Title: Resources, Comparative Advantage,
1Chapter 4
- Resources, Comparative Advantage,
- and Income Distribution
2Outline
- 1.A Model of Two-Factor Economy
- 2.Effects of International Trade Between
Two-Factor Economies - Case Study North South Trade and Income
Inequality - 3.The Political Economy of Trade A Preliminary
View - 4.Empirical Evidence on the Heckscher-Ohlin Model
- 5. Summary
1
3Introduction
- Ricardian Model labor
- differences in productivity
- In reality labor, land, natural resources
- Main foucus resources differences
- Nations resources
- The relative abundance of factor of production
- Technology of production
- Relative intensity with which different factors
of production are used in the production of goods
4- Hecksher Ohlin theory or factor propotions
theory - Model from simple (closed economy) to complexed
(open economy) - Empirical evidence for or against?
5Learning Goals
- Explain how differences in resources cause
international trade. - Discuss why there are losers and winners as a
result of trade. - Understand the meaning of gains as a whole.
- Discuss the reasons why trade is a politically
important issue and the arguments for free trade.
61.A Model of a Two-Factor Economy
- (1).Prices and Production
- (2).Choosing the Mix of Inputs
- (2).Factor Prices and Goods Prices
- (3).Resources and Output
RETURN
2
7(1). Prices and Production
- The economy we studied
- produce two goods cloth (C) and food (F)
- two inputs labor (L) and land (T)
- labor and land are in limited supply
- then, define aTC, aLC, aTF, aLF, L, F
- We assume
aLC/aTCgtaLF/aTF
The ratio of land to labor used in the
production of cloth is higher than it is in the
production of food
3
8- Food is produced using land and labor (but not
capital). - Labor is therefore a mobile factor that can be
used in either sector. - Land and capital are both specific factors that
can be used only in the production of one good. - Perfect Competition prevails in all markets.
- How much of each good does the economy produce?
- The economys output of manufactures depends on
how much capital and labor are used in that
sector.
9- This relationship is summarized by a production
function. - The production function for good X gives the
maximum quantities of good X that a firm can
produce with various amounts of factor inputs. - For instance, the production function for
manufactures (food) tells us the quantity of
manufactures (food) that can be produced given
any input of labor and capital (land).
10The production function for manufactures is given
by
QM QM (K, LM) (4-1)
where QM is the economys output of
manufactures K is the economys capital stock LM
is the labor force employed in manufactures The
production function for food is given by QF
QF (T, LF) (4-2) where QF is the
economys output of food T is the economys
supply of land LF is the labor force employed in
food
11Figure 4-1 The Production Possibility Frontier
Without Factor Substitution
QF
L/aLF
Labor constraint
T/aTF
Land constraint
L/aLC
QC
T/aTC
4
12Figure 4-2 The Production Possibility Frontier
With Factor Substitution
- Bowed shape - substitution
Where on the PPF does the economy produces?
QF
PP
QC
5
13- In general, the economy should produce at the
point that maximizes the value of production, V - V PCQC PFQF
- Define an isovalue line as a line representing a
constant value of production. - V PCQC PFQF
- PFQF V PCQC
- QF V/PF (PC /PF)QC
- The slope of an isovalue line is (PC /PF)
13
14Figure 4-3 Prices and Production
QF
Isovalue line
Q
PP
QC
14
15- In conlusion,The products mix the producers
choose to produce depends on price (or relative
price). - Q
- What if the relative price changes?
16(2).Choosing the Mix of Inputs
What input choice will producers actually make?
The input choice will depend on the ratio of
these Two factor prices, w/r
16
17Figure 4-4 Input Possibilities in Food Production
aTF
Input combinations that produce one calorie of
food
II
aLF
(1)Negative slope (2)Convex to the origin.
