International Trade Chapter 17 Chap 17 Vocabulary • • • • • • • • • • • • Exports Imports Absolute advantage Comparative advantage Tariff Quota Most favored nation clause World Trade Organization NAFTA Foreign exchange rate Trade deficit Trade surplus Why We Trade • Factors of Production (resources) are widely dispersed around the world • Efficient production requires different combinations of technologies and resources. • As a result, countries specialize and produce what they produce best and trade for the rest. Benefits from Specialization and Trade • If a nation produced everything it consumed, it would not depend on any other nation for its livelihood. • Although self-sufficiency sounds appealing, countries are better off if they specialize in the production of some products and trade some of them to other countries. • Specialization and trade are concepts based on the principle of opportunity cost. Comparative and Absolute Advantage • Absolute Advantage: when a country is able to produce MORE of a good than another country. For example the U.S. can produce more jet fighters than Saudi Arabia. • Comparative Advantage: when a nation can produce a good more efficiently, or has a lower opportunity cost in producing a good. Saudi Arabia has a comparative advantage in producing oil and trades oil for jet aircraft. Barriers to International Trade •Tariffs – taxes on imports •Revenue tariffs – to raise revenues for government •Protective tariffs – tax to protect domestic industries •Import Quotas – limits numbers of imports •Nontariff Barriers – administrative or “red tape” (For example slowing “health” or “safety” concerns. bureaucratic trade due to ARGUMENTS FOR PROTECTIONISM • National Defense* • Infant-Industry Argument* • Protect Domestic Employment • Keep money at home • Diversification-For-Stability • Protection-Against-Dumping *only legitimate arguments FREE TRADE MOVEMENT • Smoot-Hawley Tariff Act, 1930 • Reciprocal Trade Agreements Act, 1934 •Generalized Reductions •Most-Favored-Nation Clauses • General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade (GATT), 1947 • World Trade Organization (WTO), 1990s (replaced GATT) • NAFTA (North American Free Trade Association) THE WORLD TRADE ORGANIZATION Goals of the World Trade Organization (WTO) •Reductions in Tariffs Worldwide •New Rules to Promote Trade in Services •Reduction in Agricultural Subsidies •Intellectual Property Protections •Phasing Out Textile Quotas and Tariffs Foreign Exchange Markets • Foreign Currency Exchange is conducted by the major banks in the world. • To buy imports from Mexico, a U.S. business would exchange $ for pesos on the foreign exchange market. • This action would decrease the supply of pesos and increase the supply of $. • As a result of this transaction, the $ would depreciate (more dollars) and the peso would appreciate (fewer pesos). Exchange Rates • Today $1 = 13 Pesos. It takes $25 to buy a shirt that costs 325 pesos. • If in the future $1 = 14 pesos, the dollar has appreciated and the peso has depreciated, or the dollar buys MORE pesos. With the appreciated dollar, it now takes $23.21 to buy the shirt priced at 325 pesos. DETERMINANTS OF EXCHANGE RATES Changes in Tastes Relative Income Changes Relative Price Changes Purchasing Power Parity Theory Relative Interest Rates Speculation **Flexible exchange rates automatically adjust to eliminate balance of payments deficits or surpluses. U.S. IMPORT TRANSACTION American exports create a foreign demand for dollars which creates a supply of foreign currencies which are available to American buyers... Financing an American export reduces the supply of foreign currencies available and increases the domestic money supply. INTERNATIONAL EXCHANGERATE SYSTEM Today we use a “Flexible” exchange rate system. The value of a currency is adjusted based upon the laws of supply and demand. Dollar price of one pound THE MARKET FOR CURRENCY P EXCHANGE RATE: $2 = £1 S 3 2 Dollar depreciates Dollar appreciates 1 D Quantity of pounds Q