Trade Flashcards
What is international trade
The exchange of products (goods and services)
What is free trade
International trade free from artificial barriers such as import tariffs, quotas and other trade barriers
What is specialisation (trade)
Specialisation of scarce resources
What is exchange (trade)
Based on comparative advances in supply different goods and services
David Ricardo
19th century - proposed a theory of comparative advantage as a key economic argument for international trade
Dynamic gains from free trade
- allows comparative advantage and specialisation
- dynamic gains
- spread of knowledge and technology
- economies of scale
- competition and innovation
- cheaper products
Key gains from trade
- export revenues and jobs
- increased market contestability
- better technology access
- inflows of knowledge across borders
Why is trade important for developing countries
- source of foreign currency = improve balance of payments
- financing imports of essential imports of capital equipment / technologies and energy supplies
- injection of demand into the circular flow
- increased employment in export industries and rising incomes
Risks of trade & investment for developing countries
- volatile prices
- risks exports will be affected by geo-political uncertainties and cyclical volatility
- volatile capital flows
- structural unemployment
- resource curse trap
Risks from openness to trade
Transport costs
Rising inequality
Negative externalities
External shocks
What is absolute advantage
This occurs when a country can produce a product using fewer resources than another nation - if a country can produce more with the same factors of production
What is comparative advantage
When a country has lower relative opportunity cost when it decides to specialise in a particular product
Examples of countries that heavily specialise in key industries
Bangladesh - textiles
Ivory Coast - cocoa
Gains from specialisation
If it’s countries specialise according to comparative advantage, and assuming constant returns to scale, than total output can rise