17
18Figure 4-5 Factor Prices and Input Choices
w/r
CC
FF
T/L
Cloth production labor-intensive Food
production land-intensive
18
19(3).Factor Prices and Goods Prices
- Under competition, the price of a good equals the
cost of production, and the cost of production
depends on the wage rate and the rental rate. - The effect of the rental rate of land (r) on the
price of cloth (PC) depends on the intensity of
land usage in cloth production.(So does food
production) - However, an increase in the rental rate of land
will affect the price of food more than the price
of cloth. - Under competition, changes in w/r are therefore
directly related to changes in PC /PW .
19
20(3).Factor Prices and Goods Prices
Figure 4-6 Factor Prices and Goods Prices
PC/PF
SS
w/r
20
21- We have a relationship among factor prices and
good prices and the levels of factors used in
production - Stolper-Samuelson theorem if the relative price
of a good increases, then the real wage or rate
of return of the factor used intensively in the
production of that good increases, while the real
wage or rate of return of the other factor
decreases. - Under competition, the real wage/return is equal
to the marginal productivity of the factor. (zero
profit under perfect competition) - Marginal productivity of a factor increases as
the level of that factor used in production
decreases. (marginal productivity theory)
21
22Figure 4-7 From Goods Prices to Input Choices
w/r
CC
w/r2
FF
w/r1
SS
TF/LF1
T/L
PC/PF
PC/PF2
PC/PF1
TC/LC1
TC/LC2
TF/LF2
22
23- We have a theory that predicts changes in the
distribution of income when the relative price of
goods changes, say because of trade. - An increase in the relative price of cloth, PC
/PF , will - raise income of workers relative to that of
landowners, w/r. (w? r?) - raise the ratio of land to labor, T/L, in both
industries and raise the marginal product of
labor in both industries and lower the marginal
product of land in both industries. (factors of
production are paid by their marginal product) - raise the real income of workers and lower the
real income of land owners.
23
24(4).Resources and Output
Figure 4-8 The Allocation of Resources
OF
LF
C
1
TC
TF
F
OC
LC
Why OfF is steeper?
Resources employed - production
24
25- How do output levels change when the economys
resources change? - If we hold output prices constant as a factor of
production increases, then the supply of the good
that uses this factor intensively increases (more
than proportionately )and the supply of the other
good decreases. - This proposition is called the Rybczynski theorem.
25
26Figure 4-9 An Increase in the Supply of Land
LF1
LF2
OF2
OF1
C
1
TC
TF1
2
TF2
F1
F2
OC
LC
T increases P L constant
Where do the reduced factors used in cloth
production go?
26
27- A economy with a high ratio of land to labor is
predicted to have a high output of food relative
to cloth and a low price of food relative to
cloth. - It will be relatively efficient at (have a
comparative advantage in) producing food. - It will be relatively inefficient at producing
cloth.
27
28Figure 4-10 Resources and Production Possibilities
QF
QF2
2
Slope-PC/PF
Generally, an economy will tend to be
relatively effective at producing goods that are
intensive in the factors with which the country
is relatively well-endowed.
Slope-PC/PF
1
QF1
TT1
TT2
QC2
QC1
QC
RETURN
(disproportionately) biased expansion of
production possibilities (towards food production)
28
292.Effects of International Trade Between
Two-Factor Economies
- (1).Relative Prices and the Pattern of Trade
- (2).Trade and the Distribution of Income
- (3).Factor Price Equalization
- (4). Case Study North-South Trade and Income
Inequality
RETURN
29
30(1).Relative Prices and the Pattern of Trade
- Assumption Two countries
- ?The same relative demands
- Identical tasts for the same relative price.
- ?The same technology level
- Same factors yeilds same amount of goods.
- ?Factors can not move between countries
- ?Completely competition
30
31- ?Factor endowment (only difference)
- Home labor-abundant (L/T gt L/ T)
- Foreign land-abundant (L/T lt L/ T)
32- Abundant vs. intensive
- Abundance is defined in relative terms, by
comparing the ratio of labor to land in the two
countries. - Eg. The U.S. is land abundant Britain is labor
abundant. - Intensive is also defined in relative terms, by
comparing the ratio of labor to land used in two
goods production. - Eg. Cloth is labor-intensive food is
land-intensive.
