<<

MODERN PRINCIPLES OF Chapter 2 Third Edition The Power of and Outline

° Trade and Preferences ° Specialization, Productivity, and the Division of Knowledge ° Comparative Advantage ° Trade and

2 Discussion Question

Think of the last time you bought or sold something. Why did you make the trade?

Answer: You probably traded because you preferred what you got over what you gave up . For example, if you bought a candy bar for $1, you probably preferred the candy bar to having $1 in your pocket.

3 Introduction

Benefits of Trade

1. Trade makes people better off when preferences differ. 2. Trade increases productivity through specialization and the division of knowledge. 3. Trade increases productivity through comparative advantage.

4 Trade and Preferences

Trade Creates

° Trade moves from people who value them less to people who value them more. ° Trade makes people with different preferences better off.

5 Trade and Preferences

° Selling a broken laser pointer on EBay (1995)

° Offered at $1 and sold for $14.83 to a collector of broken laser points

° One man’s junk is another man’s treasure

° eBay profits by making buyers and sellers happy

6 Specialization

Trade Allows Specialization

° With no trade, there is no specialization. ° People will specialize in the production of a single good only when they can trade for other goods.

7 Specialization

Increased Productivity

° We can produce more through trade than by individual production. • People who specialize have more knowledge about their field. • Because they sell large quantities, people who specialize can take advantage of large-scale equipment.

8 Specialization

Division of Knowledge

° Without specialization, each person produces their own food, clothing, and so on. • Each person has the same knowledge as everybody else. • The combined knowledge of a society is not much more than that of a single person.

9 Specialization

Division of Knowledge

° With specialization, much more knowledge is used than could exist in a single brain. ° Knowledge increases productivity so specialization increases total output. ° Every increase in world trade is an opportunity to increase the division of knowledge. ° When everyone knows something different, the combined brain power of society is huge

10 Economic Fallacy of Centralized Knowledge Reducing Trade Barriers, Berlin 1989

Tyler Cowen and Alex Tabarrok Modern Principles: , Third Edition / Modern Principles of Economics, Third Edition Copyright © 2015 by Worth Publishers Self-Check

One of the benefits of specialization is: a. Less pollution. b. More equality. c. Increased productivity.

Answer: c – increased productivity.

13 Definition

Production Possibilities Frontier: Shows all the combinations of goods that a country can produce given its productivity and supply of inputs.

14 Production Possibilities Frontier

° PPF is a very simplified and abstract model representing production and trade ° PPF exists for a given country at a given point in time ° PPF can be used to demonstrate: • • Tradeoffs (opportunity costs) • Efficiency ( of resources) •

Tyler Cowen and Alex Tabarrok Modern Principles: Macroeconomics, Third Edition / Modern Principles of Economics, Third Edition Copyright © 2015 by Worth Publishers Production Possibilities Frontier

° Assume that we have a two-country, two-good ° PPF represents a point in time, such as the year 2018 ° The table shows the labor (resource) required to produce each good for each economy

Tyler Cowen and Alex Tabarrok Modern Principles: Macroeconomics, Third Edition / Modern Principles of Economics, Third Edition Copyright © 2015 by Worth Publishers Production Possibilities Frontier

° The PPF for each economy based on the table ° Assuming that each economy has 24 units of labor as a resource, the PPF shows all the possible combinations of production for each country ° The midpoint on each PPF represents equal division of labor between the two products (no trade occurring)

Tyler Cowen and Alex Tabarrok Modern Principles: Macroeconomics, Third Edition / Modern Principles of Economics, Third Edition Copyright © 2015 by Worth Publishers Production – Resource Inputs

Units of Labor Country Computers Shirts Mexico 12 2 U.S. 1 1

° The U.S. can produce both computers and shirts at lower cost (less labor). ° The U.S. has an absolute advantage in the production of both goods.

18 Definition

Absolute advantage: The ability to produce the same good using fewer inputs than another producer.

So from the table, it takes one US labor to make a computer, whereas it takes 12 labor from Mexico. The US has an absolute advantage.

19 Production Possibilities Frontier

Tyler Cowen and Alex Tabarrok Modern Principles: Macroeconomics, Third Edition / Modern Principles of Economics, Third Edition Copyright © 2015 by Worth Publishers Should Tiger Woods wash his own car?

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6oTMosZ76b8 Comparative Advantage

Absolute and Comparative Advantage

° Another reason to trade is to take advantage of differences. ° Countries have different climates, levels of human capital, and so on. ° Different countries are therefore suited to produce different goods.

22 Definition

Comparative advantage: Producing goods at the lowest .

23 Opportunity Costs and the PPF

PPF illustrates the trade-offs or opportunity costs of producing more of one good by giving up the production of the other good.

i.e. What is the cost of changing the mix of production for a given country?

