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Definition
· a country’s wealth is measured by its holdings of “treasure,” which usually means its gold.
o Countries should export more than they import
o Interventionist theory
o Governmental intervention
§ Governments imposed restrictions on most imports |
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Term
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· a country that practices neomercantilism attempts to run an export surplus to achieve a social or political objective
o the approach of countries that try to run favorable balances of trade in an attempt to achieve some social or political objective |
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Term
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Definition
· different countries produce some goods more efficiently than other countries; thus global efficiency can increase through free trade
o Started by Adam Smith
§ Questioned why the citizens of any country should have to buy domestically produced goods when they could buy those goods more cheaply from abroad
o Started the specialization with countries
o Ability of a party to produce a particular good at a lower absolute cost than another
o Can either be natural or acquired
§ Natural: considers climate, natural resources, and labor force availability
§ Acquired: consists of either product or process technology
· Enables a country to produce a unique product or one that is easily distinguished from those of competitors
o Each country should specialize in the production and export of that good which it produces most efficiently, that is with the fewest labor-hours |
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· global efficiency gains may still result from trade if a country specializes in those products it can produce more efficiently than other products—regardless of whether other countries can produce those same products even more efficiently
o Stated by David Ricardo
o Answers the question: “What happens when one country can produce all products at an absolute advantage?”
o Can produce a particular good or service at a lower marginal cost and opportunity cost than another party
o Even if one country was most efficient in the production of two products, it must be relatively more efficient in the production of one good
§ it should then specialize in the production and export of that good in exchange for the importation of the other good |
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Theory of Factor Proportions |
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Definition
· factors in relative abundance are cheaper than factors in relative scarcity
o Started by Eli Heckscher and Beril Ohlin
o Based on countries’ production factors—land, labor, and capital
o A country that is relatively labor abundant (capital abundant) should specialize in the production and export of that product which is relatively labor intensive (capital intensive)
o Said that differences in countries’ endowments of labor compared to their endowments of land or capital explain differences in the cost of production factors
o If labor were scarce, labor costs would be high in relation to land and capital costs and vice versa
o Relative factor costs would lead countries to excel in the production and export of products that used their abundant and cheaper production factors
o Each country exports that good which it produces relatively better than the other country and imports what it does not |
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· the country with the world’s highest capital-labor ratio has a lower capital- labor ratio in exports than in imports
o Founded by Wassily Leontief
§ Devised this contradiction of the Theory of Factor Proportions
§ Discovered that despite the US being endowed with an abundance of capital, its exports were labor intensive and imports capital intensive
o Trade is determined by the relative abundance of factors of production in each economy |
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Overlapping Product Range |
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Definition
· the type, complexity, and diversity of product demands of a country increase as the country’s income increases
o Founded by Staffan Burenstam Linder
o International trade patterns would follow this principle
§ So that countries of similar income per capita will trade most intensively having overlapping product demands
o Produce at home, then export them to similar income level countries
o Similarity of demands influence global trade in manufactured goods |
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Term
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Definition
· the production location for many products moves from one country to another depending on the stage in the product’s life cycle
o Founded by Raymond Vernon
o The location of production of certain kinds of product shifts as they go through their life cycles
§ Introduction, growth, maturity, and decline
o The country that possesses comparative advantage in the production and export of an individual product changes over time as the technology of the product’s manufacture matures
o Focus on product not nation
o Requires large amount of capital and highly skilled labor
o Located primarily in highly industrialized nations |
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Imperfect Markets and Trade Theory |
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Definition
· theories that explain changing trade patterns, including intra-industry trade, based on the imperfection of both factor markets and product markets
o Founded by Paul Krugman
o uses market structure and economies of scale (oligopoly, monopoly)
o internal and external scale of economies
§ internal: larger firms, can monopolize industry, set the market prices, sell more products
§ external: a lot of small firms |
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Competitive Advantage of Nations |
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Definition
· a nation’s competitiveness depends on the capacity of its industry to innovate and upgrade
o Founded by Michael Porter
o Companies gain competitive advantage because of pressure and challenge
o Companies benefit from having strong domestic rivals, aggressive home-based suppliers, and demanding local customers
o The dimensions of competitiveness were categorized into four determinants or “the diamond of national advantage”
§ Firm strategy, structure and rivalry
§ Demand conditions
§ Related and supporting industries
§ Factor conditions |
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Term
Identify the tools of protection/trade policy instruments |
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Definition
tariffs
export subsidy
import quota
voluntary export restraint |
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Term
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Definition
· a tax levied when a good is imported
o Specific tariffs: levied as a fixed charge for each unit of goods imported
o Ad valorem tariffs: taxes that are levied as a fraction of the value of the imported goods
o The effect of the tariff is to raise the cost of shipping goods to a country
o The oldest form of trade policy and have traditionally been used as a source of government income
o Because a tariff raises the price they receive; the domestic consumers lose, for the same reason |
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Term
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Definition
· payments made by the government to encourage the export of specified products
o a payment to a firm or individual that ships a good abroad
o can be levied on a specific or ad valorem basis
o most commonly found in agricultural and dairy products
o when the government offers an export subsidy, shippers will export the good up to the point where the domestic price exceeds the foreign price by the amount of the subsidy |
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Term
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Definition
· limitations on the quantity of goods that can be imported into the country during a specified period of time.