33- eg. Cloth labor-intensive
- PPF shift out more in this direction
- Home tends to produce a higher ratio of cloth to
food - One effect of trade convergence in prices
34(1).Relative Prices and the Pattern of Trade
Figure 4-11 Trade Leads to a Convergence of
Relative Prices
PC/PF
RS
RS
.
3
.
.
2
1
RD
QCQC
QFQF
Point 1 is lower than point 3, why? (factor
intensity)
34
35- How differences in relative prices be translated
into a pattern of trade? - Some basic relationships budget constraints in
closed and open economy
PCDCPFDFPCQCPFQF
(4-5) Rearranging DF-QF(PC/PF)(QC-DC) (4-6)
Quantity of exports
Price of exports relative to imports
Quantity of imports
36- Result
- Countries tend to export goods whose production
is intensive in factors with which they are
abundantly endowed (home labor-abundant) - Heckscher-Ohlin Theorem
- A country will export that commodity which
uses intensively its abundant factor and import
that commodity which uses intensively its scarce
factor.
36
37Figure 4-12 The Budget Constraint for a
Trading Economy
- Two characters
- Slope
- tangency
37
38Figure 4-13 Trading Equilibrium
QF
QF
Homes budget constraint
Foreign's budget constraint
QFF
DFF
DFH
QFH
QC
DCH
QCH
QCF
DCF
QC
(a) Home
(b) Foreign
38
39(2) Trade and the Distribution of Income
- In Home
- Relative price of cloth rises
- People get income from labor gain from trade
- People get income from land are worse off
- In Foreign
- Relative price of cloth rises
- Laborers are made worse off
- Landowners are made better off
40- Abundant factor (factor of relative large supply)
- Home Labor Foreign Land
- Scarce factor (factor of relative small supply)
- Home land Foreign labor
- Effects of trade on income distribution
- Owners of a countrys abundant factors gain
from trade, but owners of a countrys scarce
factors lose. - The U.S. example
41(No Transcript)
42Figure 4-3 Prices and Production
QF
Isovalue line
Q
PP
QC
42
43- In conlusion,The products mix the producers
choose to produce depends on price (or relative
price). - Q
- What if the relative price changes?
44Figure 4-4 Input Possibilities in Food Production
aTF
Input combinations that produce one calorie of
food
II
aLF
(1)Negative slope (2)Convex to the origin.
44
45(2).Choosing the Mix of Inputs
What input choice will producers actually make?
The input choice will depend on the ratio of
these Two factor prices, w/r
45
46Figure 4-5 Factor Prices and Input Choices
w/r
CC
FF
T/L
Cloth production labor-intensive Food
production land-intensive
46
47Figure 4-7 From Goods Prices to Input Choices
w/r
CC
w/r2
FF
w/r1
SS
TF/LF1
T/L
PC/PF
PC/PF2
PC/PF1
TC/LC1
TC/LC2
TF/LF2
47
48- A economy with a high ratio of land to labor is
predicted to have a high output of food relative
to cloth and a low price of food relative to
cloth. - It will be relatively efficient at (have a
comparative advantage in) producing food. - It will be relatively inefficient at producing
cloth.
48
49Figure 4-10 Resources and Production Possibilities
QF
QF2
2
Slope-PC/PF
Generally, an economy will tend to be
relatively effective at producing goods that are
intensive in the factors with which the country
is relatively well-endowed.
Slope-PC/PF
1
QF1
TT1
TT2
QC2
QC1
QC
RETURN
(disproportionately) biased expansion of
production possibilities (towards food production)
49
50(No Transcript)
51(3).Factor Price Equalization
- In the absence of trade, price of goods and
factors are different between countries. - Trade leads to (complete) equalization of factor
prices. - Because relative goods prices are equalized and
because of the direct relationship between
relative goods prices and factor prices, factor
prices are also equalized. - Goods trade means indirect trade of factors.
