4.2.6.2 Flashcards

1
Q

Absolute advantage

A

A country can produce a product using fewer factors of production than another country

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2
Q

Comparative advantage

A

A country should specialise in the goods or services it can produce as the the lowest opportunity cost

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3
Q

Theory of comparative advantage

A

Global output will increase if countries specialise in the good in which they have a comparative advantage

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4
Q

Assumptions of the theory of comparative advantage

A
  • Cost of production is constant
  • Constant returns to scale
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5
Q

Benefits of trade

A
  • Comparative advantage - allocative efficiency
  • Lower prices & higher quant - ECONOMIES OF SCALE so costs fall
  • Int’l competitiveness
  • Higher economic growth - boost exports & AD
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6
Q

Costs of trade

A
  • Over-specialisation: too reliant on output of one narrow sector (demand/supply shock to that industry?)
  • Unemployment: industries w/o comparative advantage are unsuccessful (deindustrialisation)
  • CAD: some countries will M>X -> deficit
  • Environmental trade offs: air pollution, resource depletion
  • External shocks: shocks in other country have knock on effect due to interdependence as effect of trade - Russia war on Ukraine created global shockwaves in energy market
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7
Q

What are macro effects of free trade

A
  • Economic growth (comparative adv)
  • Unemployment
  • inflation (low costs, so lower cost push inflation)
  • Current Account
  • Inward FDI if trade deals
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8
Q

Reasons for changes in pattern of trade

A
  • COMPARATIVE ADVANTAGE
  • Changes in exchange rates
  • Protectionism
  • Trading blocs and agreements (EU, NAFTA - free trade)
  • Inflation rate
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9
Q

UK’s comparative advantages

A
  • Power turbines
  • Pharmaceutical products
  • Aircraft
  • Financial services
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10
Q

What are UK’s most imported goods/services

A
  • Cars
  • Gas and oil
  • Clothing
  • Fruits and veg
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11
Q

Reasons for protectionist policies

A
  • Protect infant firms (unlike to be successful is global competition)
  • Sunset industry - declining & govt support
  • Protect against unemployment
  • Current account deficit: when M>X
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12
Q

Consequences of protectionism

A
  • Reduced choice (reduces quantity & quality of goods/services)
  • Increases prices
  • Increased costs : manufacturers who rely on imported raw material -> higher
  • Retaliation
  • Less competitiveness
  • Domestic Inefficiency - less productively
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13
Q

Trade barriers

A

A restriction placed by the govt on the import of foreign goods

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14
Q

Tariff

A

Taxes paid on imports

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15
Q

Impacts of standard of living due to tariffs

A
  • The standards of living for consumers worsen as the value of their income is eroded as they are paying higher prices
    OR
  • Domestic forms that benefit from increased production may increase employees wages
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16
Q

Quotas

A

A physical limit on imports
- in June 2022 the UK extended its quota on steel imports for a further two yrs to protect employment in the domestic steel industry

17
Q

Export subsidy

A

Lowers the cost of production for domestic firms and encourage them to increase their output so they are more int’l competitive

18
Q

Economic integration

A

When countries reduce trading barriers between themselves and become more interdependent

19
Q

Trading bloc

A

Countries come together to form a bloc of countries and agree to remove trade barriers, this increased trade
- trading blocs have increased economic integration

20
Q

Types of trading blocs

A
  • Free Trade Area (CUSMA)
  • Customs Union
  • Common Market
  • Monetary Union
21
Q

Customs Union

A

An agreement between countries in which all goods/services produced by members are trade barriers free
- members have a Common External Tariff from non member countries
- this gives consumers access to wider choice of goods and services at he lowest possible prices

22
Q

Is the EU a customs union?

A

The EU started off as a customs union but is now a common market and has elements of economic and political unions

23
Q

Common Market

A

Similar to customs unions, goods/services are traded freely
- The four factors of production flow freely between member countries
- In order to improve allocation of resources between themselves common market member
- Labour can move freely and ppl can live and work in any member country

24
Q

Example of a common market

A

The Single European Market (SEM), created in 1993
- all members of e EU, + Iceland, Norway, Switz & Yekstinzine

25
What are the features of the SEM
FREE MOVEMENT OF FACTORS OF PRODUCTION BETWEEN COUNTRIES - goods - services - capital : to encourage economic growth by enabling capital to be invested - labour : EU citizens are free to live,study,work in any member country
26
Effects of trading blocs
- Trade creation between the trading bloc - -
27
Role of the WTO
- Organises round of talks - trade barrier reduction in poorer countries (BALI package) - Settles trade disputes - one member thinks another member is breaking trade agreement rules
28
Conflict between trading blocs and WTO
- WTO is not in favour of trading blocs leading to trade diversion