o Binding quota: typically set below the free trade level of imports
o Non-binding quota: a quota at or above the free trade level of imports
o The restriction is usually enforced by issuing licenses to some group of individuals or firms
o An import quota always raises the domestic price of the imported good
o An import quota will raise domestic prices by the same amount as a tariff that limits imports to the same level |
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Voluntary Export Restraint |
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Definition
· a restriction set by a government on the quantity of goods that can be exported out of a country during a specified period of time.
o A VER is a quota on trade imposed from the exporting country’s side instead of the importer’s
o Are generally imposed at the request of the importer and are agreed to by the exporter to forestall other trade restrictions
o Always more costly to the importing country than a tariff that limits imports by the same amount
o VERs are much more costly than tariffs |
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Term
What is the case for free trade? |
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Definition
Increases efficiency, increases economies of scale (protects weak firms), increases opportunities for learning and innovation, specialization, higher global output |
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What is the political argument for free trade? |
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Definition
Nation will not be better off, the producers will be better off |
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Describe the national welfare arguments against free trade |
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Definition
Large nations benefit more than small ones |
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What is the "theory of second best"? |
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Definition
If you can’t solve a problem at the root then go for the second; trade barriers |
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Term
What is meant by levers, ratchets and binding agreements relative to trade? |
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Definition
· One way to think about the GATT-WTO approach to trade is to use a mechanical analogy:
o A device designed to push a heavy object, the world economy, gradually up a slope—the path to free trade
o Levers- what pushes the object in the right direction
o Ratchets- to prevent backsliding
o Binding- the principle ratchet in the system
§ When a tariff rate is “bound,” the country imposing the tariff agrees not to raise the rate in the future
§ At present, almost all tariff rates in developed countries are bound, as are about three-quarters of the rates in developing countries |
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What is the WTO and its structure and purpose and its impact upon global businesses? What are some of the new issues facing the WTO? |
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Definition
· Started in 1995 and replaced the GATT
· Has been accused of acting as a sort of world government, undermining national sovereignty
· A full-fledged international organization
· Main purpose is to serve as the basis for negotiating future trade rounds
· With trade appeals, it isn’t suppose to take more than 15 months |
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Term
Explain the theory of country size and the country similarity theory |
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Definition
Country size: large countries usually depend less on trade than small countries
· Countries with large land areas are apt to have varied climates and an assortment of natural resources, making them more self-sufficient than smaller countries
Country similarity theory: once a company has developed a new product in response to observed market conditions in its home market, it turns to markets it sees as most similar to those at home |
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How does trade affect the distribution of income and factor prices? |
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Definition
· Because of the tariffs.
o The country who is exporting gains revenue and the country who is importing is loosing.
· Because of import quotas
o Raises the domestic price of an imported good |
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What are the major issues involving government trade policy? Why might they fail? |
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Definition
· With mercantilism, the country would lack some goods that they might need to be an efficient country
o Could have a surplus
· With the unfavorable balance of trade, it could cause a trade deficit |
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Term
What is the "specificity rule" and how does this apply to answering the question: Is trade policy the best option for achieving macroeconomic goals? |
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Definition
· The principle that the optimal policy for correcting a distortion is one that deals most directly, or specifically, with that distortions
· States that it is more efficient to use those policy tools that are closest to the sources of the distortions separating private and social benefits or costs
· It would answer by going to the specific macroeconomic goals and how they influence the trade policy
· To answer with tariffs is indirect and not the best policy |
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Term
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Definition
1958
· Two treaties were signed in Rome to give birth to the European Economic Community (EEC) and the European Atomic Energy Community (Euratom)
o EEC: goal was the rebuild their destroyed economies and to prevent the destruction from happening again
o Euratom: goal was to create a single, integrated market for goods, services, labor, and capital
§ The latter sought jointly to develop nuclear energy for peaceful purposes
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