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What Determines a Country

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Title: No Slide Title Author: Marcelo Clerici-Arias Last modified by: Marcelo Clerici-Arias Created Date: 10/28/1998 12:57:21 PM Document presentation format – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: What Determines a Country


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What Determines a Countrys Comparative Advantage?
  • Exogenous factors are the most obvious

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Climate (long growing season)
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Natural Resources (petroleum reserves)
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But there are also endogenous factors education,
skills, capital,...
  • Implies that comparative advantage can change
    over time
  • electronic goods to pharmaceutical goods to
    internet software to .

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Lets take a closer look at how capital (K) and
labor (L)affect comparative advantage
  • Definitions
  • capital abundant country has high K/L
  • labor abundant country has low K/L
  • capital intensive production uses high K/L
  • labor intensive production uses low K/L
  • Capital abundant countries comparative advantage
    in capital intensive production
  • Labor abundant countries comparative advantage
    in labor intensive production

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Factor Price Equalization
  • Factor prices
  • wage rate for labor
  • rental rate for capital
  • Factor price equalization even if factors are
    not mobile, factor prices will tend to equalize
    with trade

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What causes factor price equalization?
  • suppose U.S. has high K/L
  • suppose Mexico has low K/L
  • then opening up trade will shift
  • U.S. production toward capital intensive goods
  • thus demand for capital rises in U.S
  • M. production toward labor intensive goods
  • thus demand for labor rises in Mexico
  • U.S. wages fall and Mexican wages rise
  • that is a move toward factor price equalization
  • assumes ceteris paribus, productivity would rise

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Gains from Expanded Markets
  • Theory combines two features of production
  • economies of scale (declining ATC over the
    relevant range of production)
  • product differentiation leads to monopolistic
    competition
  • Focuses on intraindustry trade (same industry)
  • comparative advantage focuses on interindustry
    trade (different industries)

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Getting a sense of the gains from expanded markets
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Now lets develop a model to show the gains from
expanded markets
  • First derive a relationship between
  • the number of firms,
  • the size of the market
  • costs per unit (ATC)
  • Second, derive a relationship between the number
    of firms and the price
  • Third, combine the two relationships

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Now, summarize the results using a new curve
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Recall results from monopolistic competition model
  • Product differentiation
  • Firms face downward sloping demand curve
  • With more firms in the industry, the demand curve
    shifts
  • and gets flatter (a point we did not emphasize
    earlier), so the price falls
  • sketch this by hand

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Now, summarize the result that more firms lead to
a lower price in another new curve
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Put the two new curves in the same diagram look
at the long run equilibrium
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Finally, open up the economy curve shifts
showing effect of a larger market
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End of Lecture
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