留学生国际贸易专业课程作业ppt样本-Internationa

发布时间:2019-09-26 15:12

留学生国际贸易专业课程作业ppt样本-International Trade作业,International Trade Classical Trade Theory and Comparative Advantage

References
Textbooks
Appleyard, D., Field, A. and Cobb, S. (2005) International Economics, McGraw-Hill Ch. 3
Husted, S. and Melvin, M. (2007), International Economics, Addison-Wesley Ch. 3
Krugman, P. and Obstfeld, M. (2009) International Economics: Theory and Policy Addison-Wesley Ch. 2 & 3

Articles
Balassa, B. (1963) "An Empirical Demonstration of Classical Comparative Cost Theory“, The Review of Economics and Statistics, 45(3), pp. 231-38.
Helpman, E. (1999), “The Structure of Foreign Trade”, Journal of Economic Perspectives, 13(2), pp.121-144.
Krugman, P. (1997), “Ricardo’s difficult idea”, http://web.mit.edu/krugman/www/ricardo.htm

Importance of International Trade
World GDP is over 7 times what it was in 1950 but volume of world exports is now over 27 times what is was in 19501
MASSIVE INCREASE IN WORLD TRADE

But why?
Reduction in trade barriers is certainly an important factor

EU trade
In 2007 the EU was the top exporter and importer of both goods and services in the world (International Trade Statistics, WTO)

So who does the EU trade with?

EU(27) exports by destination in 2007


http://www.dxlws.com/liuxueshengzuoye/ What do we trade?
In 2007 83% of the EU exports were manufactures and 61% of imports were manufactures (International Trade Statistics, WTO)

World trade is similarly dominated by manufactures (Krugman and Obstfeld, 2009)

Developing countries are also increasingly export manufactures and less agricultural products (Krugman and Obstfeld, 2009)

It is very important to understand patterns of trade, the terms of trade as well as the gains from trade.

This will then allow us to assess the impact of various trade policies.

Rationale for International Trade
Self sufficiency means no specialisation therefore low productivity
Exchange allows specialisation in what we are good at producing
This applies to both internal and external trade
Opportunity cost of self sufficiency is the loss of foregone output in high efficiency areas
Specialisation with trade allows overall production to increase

Absolute Advantage
If Britain can produce cloth more efficiently than America and…
America can produce food more efficiently than Britain….
Both countries can gain from trade if they specialise in what they do best
On this basis Adam Smith advocated free trade (allows division of labour)

If Britain exchanges 30 units of cloth for 60 units of food…..
Both countries could have 30  units of cloth and 60 units of food
Britain gains 15 units of food and America gains 15 units of cloth
But what if America is more efficient than Britain at producing both food and cloth?


Ricardian Model
David Ricardo was an English political economist in the early 1800s who introduced the concept of comparative advantage.
Ricardo demonstrated that trade can be beneficial with only comparative advantage
A country will export a good in which their productivity is relatively high.


Assumptions of the Ricardian Model
One factor of production – labour
Two goods
Two countries
Labour is immobile internationally but mobile nationally (=> wages are equalised nationally but not internationally)
Zero transport costs
Free trade

Comparative Advantage
America’s superiority in cloth is 40/30 = 33% whereas superiority in food is 80/45 = 78%
=> America will still export food
Notice if the ratios were the same there would be no basis for trade
Hence Britain has a comparative advantage in cloth production
=> Britain will still export cloth
There are also still gains from trade since a country’s consumption possibilities are greater

But do both countries always gain from trade?
It depends on:
what your production would have been with no trade taking place
the units labour requirements for each of the goods.

What is the impact on trade on prices (terms of trade)?
Pre-trade relative prices are equal to relative unit labour requirements
If both countries completely specialise their production the traded price of each good ends up somewhere between the two countries pre-trade prices.
As long as prices rise when countries begin trading then there are gains from trade, since the real wage rises and everybody in a country gets the same wage.

The Ricardian model is simple but nevertheless very useful in explaining trade flows.
This model allows us to reject a whole series of common claims…

‘A country will only benefit from free trade if strong enough to stand up to foreign competition’

‘Competition from foreign countries with low wages is damaging’

But there are some serious limitations of the Ricardian model…
Assumes a high degree of specialisation
Assumes constant return to scale
Does not discuss the effects of trade on income distribution within countries
Does not take into account the different resources held by different countries

Supportive Empirical Evidence
Summary
代写留学生作业We have examined the simple Ricardian model that shows countries export goods in which their productivity is relatively high, in other words in which they have a comparative advantage.
This model implies gains from trade
There are gains no matter whether the trade is ‘competitive’ or ‘fair’
Studies such as that by Balassa (1963) have confirmed the predictions of the Ricardian model empirically.
 

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