micro chapter 3
imports
Goods produced abroad and sold domestically
exports
Goods produced domestically and sold abroad
comparative advantage
when describing the opportunity costs faced by two producers (gains from trade based on this)
absolute advantage
The gains from specialization and trade are based on
a result of more efficient resource allocation than would be observed in the absence of trade
The gains from trade are
consume more goods than we otherwise would be able to consume
The most obvious benefit of specialization and trade is that they allow us to
each person spends more time producing that product in which he or she has a comparative advantage.
Total output in an economy increases when each person specializes because
allows people to specialize according to comparative advantage.
Trade can make everybody better off because it
then specializing in the production of that good and trading for other goods could allow that country to consume at a point beyond its production possibilities frontier.
When a country has a comparative advantage in producing a certain good,
trade between countries
allows each country to consume at a point outside its production possibilities frontier.
absolute advantage
comparing the productivity of one person, firm, or nation to that of another