24 Comparative Advantage

Units of Labor Country Computers Shirts Mexico 12 2 U.S. 1 1 ° Assuming each country has 24 units of labor: Production Possibilities Country Computers Shirts Mexico 2OR 12 U.S. 24OR 24 25 Comparative Advantage

Units of Labor Country Computers Shirts Mexico 12 2 U.S. 1 1

Production Possibilities Country Computers Shirts Mexico 2 12 U.S. 24 24 26 Comparative Advantage

Production Possibilities Country Computers Shirts Mexico 2 12 U.S. 24 24

° With no trade, each country will produce some of each good. ° The opportunity cost of a good is the amount of the other good that is given up.

27 Comparative Advantage

Production Possibilities Country Computers Shirts Mexico 2 12 U.S. 24 24

° In Mexico, 1 computer will cost 6 shirts, while 1 shirt will cost 1/6 of a computer. ° In the U.S., 1 computer will cost 1 shirt, and 1 shirt will cost 1 computer.

28 Comparative Advantage

Opportunity Cost Country 1 Computer 1 Shirt Mexico 6 shirts 1/6 computer U.S. 1 shirt 1 computer

° Mexico has a comparative advantage (lowest opportunity cost) in shirts. ° U.S. has a comparative advantage (lowest opportunity cost) in computers.

29 Self-Check

If country A is able to produce furniture at a lower cost than country B, we would say that country A has a(n): a. Absolute advantage. b. Comparative advantage. c. No advantage.

Answer: a – absolute advantage means producing a good with fewer inputs (lower cost). 30 Comparative Advantage

Absolute and Comparative Advantage

° To benefit from trade, a country doesn’t need to have an absolute advantage . ° A country can benefit from trade if it has a comparative advantage . ° Comparative advantage can be illustrated with a production possibilities frontier.

31 Trade Increases Productivity

° If each country produces some of each good and only consumes what it produces:

Production Possibilities (no trade) Country Computers Shirts Mexico 1 6 U.S. 12 12 TOTAL: 13 18

32 Trade Increases Productivity

° If each country specializes and , there is more of everything:

Production Possibilities (before trade) Country Computers Shirts Mexico 0 12 U.S. 14 10 TOTAL: 14 22

33 Trade Increases Productivity

° If each country specializes and trades, there is more of everything (Mexico is giving 3 shirts for 1 computer):

Production Possibilities (after trade) Country Computers Shirts Mexico 1 9 U.S. 13 13 TOTAL: 14 22

34 Trade Increases Productivity

35 Comparative Advantage

° What makes trade profitable is differences in comparative advantage. ° A country will always have some comparative advantage. ° Thus, everyone can benefit from trade.

36 Comparative Advantage

Comparative Advantage and

° Differences in wages reflect differences in productivity. ° Wages will be higher in high-productivity countries than in low-productivity countries. ° Trade raises wages to the highest levels allowed by a country’s productivity.

37 Trade and Globalization

Globalization and Wages

° Wages will rise in high-demand industries and fall in low-demand industries. ° Workers will move from low- industries to high- wage industries until wages equalize. ° The transition isn’t always quick or easy.

38 Trade and Globalization

More on Globalization and Wages • While trade will improve worker’s standard of living, domestic wages are determined by labor productivity • Simply increasing wages by government dictate will not make workers better off unless there is, somehow, an increase in productivity and output, • i.e. raising wages will likely result in

39 Trade and Globalization

°“Tariffs and import quotas usually reduce the general welfare of a society.” ° % of American Economics Association members V Agree 92% V Disagree 6% °“The U.S. should eliminate remaining tariffs and other barriers to trade.” ° % of AEA members V Agree 88% V Disagree 8%

40 A Really Good Quote on Trade

° "When goods don't cross borders, armies will.“ ° - attributed incorrectly to Frederic Bastiat (but it sounds a lot like Bastiat)

41 Example 1

Erin has a choice between two activities: She can repair one transmission per hour or she can repair two fuel injectors per hour. What is the opportunity cost of repairing one fuel injector? a) 1 transmission b) ½ transmission c) 2 transmissions

42 Example 2

Deirdre has a choice between writing one more book this year or five more articles this year. What is the opportunity cost of writing half of a book this year, in terms of articles? a) 1/5 article b) 1 article c) 2.5 articles d) 10 articles

43 Example 3

Which country has the absolute advantage in producing high-quality cars? Low-quality cars? a) North has absolute advantage in both b) South has absolute advantage in both c) North: high-quality, South: low-quality d) South: high-quality, North: low-quality

44 Example 4

What is the opportunity cost of each high-quality car (HQ) in the South? a) ½ of a low-quality (LQ) car b) 1 LQ car c) 2 LQ cars d) 1.5 LQ cars

45 Example 5

What is the opportunity cost of each high-quality car (HQ) in the NORTH? a) ½ of a low-quality (LQ) car b) 1 LQ car c) 2 LQ cars d) 1.5 LQ cars

46 Takeaway

° Trade makes people better off when preferences differ. ° With specialization and trade, the total sum of knowledge used in an economy increases tremendously. ° A country can increase its standard of living by specializing in what it can make at low (opportunity) cost and trading.

47