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Trade opener 1. Where was your shirt made? (Have your neighbor check) 2. What type of labor makes t shirts? 3. What type of labor designs cellphones?

International trade

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Page 1: International trade

Trade opener1. Where was your shirt made?

(Have your neighbor check)2. What type of labor makes t shirts?

3. What type of labor designs cellphones?

Page 2: International trade

Comparative Advantage Activity

Page 3: International trade

Absolute Advantage

Whoever can do the job the fastest

• Total hours to finish jobs

Page 4: International trade

Comparative Advantage

Whoever can do the job with the lowest opportunity cost

Page 5: International trade

Another way of looking at Comparative Advantage

• Should Jason Terry clean his own house?

Page 6: International trade

Another way of looking at Comparative Advantage

• Should Lebron James clean his house?

Page 7: International trade

Specialization of labor• Firms &

countries figure out more efficient methods of production

• Effect on concept of trade?

Page 8: International trade

Honduras

• 100 tons of sugar/year

OR

• 100 tons of bananas

Page 9: International trade

Cuba

• 600 tons of sugar/year

OR

• 200 tons of bananas

Page 10: International trade

Cuba & Honduras• Scarcity of farm

land

• Who has absolute advantage?

• Who has the comparative advantage of trade?

• Why is this better?

Cuba:

600 tons of sugar/yearOR200 tons of bananas

Honduras:

100 tons of sugar/yearOR100 tons of bananas

Page 11: International trade

Who has comparative advantage: T shirts, financial, medical services,

entertainment, shoes

• Land, labor and capital in Honduras• GDP per capita: $2,200 / Population: 8 million• Literacy rate: 85%, 2 universities

• Land, labor and capital in USA• GDP per capita: $48,000 / Population: 300 million• Literacy rate: 90%, 800+ universities

Page 12: International trade

Trade• Free trade = absence of

restrictions of goods/services

• List 3 winners & 3 losers if all countries had free trade

• Winners:

• Losers:

Page 13: International trade

Benefits of FREE TRADE• Lower prices for consumers

• More competition leading to better products

• Job opportunities for producers

• Job opportunities in buyer countries

• Opportunity costs?

Page 14: International trade

Source: World Bank

Page 15: International trade

Drawbacks of FREE TRADE• Structural unemployment

• Lower union membership

• Ethical problems

Page 16: International trade

Free Trade Assignment

• Letter to John McCain

• 2-3 paragraphs considering:

Should the US expand its free trade zone to include all of the Western Hemisphere? Consider both sides, but choose the better one.

Page 17: International trade

Bellringer1. When they were for sale,

how often did you buy Twinkies?

2. Draw a supply/demand graph showing your answer to #1, comparing a time when you were younger? (HINT: TRIBE)

3. What 2 goods does a poor country like Guatemala have a comparative advantage producing?

Page 18: International trade

Types barriers to FREE TRADE• Tariffs• Tax on imports• Result: higher price for consumers, job saving

– Opportunity cost

• Quotas• Limit on imports• Result: high prices, less choice• Examples: Japanese full sized trucks• Lexus, Infinity, etc

Page 19: International trade

Types barriers to FREE TRADE

• Embargos

• Banning imports

• Result: less exports for embargoed country

• Subsidies

• Gov’t help for industries

• Result: higher taxes locally, other countries retaliate

Page 20: International trade

Twinkie article• What really killed the twinkie?

• How would this be a problem in the future for the US?

• Who is benefiting from this situation?

• Who is suffering?

• What should the US congress do about it?

Page 21: International trade

Other crazy import tariffs

• Japan: 700% tax on rice

• European Union: orange juice (31%), peanut butter (132%), and tobacco products (350%)

• South Korea: 100% automobiles

• Canada: 28% leather shoes

• United States: 249 % solar panels, Waterproof shoes with a metal toe cap 37.5 %

• Brazil: 60% tablet computers

Page 22: International trade

Let’s consider some systems• EU, WTO, Trading blocs, NAFTA

Page 23: International trade

NAFTA

• 1994-present

• US, Canada, Mexico

• Eliminated thousands

of tariffs

• Expanded to CAFTA in 2005

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Page 25: International trade

G-8 Developing World

• USA

• Italy

• Canada

• Russia

• Japan

• Germany

• France

• Great Britain

• All fought WW2

• All in IMF

• Countries still developing

• “Third World”

• Some successful:– China, India, Costa

Rica

• Some failing:– Haiti, Zimbabwe,

Myramar

Page 26: International trade

European Union

• 1954- Present• Free movement

of goods, services and people

• Euro-zone

• Contrast with US/Latin Am.

Page 27: International trade

World Trade Organization

• 1995-present

• 152 countries

• Goal = Global free trade

• Closely related to IMF

• controversial

Page 28: International trade

Free Trade Assignment

• Letter to John McCain

• 2-3 paragraphs considering:

Should the US expand its free trade zone to include all of the Western Hemisphere? Consider both sides, but choose the better one.

Page 29: International trade

Tires

• 2 producers:

• 3 groups of consumers

• Sellers decide price and give pitch• Buyers decide which tires to buy

Save American Jobs Bill20% tariff on all foreign goods

Page 30: International trade

Trade Balance• Value of exports > value of imports• Trade Surplus• Net Exporter• Germany, China, Canada, Norway

• Value of imports > value of exports• Trade Deficit• Net importer• USA, Mexico, Japan,

Page 31: International trade

Balance of payments• Measure of trade between a country and the rest

of the world• Current Account:• Trade, income, transfers• $$$ out, must come back

• Capital Account• Financial Account• Investments

• Foreign Reserves• Draw on board