- More labor is embodied in Homes exports than in
its imports. So - Home export labor, embodied in its
labor-intensive exports. - Foreign export land, embodied in its
land-intensive exports.
51
52- In reality, factor prices are not equalized
52
53Table 4-1 Comparative International Wage Rates
Hourly compensation of production workers,2000
Country
United States Germany Japan Spain South
Korea Portugal Mexico Sri Lanka
100 121 111 55 41 24 12 2
53
54- Three assumptions are in reality violated
(untrue) - ?.both countries produce both goods
- Factor-price equalization occurs only if the
countries involved are sufficiently similar in
their relative factor endowments. - Countries with radically different ratios of
capital to labor or skilled to unskilled labor
Not necessarily true.
55- ?.technologies are the same
- A country with superior technology might have
both a higher wage rate and a higher rental rate. - ?.trade actually equalize the prices of goods in
the two countries - Visible invisible barries (transportation
costs, import quotas, tarriffs)
56Trade and Income Distribution in the Short Run
- In Home, where the relative price of cloth rises
- -----Laborers are made better off and
landowners are made worse off. - In Foreign, where the relative price of cloth
falls, the opposite happens - Owners of a countrys abundant factors gain from
trade, but owners of a countrys scarce factors
lose.
56
57Trade and Income Distribution in the Short Run
- Difference between the specific factors model and
the Heckscher-Ohlin model in terms of income
distribution effects - The specificity of factors to particular
industries is often only a temporary problem. - In contrast, effects of trade on the distribution
of income among land, labor, and capital are more
or less permanent.
57
58(No Transcript)
59(4). Case Study North-South Trade and Income
Inequality
?Why has wage inequality increased?
North-South trade in manufactures fits to the
factor proportions model much better.
?Is it true that growing trade with low-wage
countries caused the inequality of income in
the United States?
59
60Table 4-C1 Composition of Developing-Country
Exports
Manufactures Goods
Agricultural Products
Mining Products
30 24
47.5 22.5
22 62.5
1973 1995
60
61- The Heckscher-Ohlin model predicts that owners of
abundant factors will gain from trade and owners
of scarce factors will lose from trade. - But little evidence supporting this prediction
exists. - According to the model, a change in income
distribution occurs through changes in goods
prices, but there is no evidence of a change in
the prices of skill-intensive goods relative to
prices of unskilled-intensive goods.
61
62- According to the model, wages of unskilled
workers should increase in unskilled labor
abundant countries relative to wages of skilled
labor, but in some cases the reverse has
occurred - Wages of skilled labor have increased more
rapidly in Mexico than wages of unskilled labor. - Even if the model were exactly correct, trade is
a small fraction of the US economy, so its
effects on US prices and wages prices should be
small.
62
63- Changes in income distribution occur with every
economic change, not only international trade. - Changes in technology, changes in consumer
preferences, exhaustion of resources and
discovery of new ones all affect income
distribution. - Economists put most of the blame on technological
change and the resulting premium paid on
education as the major cause of increasing income
inequality in the US. - It would be better to compensate the losers from
trade (or any economic change) than prohibit
trade. - The economy as a whole does benefit from trade.
63
643.The Political Economy of Trade A Preliminary
View
- (1).The Gains from Trade, Revisited
- (2).Optimal Trade Policy
- (3).Income Distribution and Trade Politics
- Box Income Distribution and the Beginnings
of Trade Theory - Short-run gains loses often determine
political positions in debates over trade policy.
64
65- There are losers winners from trade.
- In the short run, factors specific to industries
that have to compete with imports lose from
trade. - In the long run, a countrys scarece factors lose
from trade. - Three questions
- How to measure the losses or gains?
- What should governments do?
- What are governments actually doing?s
66(1).The Gains from Trade, Revisited
Figure 4-14 Trade Expands the Economys
Consumption Possibilities
DF QF
2
Budget constraint
1
QF1
PP
QC1
DC QC
RETURN
66
67(2).Optimal Trade Policy
- Trade expansion of choices
- Theoretically, everyone can gain from trade.
