Class 2 Flashcards
(2) Factor Price Ratio
Factor Price Ratio = Cost of 1 unit Labour / cost of 1 unit Capital = w/r
(2) with 1 country, 2 industries, what happens when the factor price ratio changes?
both industries will adjust to the new factor prices by employing more of the factor that has become relatively cheaper and less of the factor that has become relatively more expensive
(2) Production Possibilities Frontier
shows how much cloth and wheat (or two other products) can be produced simultaneously (given the country’s resources and technology) and how much cloth and how much wheat is produced given the country’s preferences for cloth and wheat in light of all production possibilities
(2) General equilibrium in the economy (1 country, 2 factors)
summarized at the point of tangency of the relative product price line (Pw/Pc) and the Production Possibilities Frontier
(2) Commodity Price Convergence
when you open up to trade with the world, the system moves to world prices. The good which is relatively more expensive will fall and the good which is relatively cheap will rise
(2) What happens when you open trade up internationally?
-The country with a comparative advantage in a product will increase production of that product and decrease production of their other product. -They will export their comparative advantage product and import the other product-The previously different (country-specific) commodity price ratios (Pw/Pc) will converge to a common Pw/Pc for world prices
(2) Trade Triangle
a diagrammatic construction to compare the production (and thus the factor usage) in one country before trade and after trade
(2) Driving forces of trade
to produce goods (and services) in the places where they can be produced most efficiently, and to sell (or direct) those goods to the places where they are valued most highly
(2) With Trade Liberalization there are…(3)
- Product prices converge to world prices2. Countries move towards industrial specialization, but not to full specialization3. Factor prices converge to the world factor price ratio
(2) What happens with trade liberalization and it’s effects on the factor price ratio?
-Production in one country shifts toward more labour-intensive production and less capital-intensive production-Production in the other country shifts to less labour-intensive production and more capital-intensive production-The country that shifts toward more labour-intensive production experiences an excess demand for labour and a rise in w/r (factor price ratio)-The country that shifts toward more capital-intensive production experiences an excess supply of labour and a fall in w/r-eventually a new world factor price ratio (w/r) comes to lie between the pre-liberalization w/r of the two individual countries-this is factor price convergence
(2) Efficiency gains
when two countries open up to trade and each country does their specialization, then the world production of both goods expand and the world enjoys “efficiency gains”
(2) What happens when you increase supply of a factor? (ex technology improvement)
-The increased supply of a factor lowers the cost of that factor relative to the other factor-in the country that experiences the increased supply: the industry that uses the increased factor intensively gains a relative cost advantage and it’s production increases. the industry that does not use the increased factor intensively suffers a relative cost disadvantage and it’s production decreases. -The world price of the increased factor falls-the world price of the product that uses the increased factor intensively falls-trade increases
(2) Exports in Japan
-in Japan exports are a small percentage of GDP (13%)-japan has been expanding its exports, but it’s reluctant to open its doors to imports-Japan has been in a dark period since they are not open to immigration-they have an aging economy that is causing it to have it’s own labour force shrink and it hasn’t found a way to collectively decide on how it’s going to open its doors to other sources of labour-this is one of the reasons exports are so low in japan
(2) Importance of trade - big vs little countries
-in the US trade is a smaller percentage of GDP (11%) because the US is so large-smaller countries rely on trade more and they are the most vulnerable
(2) Canada’s Trade with the US
-Canada is disproportionately engaged in trade with the US (72% of exports to US, and 62% of imports from US)-this is down from what it used to be, because of the rise of asian economies-these figures have shaped canada’s concern about international trade