Economic Integration and terms of trade Flashcards
What is economic integration?
This refers to economic cooperation between countries and coordination of their economic policies, leading to increased economic links between them.
What is a preferential trade agreement (PTA)?
A preferential trade agreement is an agreement between two or more countries to lower trade barriers (liberalisation of trade) between each other for certain products.
They sometimes involve agreements on labour standards, environmental issues, or intellectual property.
What is the difference between bilateral and multilateral trade agreements?
Regional?
Bilateral is between two countries, multilateral is many. Regional is between countries that are within a certain geographical area.
Are PTAs discriminatory?
Yes as they discriminate against non-members of the agreement but the WTO makes an exception for it.
What is a trading bloc?
A group of countries that have agreed to reduce tariff and other barriers to trade for the purpose of encouraging free or freer trade between them.
Types of trading blocs:
- Free trade area
- Customs union
- Common market
What is a free trade area (FTA)?
Examples?
A group of countries that agree to gradually eliminate trade barriers between themselves, it is the most common type of trading bloc.
E.g. NAFTA (North American Free Trade Agreement)
ASEAN (Association os South East Asian Nations).
Problems with free trade areas?
A product may be imported into the FTA by the country that has the lowest external trade barrier to countries with the highest external trade barrier, meaning the latter may import more than they would like. FTAs make ‘rules of origin’ for imports, preventing goods from entering countries with lower external barriers.
What is a customs union?
Examples?
A group of countries that fulfils the requirements of a free trade area and in addition adopts a common policy towards all non-member countries. They act as a group for all trade agreements with non-members.
E.g. SACU (South African Customs Union)
Compare customs unions to free trade areas:
Custom unions have the advantage of not having to create rules of origin for imports but they must coordinate their policies towards non-members which gives rise to the possibility of disagreements, as they may not all agree on what are appropriate levels of tariff and other barriers for non-members.
What is a common market?
Example?
A group of countries that have a common external policy as well as eliminating all restrictions on movements of any factors of production within the common market. They have common policies such as common minimum wages and workers rights and agricultural product standards. For example, the European Economic community (EEC) which was a precursor to the EU.
Advantages and disadvantages of a common market?
Pros:
Members enjoy free trade which leads to lower prices and greater consumer choice amongst other advantages. Workers are free to move and work in any member country without restrictions. This results in a better use of factors of production as if there is high unemployment in one country and high demand for labour in another this is reduced in both countries, as is the case without the UK and Poland with considerably undesirable jobs. Factor mobility improves the allocation of resources.
Cons:
The development of a common market requires even greater policy coordination among members than in a customs union and requires willingness of governments to give up some of their policy making authority. As there has to be agreement policies can take a long time to be determined.
Advantages of economic integration:
- Increased competition - removal of trade barriers, leads to increased efficiency.
- Expansion into larger markets
- Economies of scale - if a country opens itself up for free trade it will produce more if it is efficient which allows it to take advantage of economies of scale.
- Lower prices for consumers and greater consumer choice
- Increased investment - firms want to take advantage of larger market size, firms can escape tariffs which lowers costs.
- Better use of factors of production, increased resource allocation
- Improved efficiency in production and greater economic growth
- Political advantages - interdependency reduces the likelihood of hostilities between countries.
Disadvantages of economic integration:
- Trading blocs may not be the best way to achieve trade liberalisation as they discriminate against non-members.
- Trading blocs may create obstacles to the achievement of free trade on a global scale - discrimination against non members leads to a global misallocation of resources, lowering global output and leading to a weakened role for the WTO with the risk of breaking up the economy into multiple individual trading blocs.
- Unequal distribution of gains and possible losses
What is trade creation?
The situation where higher cost products (imported or domestically produced) are replaced by lower cost imports after the formation of a trading bloc. E.g. the removal of tariffs. This creates trade.
What is trade diversion?
The situation where lower cost imports are replaced by higher cost imports from a member after the formation of a trade block. For example if a country has tariffs on all imports of a certain good, and then joins a trading bloc with a country that is not the lowest cost importer then they will reduce the tariffs for this country and not the lower cost imported. The result will be an increase in trade from a the country that is not the lower cost country, since their price without the tariff is cheaper than the other’s price with the tariff.
How is trade diversion an argument against trading blocs
Trade diversion cannot occur with multilateral trade liberalisation such as the WTO. Trade liberalisation causes a country to reduce tariffs everywhere, meaning it is not possible for lower cost imports to be replaced by higher cost imports.
When does a trading bloc increase efficiency of resource allocation?
When trade creation effects are larger than trade diversion effects. However this is in the short term, and long term effects are generally considered to be more important.