6 Krugman and Obstfeld
  • Eco3024F

2
Structure
  • Introduce new model of trade Monopolistic
    competition model
  • Introduce concepts
  • Internal Economies of Scale (EOS)
  • External Economies of Scale (EOS)
  • Develop Monopolistic Competition Model

3
Trade theory
  • So far, what causes trade
  • Different technology (Ricardo)
  • Different factor endowments (HO)
  • Different tastes
  • Hence when countries are different in production
    or consumption
  • What happens when countries are very similar? Do
    we have to expect no trade?

4
The composition of regional trade
  • W Europe N America account for nearly 60 of
    world trade
  • W Europe exports 67 of it exports to itself
  • Commodity composition of trade is very similar

5
Intra-Industry trade
  • Intra-industry trade
  • Trade within same industries, where countries
    export import the same kind of products (or
    slightly differentiated products)
  • Inter-industry trade
  • Trade between different industries

6
More examples Trade flows
7
Trade theory
  • High income countries have similar endowments and
    technologies, (as well as tastes?)
  • Intra-industry trade seems to occur between
    developed economies
  • Traditional trade theory cannot explain why trade
    such as this occurs
  • To explain this we draw on 2 models incorporating
    economies of scale
  • External EOS
  • Internal EOS (Krugman model)

8
Defining Economies of Scale
  • Lets look at the two forms of economies of scale
  • 1) Internal EoS
  • 2) External EoS

9
Defining Economies of Scale Internal
  • (1) Internal economies of scale occur when the
    cost per unit of output depends on the size of a
    firm.
  • lower input cost (bulk purchase discounts)
  • costly and lumpy inputs (RD advertising)
  • Fixed costs
  • Internal economies of scale result when large
    firms have a cost advantage over small firms,
    which leads to an imperfectly competitive market.
  • Market characterised by small number of large
    firms (Boeing and Airbus, motor vehicles)

10
Defining Economies of Scale Internal
  • Declining average costs can arise if there are
    large fixed costs in establishing an industry
  • Let Total Cost (TC) be defined as
  • TC Fcost cQ
  • where Fcost is the Fixed cost and c is the
    Marginal cost per output (Q)
  • Average costs are
  • AC TC/Q Fcost/ Q c
  • A larger firm is more efficient because average
    cost decreases as output Q increases internal
    economies of scale.

11
Defining Economies of Scale Internal
  • Example New Airbus

Cost per Unit
Ac
Mc
Planes
12
Defining Economies of Scale External
  • (2) External EoS
  • Average cost depends on size of the industry
  • External economies of scale may result if a
    larger industry allows for more efficient
    provision of services or equipment to firms in
    the industry
  • specialized suppliers (localized industrial
    clusters)
  • labour market pooling (highly spec. skills)
  • knowledge spillovers
  • infrastructure ( transport network)
  • Market structure perfectly competitive with
    numerous firms (City of London, Silicon Valley)

13
Why Economies of Scale cause trade
  • Under constant returns to scale there was no
    possibility of lowering costs by scaling up
    production
  • Assume 2 countries UK Germany
  • Each has 6 labour allocated to car production
  • 2 models of cars (BMW Land Rover) produced
    using same technology

14
Why Economies of Scale cause trade
  • Autarky
  • Assume PBMW PLR under autarky
  • each country produces both models and will
    allocate half labour to production of each car
  • UK 3 labour per model
  • BMW 60 units Land Rover 60 units Total
    120 cars
  • Germany 3 labour per model
  • BMW 60 units Land Rover 60 units Total
    120 cars
  • World production
  • BMW 120 cars Land Rover 120 cars

15
Why Economies of Scale cause trade
  • Trade
  • each country specializes in one model
  • UK 6 labour to Land Rover
  • BMW 0 units Land Rover 480 units Total
    480 cars
  • Germany 6 labour to BMW
  • BMW 480 units Land Rover 0 units Total
    480 cars
  • World production
  • BMW 480 cars Land Rover 480 cars

16
PPF with Economies of Scale
Increasing returns to scale gives rise to a
concave PPF curve
BMW
480
240
60
PLR/PBMW 1
Land Rover
480
240
60
17
Gains from Trade with EOS
Assuming preferences dont change and are
equivalent in both countries Relative price will
be same after trade
BMW
480
240
60
PLR/PBMW 1
Land Rover
480
240
60
18
Monopolistic competition model
19
Monopolistic competition model
  • Monopolistic competition is a model of an
    imperfectly competitive industry which assumes
  • Large number of firms, but each firm can
    differentiate its product from the product of
    competitors.
  • Each firm faces its own demand curve and can set
    its own price
  • Cannot affect average price, dont think
    strategically about competitor even though each
    firm faces competition it behaves as if it were a
    monopolist

20
Monopolistic competition
Under Monopoly firm earns profit

4. However, under Monopolistic competition, if
profits exist, firms enter. Demand falls until P
AC. Equilibrium at zero profit
P
AC
MC
D
MR
Q
21
Insight from forthcoming attraction Equilibrium
in Krugmans Monopolistic competition model
  • Assume
  • Model of monopolistic competition firms with cost
    functions TC F cQ (i.e. there are internal
    economies of scale)
  • All firms have the same cost function and produce
    variations of same product (symmetric) then, in
    equilibrium Pfirm Pindustry
  • Discuss adjustment to equilibrium in country with
    given market size (S) if profits exist (PgtAC)
  • Two relationships define equilibrium
  • Number Firms-Average Cost Firms enter, output of
    existing firms decline and average costs rise
  • Number Firms - Price Firms enter, price
    competition rises and prices fall
  • Equilibrium establishes at P AC. Adjustment is
    through firms entry/exit and P adjustment

22
Developing Krugmans monopolistic competition
model
  • In following sections we will
  • Develop the Number Firms-Average Cost
    relationship
  • Develop the Number Firms - Price relationship

23
Number Firms-AC relationship
  • A firm in a monopolistically competitive industry
    is expected
  • to sell more the larger the total sales (S) of
    the industry and the higher the prices charged by
    its rivals.
  • to sell less the larger the number of firms (n)
    in the industry and the higher its own price.
  • These concepts are represented by the
    mathematical relationship

24
Number Firms-AC relationship (cont.)
  • Q S1/n b(P Pind)
  • Q is an individual firms sales
  • S is the total sales of the industry
  • n is the number of firms in the industry
  • b is a constant term representing the
    responsiveness of a firms sales to its price
  • P is the price charged by the firm itself
  • Pind is the average price charged by its
    competitors
  • Hence a firm will sell more
  • the higher the demand in the industry (S)
  • the lower its price relative to competitors
    (P-Pind)

25
Number Firms-AC relationship (cont.)
  • To make the model easier to understand, we assume
    that all firms have identical demand functions
    and cost functions.
  • Thus in equilibrium, all firms charge the same
    price P Pind
  • In equilibrium,
  • Q S/n 0 REMEMBER FOR LATER
  • AC C/Q F/Q c F(n/S) c

26
Number Firms-AC relationship (cont.)
  • AC F(n/S) c
  • The larger the number of firms n in the industry,
    the higher the average cost for each firm because
    the less each firm produces.
  • The larger the total sales S of the industry, the
    lower the average cost for each firm because the
    more that each firm produces.

27
Number Firms-AC relationship (cont.)
  • The relationship can be expressed as follows

Average Cost
(AC F(n/S) c)
CC
AC
Number of firms
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