Exam 3: Chapter 6-7
infant industry argument
-Alexander Hamilton -many developing countries have a potential comparative advantage in manufacturing, but new manufacturing industries cannot initially compete with established industries in developed countries
theory of comparative advantage
-David Ricardo -it makes sense for a country to specialize in the production of those goods that it produces most efficiently and to buy the goods that it produces less efficiently from other countries
Theory of national competitive advantage
-Michael Porter -attempts to explain why particular nations achieve international success in particular industries
Product life-cycle theory
-Raymond Vernon -early in their life cycle, most new products are produced in and exported from the country in which they were developed
Tariffs are
-a tax levied on imports/exports -the oldest and simplest instrument of trade policy -instrument that the GATT and WTO have been the most successful in limiting
countervailing duties
-antidumping duties - if a complaint has merit, the Commerce Department may impose this on the offending foreign imports
basic factors v. advanced factors
-basic factors: natural resources, climate, location, demographics -advanced factors: communication infrastructure, sophisticated and skilled labor, research facilities, technological know-how
firms typically set up production facilities in foreign countries to
-facilitate cost-efficient production -overcome tariff barriers -conform to local content regulations -reduce threat of trade barriers in the future
economic arguments for intervention
-infant industry argument -strategic trade policy
Porter's attributes of a nation that shape the environment
1) factor endowments 2) demand conditions 3) related and supporting industries 4) firm strategy, structure, and rivalry
2 of the first industries targeted for reform
1) global telecommunication 2) financial services
subsidies help domestic producers in two ways:
1. Competing against foreign imports 2. Gaining export markets
strategic trade policy
Aimed at improving the competitive position of a domestic industry and/or domestic firm in the world market.
political arguments for intervention
Cover a range of issues including - protecting jobs - protecting industries deemed important for national security - retaliating against unfair foreign competition - protecting consumers from "dangerous" products - furthering the goals of foreign policy - protecting the human rights of individuals in exporting countries.
New trade theory
In some cases countries specialize in the production and export of particular products not because of underlying differences in factor endowments, but because in certain industries the world market can support only a limited number of firms.
What theory suggests that nations may benefit from trade even when they do not differ in resource endowments or technology?
New trade theory
which of the following, enacted by the U.S. Congress erected a wall of tariff barriers against imports into the U.S.
Smoot-Hawley Act
Which of the following was NOT contained in the Uruguay Round
Tariffs were to be imposed on more that 40% of manufactured goods
Leontief Paradox
US exports are less capital intensive than US imports.
Paul Krugman characterizes the strategic trade policy as being
a boost to national income at the expense of other countries
import quota
a direct restriction on the quantity of some goof that may be imported into a country
zero-sum game
a gain by one country results in a loss by another
subsidy
a government payment to domestic producer (cash grants, low-interest loans, tax breaks, gov. equity participation)
tariff rate quota
a lower tariff rate is applied to imports within the quota than those over the quota
export ban
a policy that partially or entirely restricts the export of a good
Voluntary Export Restraint (VER)
a quota on trade imposed by the exporting country, typically at the request of the importing country's government
Local Content Requirement (LCR)
a requirement that some specific fraction of a good be produced domestically
Free trade
a situation in which a government does not attempt to influence through quotas or duties what its citizens can buy from another country or what they can produce and sell in another country
Uruguay Round
a trade agreement to dramatically lower trade barriers worldwide; created the World Trade Organization
positive-sum game
all countries can benefit
over time the U.S. switches from being an exported of the product to
an importer of the product as production becomes concentrated in lower-cost foreign locations
high cost of U.S. labor gave U.S. firms
an incentive to develop cost-saving process innovations
administrative trade policies
bureaucratic rules designed to make it difficult for imports to enter a country
which of the following is a policy implication of Porter's theory of national competitive advantage?
