International Trade Theory
International Trade Theory
Trade Theory
Introduction
International Trade
Theory
explains why it is beneficial
for countries to engage in
international trade
helps countries formulate
their economic policy
explains the pattern of
international trade in the
world economy
An Overview of Trade
Theory
Question: How has international trade
theory evolved?
Answer:
Mercantilism (16th and 17th centuries)
encouraged exports and discouraged imports
Adam Smith (1776) promoted unrestricted
free trade
David Ricardo (19th century) built on Smith
ideas
Eli Heckscher and Bertil Ohlin (20th century)
refined Ricardos work
Why do Certain
Patterns of Trade Exist?
Some patterns of trade are fairly
easy to explain:
it is obvious why Saudi Arabia exports
oil, Ghana exports cocoa, and Brazil
exports coffee
The Pattern of
International Trade
Ricardos theory of comparative
advantage - existing trade patterns are
related to differences in labor productivity
Heckscher and Ohlin - explain trade
through the interplay between the
proportions in which the factors of
production are available in different
countries and the proportions in which
they are need for producing particular
goods
The Pattern of
International Trade
Paul Krugman - developed new
trade theory - the world market
can only support a limited number
of firms in some industries
trade will skew toward those
countries that have firms that
were able to capture first
mover advantages
Michael Porter - focused on the
importance of country factors to
explain a nations dominance in
the production and export of
certain products
Mercantilism
After trade
Ghana would have 14 tons of cocoa left, and 6 tons of rice
South Korea would have 14 tons of rice left and 6 tons of cocoa
Absolute Advantage
Figure 5.1: The Theory of Absolute
Advantage
Absolute Advantage
Table 5.1: Absolute Advantage and the Gains from Trade
Ghana in
Africa
South Korea in
Asia
Ricardos Theory
of Comparative Advantage
David Ricardo asked what might happen when
one country has an absolute advantage in the
production of all goods
Ricardos theory of comparative advantage
suggests that countries should specialize in
the production of those goods they produce
most efficiently and buy goods that they
produce less efficiently from other countries,
even if this means buying goods from other
countries that they could produce more
efficiently at home.
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Assume:
Assume
Comparative Advantage
Figure 5.2: The Theory of Comparative Advantage
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Heckscher-Ohlin Theory
Heckscher and Ohlin - comparative
advantage arises from differences in
national factor endowments (the extent to
which a country is endowed with
resources such as land, labor, and capital)
the more abundant a factor, the lower its cost
countries will export goods that make
intensive use of those factors that are locally
abundant, and import goods that make
intensive use of factors that are locally
scarce
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What is the
Product Life Cycle Theory?
U.S. firms might set up production facilities in
advanced countries with growing demand, limiting
exports from the U.S.
As the market in the U.S. and other advanced nations
matured, the product would become more
standardized, and price the main competitive weapon
Producers based in advanced countries where labor
costs were lower than the United States might now
be able to export to the United States
If cost pressures were intense, developing countries
would acquire a production advantage over advanced
countries
Production became concentrated in lower-cost foreign
locations, and the United States became an importer
of the product
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What is the
Product Life Cycle Theory?
The Product Life Cycle Theory
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Porters Diamond of
Competitive Advantage
Michael Porter tried to explain why a nation achieves
international success in a particular industry and identified
four attributes that promote or impede the creation of
competitive advantage:
1.Factor endowments - a nations position in factors of
production necessary to compete in a given industry
can lead to competitive advantage
can be either basic (natural resources, climate, location) or
advanced (skilled labor, infrastructure, technological know-how)
Porters Diamond of
Competitive Advantage
3. Relating and supporting industries - the
presence or absence of supplier industries and
related industries that are internationally competitive
can spill over and contribute to other industries
successful industries tend to be grouped in clusters in
countries
Porters Diamond
Determinants of National Competitive Advantage: Porters Diamond
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Summary:
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2. First-mover implications - a
first-mover advantage can help a
firm dominate global trade in that
product
a firm can invest resources in trying to
build first-mover advantages, even if it
means losses for a few years before a
venture becomes profitable
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In Search of Mutualistic
Market
Supporting
FreeVs.
Trade
Against
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