- In practice?
- Homogeneous economy? Actually not.
- Who nees special treatment?
- eg. The U.S. manufactures (producers of garments,
shoes)
67
68- Three main reasons for not focusing on the income
distribution effects of trade - (1) Its not specific to trade.
- Changes in technology, changes in consumer
preferences, exhaustion of resources and
discovery of new ones all affect income
distribution. - (2) Its always better to allow trade and
compensate those who are hurt by it. - Cusions like safety net of income support
programme - The economy as a whole does benefit from trade.
69(3).Income Distribution and Trade Politics
- (3) Those who stand to lose are typically better
organized. - eg. the U.S. sugar industry
- There is a political bias in trade politics
potential losers from trade are better
politically organized than the winners from
trade. - Losses are usually concentrated among a few, but
gains are usually dispersed among many. - Each of you pays about 8/year to restrict
imports of sugar, and the total cost of this
policy is about 2 billion/year. - The benefits of this program total about 1
billion, but this amount goes to relatively few
sugar producers.
69
70- Typically, those who gain from trade in any
particular product are a much less concentrated,
informed, and organized group than those who
lose.
70
714.Empirical Evidence on the Heckscher-Ohlin Model
- ?.Tests on US data
- Leontief found that US exports were less
capital-intensive than US imports, even though
the US is the most capital-abundant country in
the world Leontief paradox. - ?.Tests on global data
- Bowen, Leamer, and Sveikauskas tested the
Heckscher-Ohlin model on data from 27 countries
and confirmed the Leontief paradox on an
international level. - ?.Tests on manufacturing data between low/middle
income countries and high income countries. - This data lends more support to the theory.
RETURN
71
72?.Tests on US data
72
73Year Factors Export Import Export/ Import
1947 Capital() 2,550,789 3,091339 1.30
1947 Labor(hours) 182 170 1.30
1947 K/L 14,100 18,180 1.30
1956 Capital() 2256,800 2,303,400 1.06
1956 Labor(hours) 174 168 1.06
1956 K/L 12,977 13,726 1.06
1971 (Baldwin) Capital() 1,876,000 2,132,000 1.27
1971 (Baldwin) Labor(hours) 131 119 1.27
1971 (Baldwin) K/L 14,200 18,000 1.27
74?.Tests on global data
74
75?.Tests on manufacturing data between low/middle
income countries and high income
countries.(North-South Trade)
75
76?.The Case of the Missing Trade.
- But because factor prices are not equalized
across countries, the predicted volume of trade
is much smaller than actually occurs. - A result of missing trade discovered by Daniel
Trefler. - The reason for this missing trade appears to be
the assumption of identical technology among
countries. - Technology affects the productivity of labor and
therefore the value of labor services. - A country with high technology and a high value
of labor services would not necessarily import a
lot from a country with low technology and a low
value of labor services.
76
77Whats the implications of the tests?
77
785. Summary
- 1 Substitution of factors in the production
process generates a curved PPF. - 2 When an economy produces on its PPF, the
opportunity cost of producing a good equals the
relative price of that good. - 3 If the relative price of a good increases, then
the real wage or rate of return of the factor
used intensively in the production of that good
increases, while the real wage or rate of return
of the other factor decreases.
78
79- 4 If we hold output prices constant as a factor
of production increases, then the supply of the
good that uses this factor intensively increases,
and the supply of the other good decreases. - 5 An economy will export goods that are
intensive in its abundant factors of production
and import goods that are intensive in its scarce
factors of production. - 6 The Heckscher-Ohlin model predicts that
relative output prices and factor prices will
equalize, neither of which occurs in the real
world. - 7 The model predicts that owners of abundant
factors gain, but owners of scarce factors lose
with trade.
79
80- 8 A country as a whole will be better off with
trade, even though the model predicts that owners
of scarce factors will be worse off without
compensation. - 9 Empirical support of the Heckscher-Ohlin model
is weak except for cases involving trade between
high income countries and low/middle income
countries.
80