businesses should urge government to increase investment in education, infrastructure, and basic research
specific tariffs
charged as a fixed charge for each unit of a good imported
ad valorem tariffs
charged as a proportion of the value of the imported good
Heckscher-Ohlin theory predicts that
countries will export those goods that make intensive use of factors that are locally abundant, while importing goods that make intensive use of factors that are locally scarce
which of the following is NOT included in the Doha agenda of the WTO
creating an institution to enforce intellectual property rights
foreign producers agree to ______ imposed by an exporting country because they fear more damaging punitive tariffs or import quotas might follow if they do not
voluntary export restraints
Paul Samuelson's critique looks at
what happens when a rich country enters into a free trade agreement with a poor country
at what stage of the product-life-cycle theory does production within other advanced countries begin to limit the potential for exports from the U.S.
when the U.S. firms set up production units in the advanced nations to meet rapidly growing demand
the theory of comparative advantage suggests that
trade is a positive-sum game in which all countries realize economic gains
Economies of scale
unit cost reductions associated with a large scale of output
Vernon argued that early in the life cycle of a new product, while demand is starting to grow rapidly in the U.S.
demand in other advanced countries is limited to high-income groups
Common Agricultural Policy (CAP)
designed to protect the jobs of Europe's politically powerful farmers by restricting imports and guaranteeing prices
Antidumping Policies
designed to punish foreign firms that engage in dumping -protects domestic producers from unfair foreign competition
Heckscher-Ohlin theory argues that the pattern of international trade is determined by
differences in factor endowments, rather than differences in productivity
the goal behind an export tariff
discriminate against exporting in order to ensure that there is sufficient supply of a good within a country
first-mover advantages
economic and strategic advantages that accrue to early entrants into an industry
what raises revenue for the government and reduces exports from a sector, often for political reasons?
export tariffs
what term does Heckscher-Ohlin use to refer to the extent to which a country is enriched with resources?
factor endowments
who gains/suffers from tariffs
gains: -government because the tariff increases government revenue -domestic producer because the tariff affords them some protection against foreign competitors by increasing the cost of imported foreign goods suffers: -consumers because they must pay more for certain imports
principle assertion of mercantilism
gold and silver were mainstays of national wealth and essential to vigorous commerce
free trade
government does not attempt to influence through quotas or duties what its citizens can buy from another country or what they can produce and sell to another country
constant returns to specialization
units of resources required to produce a good are assumed to remain constant
the threat of antidumping action limits the ability of a firm to
use aggressive pricing to gain market share in a country
An implication of trade barriers for business practices is that they
limit a firm's ability to serve a country from locations outside of that country
diminishing returns to specialization occur when
more units of resources are required to produce each additional unit -not all resources are of the same quality -different goods use resources in different proportions
GATT(General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade)
multilateral agreement whose objective was to liberalize trade by eliminating tariffs, subsidies, import quotas, etc.
The locus of global production initially switches from the U.S. to
other advanced nations and then from those nations to developing countries
basic theory of comparative advantage
potential world production is greater with unrestricted free trade than it is with restricted trade
According to the product life-cycle theory, once a new product becomes widely accepted internationally then
production for that product will start to take place in other countries
absolute advantage
production of a product is more efficient than in any other country
the rather vague definition of what constitues for "dumping" has
proved to be a loophole that many countries are exploiting
Multilateral or Bilateral Trade Agreements
reciprocal trade agreements between two or more partners
dumping
selling goods in a foreign market at below their costs of production or as selling goods in a foreign market at below their "fair" market value
According to new trade theory, each nation may be able to
specialize in producing a narrower range of products than it would in the absence of trade
export tariff
tax placed on the export of a good
Mercantilism advocated
that countries should simultaneously encourage exports and discourage imports
quota rent
the extra profit that producers make when supply is artificially limited by an import quota
Heckscher-Ohlin theory emphasizes
the interplay between the proportions in which the factors of production are available in different countries and the proportions in which they are needed for producing particular goods
According to Adam Smith,____ should determine what a country imports and exports
the market mechanism
According to David Hume, if England exported more than it imported
the resulting inflow of gold and silver would swell the domestic money supply and generate inflation -surplus is not sustainable
