The comparative advantage With Short-term protectionism Module:EC-228 student number:584796 Name :xiaoran DENG Contents Introduction ……………………………………………………2 Comparative advantage ……………………………………… 2 How to found comparatives advantages ………………………… 4 A numerical example …………………………………………4 Dynamic comparative advantage ……………………………5 An example for infant industry…………………………………… 6 Short- term protectionism …………………………………… 9 Conclusion …………………………………………………… 9 Reference
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1- Describe Adam Smith’s concept of absolute advantage and David Ricardo’s concept of Comparative Advantages. Are those concepts still useful in the 21st century’s Business environment? The concept of absolute advantage is the ability of a country to use less resources (inputs) to produce goods/products than any other country. For Smith‚ a country should specialize in the production of the product for which it has an absolute advantage and should buy at lower price others goods from other countries
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(1577 million dollars)‚ Germany (1268‚8 million dollars)‚ and USA (1278‚1 million dollars). So it means that Japan is really attractive to be investigated in our work. [2] So high indexes of export are also affected by following factors: 1) Advantages of Japan’s geographical location – it is relative close to main international trade partners. Such partners in 2009 were: China – 18‚88% of export share; USA – 16‚42%; Korea – 8‚13%; Taiwan – 6‚27%; Hong Kong – 5‚49%. In 2010 the total equivalent
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theory of comparative advantages‚ does international trade always benefit the lower income group in a poor country? Who do they trade with? Who are the poor countries? Define by using GDP per capita (usual gauge). Thus China can be considered as a poor country. Among the poorer group‚ they are richly endowed in labor. Poor countries tend to have more workers than machines. They’re comparative advantage lies in their labor industries. According to theory of comparative advantage‚ the workers
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Absolute Advantage Absolute advantage is a situation where a country can produce a product more efficient than any country in producing it. It also refer to ability to produce a particular good at a lower absolute cost than another. That’s mean a country that have an absolute advantage is a country that can produce a product that are due to some combination. The determinant of absolute advantage for a country is such as favorable climate‚ good soils‚and accumulated expertise. For example‚ Bangladesh
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THEORY OF ABSOLUTE ADVANTAGE “If a foreign country can supply us with a commodity cheaper than we ourselves can make it‚ [we had] better buy it of them with some part of our own industry‚ employed in a way in which we have some advantage.” -Adam Smith (WN‚ IV.ii.12) This means that a nation produces and exports those commodities which it can produce more cheaply than other nations‚ and imports those which it cannot. A nation will not produce a good that is produced more expensively at
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with less developed countries where these goods are produced for a higher price. This is striking but this comes out from the theory of “relative advantage”. The absolute advantage is the fact that one country (named A) is more efficient and productive than another country (named B) in the production of all goods. It is said that A has an absolute advantage on B. When these two countries have different relative efficiencies‚ they can make profit from trading with each other. For instance‚ if B can
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ADVANTAGES AND DISADVANTAGES OF INTERNATIONAL TRADE International trade allows countries to exchange good and services with the use of money as a medium of exchange. Several advantages can be identified with reference to international trade. However international trade does have its limitations as well. Discussed below are both advantages and disadvantages of international trade. Advantages • Greater variety of goods available for consumption – international trade brings in different varieties
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The theory of comparative advantage is perhaps one of the most important concepts in international trade theory. A country has an absolute advantage in the production of a good relative to another country if it can produce the good at lower cost or with higher productivity. Absolute advantage compares industry productivities across countries. In the case of Zambia‚ for instance‚ the country has an absolute advantage over many countries in the production of copper. This occurs because of the existence
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ECO2023 DAVID RICARDO & THE COMARATIVE AND ABSOLUTE ADVANTAGE David Ricardo was one of those rare people who achieved both tremendous success and lasting fame. After his family disinherited him for marrying outside his Jewish faith‚ Ricardo made a fortune as a stockbroker and loan broker. When he died‚ his estate was worth more than $100 million in today’s dollars. At age twenty-seven‚ after reading Adam Smith’s The Wealth of Nations‚ Ricardo got excited about economics. He wrote his first
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