Comparative and Absolute Advantage Flashcards
1
Q
what are the benefits of international trade?
A
- lower prices: as global division of labour takes place, multiplied efficiencies add to overall wealth of consumers everywhere
- taking advantage of different factor endowments
- economies of scale
- increased choice and variety
- acquisition of needed resources: trade can be the only way for countries to obtain critical goods to increase standard of living
- competition to improve efficiency: domestic markets put under greater pressure to improving services and lowering prices
- political benefits: trade and integration encourage compromise and resolution between nations
2
Q
absolute advantage
A
situation that occurs in comparative advantage theory when one country can produce more of a given product with the same or fewer resources than another country
3
Q
comparative advantage
A
when a country produces a good at a lower domestic opportunity cost than other country
4
Q
comparative advantage theory
A
countries should specialise in the production of whatever has the lowest opportunity cost
5
Q
absolute advantage on PPC
A
- country U has AA in wheat
- country S has AA in oil
6
Q
comparative advantage on PPC
A
- country J has CA in smartphones
- country C has CA in TVs
- country J has AA in both
7
Q
which factors determine comparative advantage?
A
- relative abundance of the resource
- value of the good produces from the resource to the world market
8
Q
limitations of comparative advantage theory
A
- perils of extreme specialisation: complete specialisation very risky to nation and limits potential for full development
- unrealistic assumptions: transport costs irrelevant, goods assumed to be identical, perfect information available, relatively constant costs, two-countries only, full employment assumed