7 Krugman's Intra Industry Trade Model
7 Krugman's Intra Industry Trade Model
7 Krugman's Intra Industry Trade Model
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Intra-industry trade patterns
• Pharmaceutical products
• Vehicles (other than railway
and tramway)
• Articles of iron and steel
• Ship / boats and floating
structures
Increasing
• Furniture linings
returns to scale
• Power generating machinery
• Electrical machinery
• Organic chemicals
• In-organic chemicals
• Telecom equipment
Variety • Clothing and apparel
• footwear
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Fixed costs, increasing returns to scale and falling average costs
Total cost
= FC + VC
AC
= F + c.Q
capacity
AC
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Why IIT?
1. Transport costs
(geographical distance between domestic supplier and domestic consumer > that between foreign supplier
and domestic consumer)
Country A Country B
Customers of
Factory
country A
of B
Factory Customers of
of A country B
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Why IIT?
2. Need for Variety
Consumers like to choose from a variety of the same good. Some varieties
produced at home; some varieties may be imported.
Larger range of variety can also be produced by domestic firms if the
consumers want so. But not often observed.
Why cannot the domestic firms provide many varieties?
• Costs of establishing (fixed costs) needed to launch different varieties of
the same product requires a minimum scale of the business for the
business to be profitable.
• It should be more cost effective for a firm to market its few varieties of the
product in different countries, to enjoy the economies of scale.
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• Grubel-Lloyd index for industry i
GLI = 1 - |Xi-Mi|/(Xi+Mi)
Spain: 0.0807
India: 0.0305
Thailand: 0.0286
Kenya: 0.0052
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Increasing returns
technology:
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Increasing returns, non-competitive markets and pricing (1)
P,
AC, • Fixed costs give rise to IRS
MC, (falling AC)
MR • Increasing returns in
production gives rise to
supernormal profits
Pm A • If entry of new firms is
MC
restricted the market tends
ACm to be monopolistic
B
MR AC
AR or
E Demand
Qm Q
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How the demand curve changes for the firm
when another firm enters the market
When the products of the two When the products of the two
firms are homogenous firms are differentiated
P P
10 10
Q Q
What changes in the individual firm’s (firm i) demand when firms enter
Given the average price charged by other firms, if firm i reduces price , i‘s
market share increases, and vice versa. If Pi falls to 0 firm gets almost the
entire market.
AR or
E Demand
Qm Q
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Increasing returns, non-competitive markets and pricing (3)
P,
AC, • When each firm makes loss,
MC, some move out of the
MR market.
• Competition reduces and the
demand curve for each of
A them swings back.
Pm MC
• The demand curve, after
ACm swinging back and forth,
B finally settles where there is
MR AC no supernormal profit. That
is at the tangency of the AC.
AR or • That is the equilibrium for
E Demand the market = > where every
firm makes P = AC
Qm Q
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Increasing returns, non-competitive markets and pricing (2)
P,
AC, Element of
MC, Monopolistic competition monopoly
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What changes in the individual firm’s demand when economies integrate
C*
D D
D’ Q
Q
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Intra-industry trade
model:
trade under non- p
The Model
Consider a single country market.
1. This demand pattern can be given by Q = S[(1/n) – b(P-Pa)]
S = total sales of the Industry Q = sales of the firm
n = number of firms Pa = average price charged by the rest of the market
b measures elasticity of demand
Q = S[(1/n) – b(P-Pa)]
= [(S/n) + SbPa] – SbP
= A - BP
2. Total cost = F + cQ
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Finding the profit maximising price: From
MR = MC
Q = S[(1/n) – b(P-Pa)]
Finding MR
= [(S/n) + SbPa] – SbP P = (A – Q) / B
P
= A - BP = A/B – Q/B
Or P = [A-Q]/B
TR = P.Q
Equilibrium: MR = MC = AQ/B – Q2/B
MR = MC implies
P – 1/nb = c n
P = c +1/nb
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Finding the Average cost:
AC = F/Q + c
P, AC
P = c +1/nb
CC
Number of firms or variety n*
n* = 𝑺/𝑭𝒃
Eq P = P*
P*
PP
n
n*
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AC = [Fn/S] + c
When trade opens up
International trade integrates the markets P = c +1/nb
Say the total market size is doubled (from S to 2S)
Equilibium:
P
Number of firms or variety n’
= 𝟐. 𝒏∗
CC (pre
trade)
Price P’ < P*
Eq1
P* CC
Eq2 (post
P’ trade)
PP
n* n' n
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International trade integrates the markets
Equilibium:
P
Number of firms or variety n’
= 𝟐. 𝒏∗
CC (pre 2n*> n‘ > n*
trade)
Price P’ < P*
n* n' n
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Price changes in trading nations A and B
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Costs of trade:
• Some of the firms have to exit the market
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Reading
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