4.1.5 Trading Blocs Flashcards
How is Trading Bloc defined ?
• A trading bloc is a type of intergovernmental agreement to reduce regional trade barriers
• Depending on how closely the members wish to integrate their economies they may form different types of trading blocs such as free trade areas, customs unions, common markets and full economic & monetary union
EU trading block ?
• The EU is a single marketplace between the 28 member countries (with a notable exception of Switzerland which remains independent).
• There is free movement of; people, money, goods and services between all 28 countries
• 19 of these countries also opted to have the Euro as their currency (to stabilise their currency), this is the Eurozone
country’s in ASEAN trading bloc
Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN)
• Thailand
• Philippines
• Malaysia
• Vietnam
• Burma
• Laos
• Cambodia • Brunei
ASEAN trading
• ASEAN was started in 1967 by Thailand, Malaysia, Philippines, and Singapore to promote economic and social growth in the region
• It has negotiated a free trade agreement among member states and with other countries such as China, as well as eased travel in the region for citizens of member countries.
NAFTA trading bloc?
North American Free Trade Area (NAFTA)
• USA
• Canada
• Mexico
-1992
NAFTA trading
• NAFTA was created in 1992 with the simple idea of giving the customers in the USA, Canada and Mexico cheaper goods.
• Without import tariffs between the countries the goods are less expensive which is a bonus for the consumer, but not always popular with business
Trade bloc expansion defined?
• Expansion of a trading bloc; the process of more countries joining an existing trading bloc, thereby making it expand
Expansion of trading blocs?
• As other countries see the benefits of belonging to a free trade area, they may eventually apply to join
• These benefits might be; access to larger markets, economies of scale by producing more and selling more, enhanced competition and migration with a good supply of able bodied labour
what are Opportunities of free trade?
• Free trade is trade that takes place between counties without protectionism e.g. no tariffs or quotas on imports
• This brings with it opportunities to business:
#1 Freedom to trade; For example UK businesses can sell goods and services
freely across the whole of the European Union
#2 Enlarged market; For example the size of the market for British goods is now 499 million people, can mean EOS
#3 Protection from international competition outside of the BLOC; For example UK businesses are protected from competition from China
#4 Freedom of movement of people; For example UK firms can employ talented people from across Europe.
Drawbacks of free trade
• Free trade agreements (such as trading blocs) can also create problems for business
• Dominance of developed countries in global trading
• It can kill off domestic business in developing nations
• It can reduce national sovereignty or identity as countries become standardised, westernised and Mcdonaldized
Factors to consider in trading blocs
- where to produce.
- where to sell
- how to enter a market
- business strategy
What impacts on business of trading blocs
Opportunities for business:
- Freeing regional trade may allow individual members to specialise in line with their country’s comparative advantages.
- the market for firms’ goods and service should increase.
- As the volume of trade increases within the region, producers are able to benefit from economic of scale this leads to lower costs for them and usually lower prices for consumers.
- Resources may be easier to source and labour easier to recruit , while production and transport costs may continue to fall
- As trade increases, it may result in greater competition and thereby more efficiency in the market.
Drawbacks for business in trade blocs
- Trade blocs may actually harm overall trade because countries outside the region may be better placed to specialise or develop a competitive advantage in a product or service.
- inefficient producers may be protected from competition thereby diverting trade away from more efficient producers and potentially harming consumers.
- The overall benefits may turn out to be small if an agreement limits the good/services that are traded.
- Locally , some of the benefits may be distributed unequally.
Common markets
A market where goods, labour and capital can move freely across the member states; tariffs are generally removed and non-tariff barriers eliminated or at least reduced
Customs union
A union where member states remove all trade barriers between themselves and members adopt a common set of barriers against non-members