Carbaugh Intl Econ 9e
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Transcript Carbaugh Intl Econ 9e
International Economics
By Robert J. Carbaugh
9th Edition
Chapter 1:
The International Economy
Copyright ©2004, South-Western College Publishing
Economic interdependence
Elements of interdependence
Trade: goods, services, raw materials,
energy
Finance: foreign debt, foreign investment,
exchange rates
Business: multinational corporations, global
production
Carbaugh, Chap. 1
2
Economic interdependence
Forces driving globalization
Technological change:
Production
Communication & information
Transport
Liberalization of trade & investment:
Tariff, non-tariff barrier reductions
Liberalized financial transactions
International financial markets
Carbaugh, Chap. 1
3
Economic interdependence
Waves of Globalization
1st wave: 1870-1914
Falling tariff barriers
improved transportation
2nd wave: 1945-1980
Agreements to lower barriers again
Rich country trade specialization
Poor nations left behind
3rd wave: 1980-present
Growth of emerging markets
international capital movements regain importance
Carbaugh, Chap. 1
4
Economic interdependence
Exports of goods and services as percent of
Gross Domestic Product, 2001
Country
Netherlands
Norway
South Korea
Canada
Germany
France
United Kingdom
Mexico
United States
Japan
Carbaugh, Chap. 1
Exports (% of GDP)
Imports (% of GDP)
68%
48
46
45
35
29
28
28
11
11
62%
30
41
39
34
27
30
30
14
10
5
Economic interdependence
Leading trading partners of the United States,
2000
Country
Canada
Mexico
Japan
Germany
France
Italy
Netherlands
Belgium/Luxembourg
Venezuela
Australia
Carbaugh, Chap. 1
Value of US
exports ($ bill.)
$202.4
125.2
98.4
45.2
30.6
16.4
28.9
17.9
9.0
17.9
Value of US
imports ($ bill.)
$250.1
147.9
165.3
74.3
40.6
31.0
15.0
12.8
19.2
9.7
6
Economic interdependence
Interdependence: Impact
Overall standard of living is higher
Access to raw materials & energy not available
at home
Access to goods & components made less
expensively elsewhere
Access to financing and investment not
available at home
International competition encourages efficiency
Carbaugh, Chap. 1
7
Economic interdependence
Interdependence: Impact (cont’d)
Other impacts - good & bad
Curtails inflationary pressures at home
Limits domestic wage increases
Makes economy vulnerable to external
disturbances
Limits impact of domestic fiscal policy on
economy
Carbaugh, Chap. 1
8
Comparative advantage
Comparative advantage means:
If the relative cost of making two items is
different in two countries, each can gain by
specializing in the one it makes most cheaply each has a comparative advantage in that
product
Even countries that make nothing cheaply can
benefit from specialization
Carbaugh, Chap. 1
9
Economic interdependence
Common fallacies of international trade
"Trade is zero-sum" - trade can bring
benefits to both partners
"Imports bad, exports good" - if you buy
nothing from other countries, they have no
income to buy from you
"Tariffs and quotas save jobs" - cutting
imports makes it harder to export, so other
jobs are lost
Carbaugh, Chap. 1
10
Comparative advantage
Competitiveness & trade
Main objective of any nation is to generate
high and rising standard of living
No nation can efficiently make everything itself
International trade allows countries to focus on
producing what they make efficiently
Inefficient sectors will be squeezed out
Sectors open to competition become more
efficient and productive
Carbaugh, Chap. 1
11
Economic interdependence: globalization
Ups and downs of globalization
Advantages
Productivity increases faster when countries produce
according to comparative advantage
Global competition and cheap imports keep prices low
and inflation at bay
An open economy encourages technological
development and innovation with ideas from abroad
Jobs in export industries pay more than those in
import-competing industries
Free movement of capital gives the US access to
foreign investment and keeps interest rates low
Carbaugh, Chap. 1
12
Economic interdependence: globalization
Ups and downs of globalization
Disadvantages
Millions of US jobs lost to imports or production abroad;
those displaced find lower-paying jobs
Millions of other Americans fear getting laid off
Workers face pressure for wage concessions under
threat of having the jobs move abroad
Service and white-collar jobs are joining blue-collar
ones in being vulnerable to moving overseas
US workers can lose their competitiveness when firms
build state-of-the-art factories in low-wage countries,
making them as productive as plants in the US
Carbaugh, Chap. 1
13