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A2 Economics
Comparative Advantage and
Benefits of Trade
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Pre-specialisation
Digital Cameras
UK
600
United States
2400
Total
3000
Working out the comparative advantage
Vacuum Cleaners
600
1000
1600
To identify which country should specialise in a particular product we need to analyse the internal
opportunity costs for each country. For example, were the UK to shift more resources into higher output
of vacuum cleaners, the opportunity cost of each vacuum cleaner is one digital television. For the United
States the same decision has an opportunity cost of 2.4 digital cameras. Therefore, the UK has a
comparative advantage in vacuum cleaners.
If the UK chose to reallocate resources to digital cameras the opportunity cost of one extra camera is still
one vacuum cleaner. But for the United States the opportunity cost is only 5/12ths of a vacuum cleaner.
Thus the United States has a comparative advantage in producing digital cameras because its
opportunity cost is lowest.
According to the principle of comparative advantage, each country specializes in the products in which it has
an advantage.
Output after Specialisation
Digital Cameras
0 (-600)
3360 (+960)
3000
3360
UK
United States
Total
Vacuum Cleaners
1200 (+600)
600 (-400)
1600
1800
The UK specializes totally in producing vacuum cleaners doubling its output to 1200
The United States partly specializes in digital cameras increasing output by 960 having given up
400 units of vacuum cleaners
As a result of specialisation according to the principle of comparative advantage, output of both
products has increased - representing a gain in economic welfare.
For mutually beneficial trade to take place, the two nations have to agree an acceptable rate of
exchange of one product for another.
There are gains from trade between the two countries. If the two countries trade at a rate of exchange
of 2 digital cameras for one vacuum cleaner, the post-trade position will be as follows:
The UK exports 420 vacuum cleaners to the USA and receives 840 digital cameras
The USA exports 840 digital cameras and imports 420 vacuum cleaners
Post trade output / consumption
UK
United States
Total
Digital Cameras
840
2520
Vacuum Cleaners
780
1020
3360
1800
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Compared with the pre-specialisation output levels, consumers in both countries now have an increased
supply of both goods to choose from.
Assumptions behind Trade Theory
This theory of the potential benefits from trade and exchange using the law of comparative advantage is
based on a number of underlying assumptions:
1. Perfect occupational mobility of each of the factors of production (land, labour, capital etc.) -this
means that switching factor resources from one industry to another involves no loss of relative
efficiency and productivity. In reality of course we know that factors of production are not
perfectly mobile labour immobility for example is a root cause of structural unemployment
2. Constant returns to scale (i.e. doubling the inputs used in the production process leads to a
doubling of output) this is merely a simplifying assumption. Specialisation might lead to
diminishing returns in which case the economic benefits from trade are reduced. Conversely,
increasing the scale of production can generate increasing returns to scale - in which case the
benefits from trade are even stronger than the numerical example we have considered
3. No externalities arising from production and/or consumption meaning that there is no
divergence between private and social costs and benefits. Again this is a simplifying assumption.
No discussion about the overall costs and benefits of specialisation and trade should ignore many
of the environmental considerations arising from increased production and trade between
countries.
Zero or insignificant transportation costs
What Determines Comparative Advantage?
A country's place in the global economy seems neither predestined nor predictable. Comparative advantage
is almost impossible to spot in advance. The Economist, April 2004
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Comparative advantage is best viewed as a dynamic concept meaning that it can and does change
over time. Some businesses find they have enjoyed a comparative advantage within their own market in
one product for several years only to face increasing competition as rival producers from other countries
enter their markets and under cut them on price or take market share through non-price competition. For
a country, the following factors are often seen as important in determining the relative costs of
production:
The quantity and quality of factors of production available (e.g. the size and efficiency of the
available labour force and the productivity of the existing stock of capital inputs)
2. Investment in research & development (this is important in industries where patents give some
firms a significant market advantage) there is quite strong evidence that an emerging
comparative advantage often comes from entrepreneurial trial and error the never ending
process of engaging in research and innovation to find more efficient process and new products
Fluctuations in the real exchange rate which then affect the relative prices of exports and
imports and cause changes in demand from domestic and overseas customers
4. Import controls such as tariffs, export subsidies and quotas can be used to create an artificial
comparative advantage for a country's domestic producers
5. The non-price competitiveness of producers (e.g. covering factors such as the standard of
product design and innovation, product reliability, quality of after-sales support)
Comparative advantage is often a self-reinforcing process.
Entrepreneurs in a country develop a new comparative advantage in a product (either because they find
ways of producing it more efficiently or they create a genuinely new product that finds a growing
demand in home and international markets). Rising demand and output encourages the exploitation of
economies of scale; higher profits can be reinvested in the business to fund further product development,
marketing and a wider distribution network. Skilled labour is attracted into the industry and so on.
The wider benefits of international trade
One way of expressing the gains from trade in goods and services between countries is to distinguish
between the static gains from trade (i.e. improvements in allocative and productive efficiency) and the
dynamic gains (the gains in welfare that occur over time from improved product quality, increased
choice and a faster pace of innovative behaviour)
Some of the broader gains from free trade are outlined below:
1. Welfare gains allocative efficiency: Free trade can be shown under certain conditions to lead
to significant increases in economic welfare. Neo-liberal economists who support the liberalisation
of trade between countries believe that trade is a positive-sum game in other words, all
counties engaged in open trade and exchange stand to gain.
2. Economies of scale - trade allows firms to exploit scale economies by operating in larger
markets. Economies of scale lead to lower average costs of production that can be passed onto
consumers.
3. Competition / market contestability trade promotes increased competition particularly for
those domestic monopolies that would otherwise face little real competition. For example, Corus
faces competition from overseas steel producers and is effectively a price-taker in the world
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market. The Royal Mail will have to fight hard to maintain its market position during the phased
liberalization of the European postal services market between now and 2007.
4. Dynamic efficiency gains from innovation - trade also enhances consumer choice and
international competition between suppliers help to keep prices down. Trade in ideas stimulates
product and process innovations that generates better products for consumers and enhances the
overall standard of living.
5. Rising living standards and a reduction in poverty - James Wolfeson (the Head of the World
Bank) has argued that trade can be a powerful force in reducing poverty and raising living
standards. A growing body of evidence shows that countries that are more open to trade grow
faster over the long run than those that remain closed. And growth directly benefits the world's
poor. A one percentage point increase in growth on average reduces poverty by more than 1.5
per cent each year.