Interdependence and The Gains From Trade
Interdependence and The Gains From Trade
Interdependence and The Gains From Trade
3
Interdependence and the
Gains from Trade
Economics
PRINCIPLES OF
N. Gregory Mankiw
2
Interdependence
One of the Ten Principles from Chapter 1:
Trade can make everyone better off.
We now learn why people – and nations –
choose to be interdependent,
and how they can gain from trade.
2,000
1,000
Computers
0
100 200 300 400 500
2,000
1,000
Computers
0
100 200 300 400 500
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
INTERDEPENDENCE AND THE GAINS FROM TRADE 9
Japan Without Trade
Wheat
(tons) Suppose Japan uses half its labor to
produce each good.
2,000 Then it will produce and consume
120 computers and
600 tons of wheat.
1,000
0 Computers
100 200 300
INTERDEPENDENCE AND THE GAINS FROM TRADE 10
Consumption With and Without Trade
Without trade,
U.S. consumers get 250 computers
and 2500 tons wheat.
Japanese consumers get 120 computers
and 600 tons wheat.
We will compare consumption without trade to
consumption with trade.
First, we need to see how much of each good is
produced and traded by the two countries.
12
U.S. Production With Trade
Wheat
(tons)
5,000 Producing 3400 tons of wheat
requires 34,000 labor hours.
4,000
The remaining 16,000
3,000 labor hours are used to
produce 160 computers.
2,000
1,000
Computers
0
100 200 300 400 500
0 Computers
100 200 300
INTERDEPENDENCE AND THE GAINS FROM TRADE 14
Basic international trade terms
Exports:
goods produced domestically and sold abroad
To export means to sell domestically produced
goods abroad.
Imports:
goods produced abroad and sold domestically
To import means to purchase goods produced
in other countries.
16
U.S. Consumption With Trade
Wheat
(tons) computers wheat
5,000 produced 160 3400
+ imported 110 0
4,000 – exported 0 700
= amount
3,000 270 2700
consumed
2,000
1,000
Computers
0
100 200 300 400 500
1,000
0 Computers
100 200 300
INTERDEPENDENCE AND THE GAINS FROM TRADE 18
Trade Makes Both Countries Better Off
U.S.
consumption consumption gains from
without trade with trade trade
computers 250 270 20
wheat 2,500 2,700 200
Japan
consumption consumption gains from
without trade with trade trade
computers 120 130 10
wheat 600 700 100
INTERDEPENDENCE AND THE GAINS FROM TRADE 19
Where Do These Gains Come From?
Absolute advantage: the ability to produce a
good using fewer inputs than another producer
The U.S. has an absolute advantage in wheat:
producing a ton of wheat uses 10 labor hours
in the U.S. vs. 25 in Japan.
If each country has an absolute advantage
in one good and specializes in that good,
then both countries can gain from trade.