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EC3040B Topic 2 International Trade Cf Todaro and Smith Chap. 12 Trends in trade: up, especially middle income and since about 1989 Perkins, Radelet, Lindauer East Asia is the big growth area for trade Intra-regional trade is relatively small …but growing Figure 12.3 • Developing countries have traditionally relied on primary products (agriculture, mining) for exports. This is changing. • Some countries are still very dependent on a handful of export products • The structure of developing country imports is much more similar across countries. Fuel, machinery and other capital goods, intermediate producer goods, and consumer products are usually involved Table 12.2 Bigger economies trade less! Table 12.1 Population of those countries Burkina Faso Burundi Cote d'Ivoire Ethiopia Ghana Kenya Madagascar Malawi Mauritania Mozambique Rwanda Senegal Seychelles Sierra Leone Sudan Uganda 14 Fiji 8 Maldives 18 Myanmar 73 P.N.G. 23 Solomon Is 35 Tonga 19 13 3 20 9 12 0.1 6 37 30 320 (of 770) 0.9 0.3 51 6 0.5 0.1 58.8 Belize Chile Costa Rica Cuba Dominica Guyana Honduras Jamaica Panama Paraguay St Lucia 0.3 16 4 11 0.1 0.8 7 3 3 6 0.2 51.4 (of 556) Dependence on primary products is falling 2002 Share of Primary Products in Exports 100 90 80 70 60 50 40 30 20 10 0 0 20 40 60 1970 80 100 Ethiopia: Merchandise Trade 2005-6 Exports Coffee Pulses Oilseeds Sugar and molasses Leather and leather products Live animals Meat, canned and frozen Fruits and vegetables Flowers Chat Gold Other exports Total % of GDP USD mn 354 37 211 0 75 28 18 13 22 89 65 88 1000 7.6 Imports Raw Materials Semi-finished Fuel Capital goods Transportation (of which aircraft) Agricultural Industrial Consumer goods Durable Non-durable (of which food) Miscellaneous Total (cif) % of GDP USD mn 77 821 860 429 67 38 984 415 866 332 98 4592 34 Ethiopia: International Payments Exports Services (net) Private current transfers Official current transfers USD mn 1000 149 1229 866 New public debt LT Private capital (inc FDI) 343 365 Use of official external reserves Debt relief 216 133 Errors and Omissions 507 4808 Imports Interest etc (net) Amortization public debt Other (net) USD mn 4593 38 148 30 4809 Ethiopia: Export Price and Volume Fluctuations 2001/2 2002/3 2003/4 2004/5 2005/6 2006/7 Total 452 483 600 847 1000 1099 Coffee price Oilseeds price 163 1.5 33 0.4 165 1.3 46 0.6 224 1.4 84 0.8 335 2.1 125 0.7 354 2.4 211 0.8 363 Modest volume growth, price surge Volume tripled, price improved Chat 49 58 88 100 89 Volume more than double, price weak price 5.2 5.2 6.4 5.2 4.0 Gold price Leather Livestock Meat Flowers Others 35 7 56 1 1 0 114 42 8.4 52 0 2 0 118 49 7.9 44 2 8 0 101 59 9.9 67 13 15 8 125 65 13.0 75 28 18 22 138 88 No volume change, price strong Little price change Volume Volume Volume Ethiopia: Export Price and Volume Fluctuations 2001/2 2002/3 2003/4 2004/5 2005/6 2006/7 Total 452 483 600 847 1000 1099 Coffee price Oilseeds price 163 1.5 33 0.4 165 1.3 46 0.6 224 1.4 84 0.8 335 2.1 125 0.7 354 2.4 211 0.8 363 Modest volume growth, price surge Volume tripled, price improved Chat 49 58 88 100 89 Volume more than double, price weak price 5.2 5.2 6.4 5.2 4.0 Gold price L 35 7 42 8.4 49 7.9 59 9.9 65 13.0 No volume change, price strong L : Export Price and Volume Fluctuations s price 3 0.4 6 0.6 4 0.8 5 0.7 1 0.8 e Chat 49 58 88 100 89 Volume more than double, price weak price 5.2 5.2 6.4 5.2 4.0 Gold price Leather Livestock Meat Flowers Others 35 7 56 1 1 0 114 42 8.4 52 0 2 0 118 49 7.9 44 2 8 0 101 59 9.9 67 13 15 8 125 65 13.0 75 28 18 22 138 88 No volume change, price strong Little price change Volume Volume Volume Terms of Trade and the Prebisch-Singer Thesis • Total export earnings depend on: – Total volume of exports sold AND – Price paid for exports • Terms of trade: relative price of exports and imports – Many alternative calculations – Simplest is average unit price of exports divided by average unit price of imports (barter TOT) – Also: income TOT measures export receipts divided by price of imports (takes account of shifting volumes of primary products) • Prebisch and Singer: “export prices fall over time, so LDCs lose purchasing power unless they can continually increase export volumes” – Implication: LDCs need to avoid dependence on primary exports Source: Weil (2007) Source: FT Jan 2008 Oil prices Brent futures ICE FT Copper prices Comex futures FT Wheat prices CBT futures FT Coffee prices ICE futures FT The Basic Static Theory of International Trade • The principle of comparative advantage • Different production possibilities…based on – Technology differences (Ricardo) or – Relative factor endowments (Heckscher-Ohlin) • Need to add: imperfect competition, increasing returns to scale, learning by doing… Figure 12.1 Position before trade opens up The point of the vent-for-surplus theory is that it deals with situations where surpluses are just unused without trade: Trade here is not so much about reallocation: more about finding a use for underused resources Position with trade Position before trade opens up The point of the vent-for-surplus theory is that it deals with situations where surpluses are just unused without trade: Trade here is not so much about reallocation: more about finding a use for underused resources Mozambique Cashew nuts in Mozambique…a lesson in political economy 1960s: Mozambique produced half of the world’s cashews Independence 1975: ban on raw Cashew exports (objective: stimulate domestic processing) (War 1982-92) Ban lifted 1991/2, replaced with export quota and export tax (60%). Quota subsequently removed and export tax reduced to 14% (1998-9) Aim of 1990s reforms: restore efficient level of raw cashew production (and reduce inefficient processing activity) and by increasing farmer price lower poverty (at expense of processors) Results: farmgate prices increased; raw cashew exports increased processing shrank But effects small: (McMillan, Horn and Rodrik, 2003) Efficiency gains about 0.14% of GDP About $5 per annum extra for each cashew-growing household Unemployment (maybe transitory) of processor workers (there had been 11,000) May have resulted in lost output of almost as much as the efficiency gains.