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Assumption 1 Rational Behavior |
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Individuals maximize utility (satisfaction) subject to constrains (budget.) |
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2 countries that produce 2 goods (homogenous) |
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Assumption 3 No money illusion |
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We care about the relative prices of goods. (Opportunity Cost: The price of goods expressed in terms of other goods.) Nominal: Expressed in monetary units. |
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Assumption 4 Perfect Competition |
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Perfect competition in both countries and industries. |
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Assumption 5 Factor Endowments |
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Factor endowments are fixed. (land, labor, capital and technology) |
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Assumption 6 Mobility of Production |
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Factors of production are perfectly mobile between two industries within each country, but not accross borders. |
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Assumption 7 Utility Measures |
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Utility measures the satisfaction derived from an consumption decision. (Individuals make choices that maximize utility.) |
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Assumption 8 Factors of production |
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Factors of production cannot move between countries |
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Assumption 9 Trade Barriers |
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Assumption 10 Trade Deficits |
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No trade deficits: Exports must pay for imports. |
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Labor is the only factor of production |
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Production exhibits constant returns to scale between labor and output. Y=AE A>1 (Contstant opportunity cost) |
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HO Assumption: 13 2 Factors of Production |
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HO Assumption:14 Technology |
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Both countries have access to the same types of technology |
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HO Assumption: 15 Good Y labor |
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Good Y always has more labor per machine relatively. Good Y = Labor intenstive Good X = Capital intensive |
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HO Assumption: 16 Factor Endowments |
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Countries differ in their factor endowments of L and K. Country A is relatively capital abundant. Country B is relatively Labor abundant. |
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Tastes are identical: Original assumptions do not include tastes because demand was not a factor. |
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A country will have a comparative advantage in, and therefore, will export that good whose production is relatively intensive in the factor with which that country is relatively well endowed. |
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At constant world prices, if a country experiences an increase in the supply of one factor, it will produce more of the product whose production is intensive in that factor and less of the other product. |
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The Factor price of Equilization Theorem |
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Definition
Given all assumptions of the HO model, international trade will lead to the international equilization of factor prices. |
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Stopler Samuelson Theorem |
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Free trade benefits the abundant factor and harms the scarce factor. |
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In those industries in which labor productivity in the U.S. was higher relative to the U.K., the U.S. exports should be higher relative to UK exports. |
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Leontief Paradox In Theory |
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US was capital abundant, therefore shoulc export capital intensive goods, Import labor intensive goods. The K/L ratio should be higher in exported godos than imported goods. |
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Leontief Paradox Actual Findings |
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US exports were labor intnesive when should have been capital intensive because: Assumed US had equal labor productivity as foreign workers. Natural Resources were ignored Assumption of identical taste violated Countries do not use the same production techniques. |
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IO: Exports/GNP X 100 Exports/ C+I+G+(X-M) (The higher the number is higher openneess) |
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Improvement in Technology Increase in resource supply Education in Labor |
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1/Marginal Propensity to Leak = 1/(MPS+MPI) |
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