Chapter 3
Chapter 3
Chapter 3
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PRINCIPLES OF
ECONOMICS
FOURTH EDITION
N. G R E G O R Y M A N K I W
PowerPoint® Slides
by Ron Cronovich
Interdependence
Every day hair gel from
you rely on Cleveland, OH
many people
from around cell phone
the world, from Taiwan
most of whom
you do not know, dress shirt
from China
to provide you
with the goods
and services coffee from
Kenya
you enjoy.
CHAPTER 3 INTERDEPENDENCE
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Interdependence
§ One of the Ten Principles of
Economics from Chapter 1:
Trade can make
everyone better off.
Our Example
§ Two countries: the U.S. and Japan
§ Two goods: computers and wheat
§ One resource: labor, measured in hours
§ We will look at how much of both goods
each country produces and consumes
• if the country chooses to be self-sufficient
• if it trades with the other country
2,000
1,000
Computers
0
100 200 300 400 500
2,000
1,000
Computers
0
100 200 300 400 500
ACTIVE LEARNING 1:
Derive Japan’s PPF
Use the following information to draw Japan’s PPF.
§ Japan has 30,000 hours of labor
available for production, per month.
§ Producing one computer
requires 125 hours of labor.
§ Producing one ton of wheat
requires 25 hours of labor.
Your graph should measure computers on the
horizontal axis.
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Japan’s PPF
Wheat
(tons)
Japan has enough labor to
produce 240 computers,
2,000 or 1200 tons of wheat,
or any combination
along the PPF.
1,000
0 Computers
100 200 300
CHAPTER 3 INTERDEPENDENCE AND THE GAINS FROM TRADE 9
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Wheat
(tons) Suppose Japan uses half its labor to
produce each of the two goods.
2,000 Then it will produce and consume
120 computers and
600 tons of wheat.
1,000
0 Computers
100 200 300
CHAPTER 3 INTERDEPENDENCE AND THE GAINS FROM TRADE 10
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A C T I V E L E A R N I N G 2:
Production under trade
1. Suppose the U.S. produces 3400 tons of wheat.
How many computers would the U.S. be able to
produce with its remaining labor? Draw the
point representing this combination of
computers and wheat on the U.S. PPF.
2. Suppose Japan produces 240 computers.
How many tons of wheat would Japan be able
to produce with its remaining labor? Draw this
point on Japan’s PPF.
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1,000
Computers
0
100 200 300 400 500
1,000
0 Computers
100 200 300
CHAPTER 3 INTERDEPENDENCE AND THE GAINS FROM TRADE 14
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International Trade
§ Exports:
goods produced domestically and sold abroad
§ Imports:
goods produced abroad and sold domestically
A C T I V E L E A R N I N G 3:
Consumption under trade
Suppose the U.S. exports 700 tons of wheat to
Japan, and imports 110 computers from Japan.
(So, Japan imports 700 tons wheat and exports
110 computers.)
§ How much of each good is consumed in the
U.S.? Plot this combination on the U.S. PPF.
§ How much of each good is consumed in Japan?
Plot this combination on Japan’s PPF.
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1,000
Computers
0
100 200 300 400 500
0 Computers
100 200 300
CHAPTER 3 INTERDEPENDENCE AND THE GAINS FROM TRADE 18
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Opportunity Cost
and Comparative Advantage
§ Comparative advantage: the ability to produce
a good at a lower opportunity cost than another
producer
§ Which country has the comparative advantage in
computers?
§ To answer this, must determine the opp. cost of
a computer in each country.
Opportunity Cost
and Comparative Advantage
§ The opp. cost of a computer is
• 10 tons of wheat in the U.S., because producing
one computer requires 100 labor hours,
which instead could produce 10 tons of wheat.
• 5 tons of wheat in Japan, because producing
one computer requires 125 labor hours,
which instead could produce 5 tons of wheat.
§ So, Japan has a comparative advantage in
computers. (Absolute advantage is not
necessary for comparative advantage!)
CHAPTER 3 INTERDEPENDENCE AND THE GAINS FROM TRADE 24
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A C T I V E L E A R N I N G 4:
Absolute & comparative advantage
Argentina and Brazil each have 10,000 hours of
labor per month, and the following technologies:
Argentina
• producing one pound coffee requires 2 hours
• producing one bottle wine requires 4 hours
Brazil
• producing one pound coffee requires 1 hour
• producing one bottle wine requires 5 hours
Which country has an absolute advantage in the
production of coffee? Which country has a
comparative advantage in the production of wine?
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A C T I V E L E A R N I N G 4:
Answers
Brazil has an absolute advantage in coffee:
• Producing a pound of coffee requires only one
labor-hour in Brazil, but two in Argentina.
Argentina has a comparative advantage in wine:
• Argentina’s opp. cost of wine is two pounds of
coffee, because the four labor-hours required
to produce a bottle of wine could instead produce
two pounds of coffee.
• Brazil’s opp. cost of wine is five pounds of coffee.
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Unanswered Questions….
§ We made a lot of assumptions about the quantities
of each good that each country produces, trades,
and consumes, and the price at which the
countries trade wheat for computers.
§ In the real world, these quantities and prices would
be determined by the preferences of consumers
and the technology and resources in both
countries.
§ We will begin to study this in the next chapter.
§ For now, though, our goal was only to see that
trade, indeed, can make everyone better off.
CHAPTER 3 INTERDEPENDENCE AND THE GAINS FROM TRADE 28
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CHAPTER SUMMARY
§ Interdependence and trade allow everyone to
enjoy a greater quantity and variety of goods &
services.
§ Comparative advantage means being able to
produce a good at a lower opportunity cost.
Absolute advantage means being able to produce
a good with fewer inputs.
§ When people – or countries – specialize in the
goods in which they have a comparative
advantage, the economic “pie” grows and
trade can make everyone better off.
CHAPTER 3 INTERDEPENDENCE AND THE GAINS FROM TRADE 29