Chapter 19 International Trade and Trade Policy Flashcards
exports
goods produced domestically but sold abroad
imports
goods produced abroad but bought domestically
bilateral trade
transactions between 2 individuals or countries
multilateral trade
trade between several parties
marginal rate of transformation
trade off between 2 inputs
comparative advantage means…
individuals and countries specialize in those goods in whose production they are relatively the most efficient
specialization increases productivity by
- eliminating time where workers switch between tasks
- repetition increases worker skill
- creation of fertile environment for invention
bases of comparative advantage
- natural endowments (geographical determinants such as land, natural resources, climate)
- acquired endowments (physical capital, human skills developed by a nation)
- superior knowledge (technological advantages, acquired either as accident of history or through deliberate processes)
- specialization (create comparative advantage in otherwise similar countries)
- interactions (reinforce other sources of comparative advantage)
protectionism
policy of protecting domestic industries from the competition of foreign-made goods
commercial policies
policies directed at affecting either imports or exports
tariffs
tax on imports
quota
limits on the amount of foreign goods that can be imported
quota rents
profits that result from the artificially created scarcity of quotas and accrue to firms that are allocated the right to import
voluntary export restraints
persuade a country to limit its exports (essentially gives quota rents to foreign producers)
dumping
sale of products overseas at prices that are not only lower than those in the home country but below cost