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Transcript
18.1 Benefits of Trade
SLIDE
1
18
International Trade and
Finance
18.1 Benefits of Trade
18.2 Trade Restrictions and
Free-Trade Agreements
18.3 Balance of Payments
18.4 Foreign Exchange Rates
CONTEMPORARY ECONOMICS
© Thomson South-Western
18.1 Benefits of Trade
SLIDE
2
CONSIDER
 If the United States is such a rich and productive nation,
why are so many goods and services imported?
 Why isn’t the United States self-sufficient?
 If free trade is such a good idea, why do some producers
try to restrict foreign trade?
 What’s up with the euro?
 Is a growing U.S. trade deficit a growing worry?
 What “fudge factor” guarantees the balance of payments
account do, in fact, balance?
CONTEMPORARY ECONOMICS
© Thomson South-Western
18.1 Benefits of Trade
Objectives
 Identify sources of comparative
advantage.
 Discuss the gains from international trade
even without comparative advantage.
 Describe the most important U.S. exports
and imports.
CONTEMPORARY ECONOMICS
© Thomson South-Western
18.1 Benefits of Trade
Key Terms
 world output
 European Union (EU)
CONTEMPORARY ECONOMICS
© Thomson South-Western
18.1 Benefits of Trade
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Comparative Advantage
To maximize the benefits of trade, each
country specializes in the goods that it
produces at the lowest opportunity cost.
As a result, all countries can become
better off than if each tried to go it alone.
World output—the combined GDP of all
nations in the world
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18.1 Benefits of Trade
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Labor and Capital
 Two key resources are labor and capital.
 Countries differ in their availability of labor and
capital and the qualities of these resources.
 Countries with a well-educated and well-trained labor
force will specialize in producing goods that require
such talent.
 Countries with state-of-the-art manufacturing
technologies will specialize in producing goods that
require high-tech capital.
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© Thomson South-Western
18.1 Benefits of Trade
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7
Soil and Seasons
Some countries are blessed with fertile
land and favorable growing seasons.
Seasonal differences across countries
also create gains from trade.
CONTEMPORARY ECONOMICS
© Thomson South-Western
18.1 Benefits of Trade
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Mineral Deposits
Mineral resources often are concentrated
in particular parts of the world, such as oil
in Saudi Arabia, uranium in Australia, and
diamonds in South Africa.
The United States has abundant coal deposits
but not enough oil to satisfy domestic
demand.
Thus, the United States exports coal and
imports oil.
CONTEMPORARY ECONOMICS
© Thomson South-Western
18.1 Benefits of Trade
SLIDE
9
Other Benefits of Trade
 Economies of scale
 If a producer experiences economies of scale—that
is, if the average cost of output declines as a firm
expands its scale of production—countries can gain
from specialization and trade.
 European Union (EU)—Twenty-five nations joined to
enhance economic cooperation
 Differences in tastes
 Countries can gain from trade as long as tastes and
preferences differ across countries.
CONTEMPORARY ECONOMICS
© Thomson South-Western
18.1 Benefits of Trade
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10
U.S. Exports and Imports
 Countries trade with one another—or, more
precisely, people, firms, and governments in one
country trade with those in another—because
each side expects to gain from the exchange.
 Traders expect to increase their consumption
possibilities.
 U.S. exports
 U.S. imports
CONTEMPORARY ECONOMICS
© Thomson South-Western
18.1 Benefits of Trade
SLIDE
Composition of U.S.
Exports and Imports in 2005
Figure 18.1
11
Services are the largest category of U.S. exports,
while industrial supplies and materials, which
includes oil, are the largest category of imports.
CONTEMPORARY ECONOMICS
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18.1 Benefits of Trade
SLIDE
Largest trading parters for the
U.S.…
12
1. Canada
2. China
3. Mexico
*In the U.S., exports of goods and services make up
approx. 1/10 of our GDP (2005)
To compare…1/4 in Canada and U.K., 1/3 in Germany,
1/7 in Japan
*In the U.S., imports make up 1/6 of our GDP.
CONTEMPORARY ECONOMICS
© Thomson South-Western