HillGBT10e Accessible PPTXCh06
HillGBT10e Accessible PPTXCh06
HillGBT10e Accessible PPTXCh06
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Learning Objectives
LO 6-1Understand why nations trade with each other.
LO 6-2Summarize the different theories explaining trade flows
between nations.
LO 6-3Recognize why many economists believe that
unrestricted free trade between nations will raise the
economic welfare of countries that participate in a
free trade system.
LO 6-4Explain the arguments of those who maintain that
government can play a proactive role in promoting
national competitive advantage in certain
industries.
LO 6-5Understand the important implications that international
trade theory holds for management practice.
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Opening Case:
The Trans Pacific Partnership
Free trade deal between 12 countries that account for 36% of
world’s GDP and 26% of world trade
Many U.S. politicians criticized partnership – Obama called it
of major importance
TPP will eliminate/reduce 18,000 tariffs, taxes, and nontariff
barriers
U.S. agriculture will benefit
Some U.S. companies urged Congress to reject the deal
Ford Motors
Labor unions
Drug companies
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Introduction
Economists argue that free trade stimulates
economic growth and raising the standard of living
Many theories explain why free trade is beneficial
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Free trade refers to a situation where a government
does not attempt to influence through quotas or duties
what its citizens can buy from another country or what
they can produce and sell to another country
• Mercantilism (16th and 17th centuries) encouraged exports
and discouraged imports
• Adam Smith (1776) promoted unrestricted free trade
• David Ricardo (19th century) built on Smith ideas
• Eli Heckscher and Bertil Ohlin (20th century ) refined
Ricardo’s work
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The Benefits of Trade
• Specialize in the manufacture and export of products that
can be produced most efficiently in that country
• Import products that can be produced more efficiently in
other countries
• Gains arise because international trade allows a country to
specialize in the manufacture and export of products
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Did You Know?
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An Overview of Trade Theory 3 of 5
The Pattern of International Trade
Ricardo’s theory of comparative advantage
Trade patterns reflect differences in labor productivity
Heckscher and Ohlin
Trade reflects the interplay between the proportions in
which the factors of production are available in different
countries and the proportions in which they are need for
producing particular goods
Ray Vernon
Trade patterns reflect a product’s life cycle
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An Overview of Trade Theory 4 of 5
The Pattern of International Trade continued
Paul Krugman’s new trade theory
The world market can only support a limited number of firms in
some industries
Trade will skew toward those countries that have firms that were
able to capture first mover advantages
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An Overview of Trade Theory 5 of 5
Trade Theory and Government Policy
Mercantilism makes a case for government involvement in
promoting exports and limiting imports
Smith, Ricardo, and Heckscher-Ohlin promote unrestricted
free trade
New trade theory and Porter justify limited and selective
government intervention to support the development of
certain export-oriented industries
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Mercantilism (mid-16th century): it is in a country’s best
interest to maintain a trade surplus - to export more
than it imports
Advocated government intervention to achieve a surplus
in the balance of trade
Viewed trade as a zero-sum game: one in which a gain by
one country results in a loss by another
Chủ nghĩa trọng thương (giữa thế kỷ 16): lợi ích tốt nhất
của một quốc gia là duy trì thặng dư thương mại -
xuất khẩu nhiều hơn nhập khẩu
Ủng hộ sự can thiệp của chính phủ để đạt được thặng dư trong cán cân thương
mại
Xem thương mại như một trò chơi có tổng bằng 0: một trò chơi trong đó quốc gia này
được lợi thì quốc gia khác lại thua lỗ
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Smith (1776) - countries differ in their ability to
produce goods efficiently
A country has an absolute advantage in the
production of a product when it is more efficient
than any other country in producing it (ss chi phí sx)
According to Smith
Trade is not a zero-sum game, tổng dương
Countries should specialize in the production (chuyên
môn hóa sx) of goods for which they have an absolute
advantage and then trade these goods for the goods
produced by other countries
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Figure 6.1 The Theory of Absolute Advantage
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Table 6.1 Absolute Advantage and the Gains from Trade
Resources Required to Produce 1 Ton of Cocoa and Rice
Cocoa Rice
Ghana 10 20
South Korea 40 10
Production and Consumption Without Trade
Ghana 10 5
South Korea 2.5 10
Total Production 12.5 15
Production with Specialization
Ghana 20 0
South Korea 0 20
Total Production 20 20
Consumption after Ghana Trades 6 Tons of Cocoa for 6 Tons of South Korean Rice
Ghana 14 6
South Korea 6 14
Increase in Consumption as a Result of Specialization and Trade
Ghana 4 1
South Korea 3.5 4
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Comparative Advantage 1 of 7
David Ricardo (1817): What happens when one country has
an absolute advantage in the production of all goods?
Proposed the theory of comparative advantage (lợi thế so
sánh – tương đối)
A country should specialize in the production of those goods that it
produces most efficiently and buy the goods that it produces less
efficiently from other countries
Chuyên môn hóa sx vào mặt hàng mà chi phí cơ hội thấp hơn (so sánh
với các mặt hàng trong cùng qgia =/ với học thuyết lợi thê tuyệt đối ss
với mặt hàng các qgia khác)
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Figure 6.2 The Theory of Comparative Advantage
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Comparative Advantage 2 of 7
The Gains from Trade
The theory of comparative advantage - trade is a positive sum
game in which all gain
Potential world production is greater with unrestricted free trade than
it is with restricted trade
Provides a strong rationale for encouraging free trade
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Table 6.2 Comparative Advantage and the Gains from Trade
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Qualifications and Assumptions
1. Only two countries and two goods
2. Zero transportation costs
3. Similar prices and values
4. Resources are mobile between goods within countries,
but not across countries
5. Constant returns to scale
6. Fixed stocks of resources
7. No effects on income distribution within countries
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Comparative Advantage 4 of 7
Extensions of the Ricardian Model
Suppose the following assumptions are relaxed
1. Resources move freely from the production of one good to
another within a country
2. There are constant returns to scale
3. Trade does not change a country’s stock of resources or the
efficiency with which those resources are utilized
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Comparative Advantage 5 of 7
Extensions of the Ricardian Model continued
Immobile Resources
Resources do not always move freely from one economic activity
to another
Governments may help retrain displaced workers
Diminishing Returns
The simple model assumes constant returns to specialization: the
units of resources required to produce a good are assumed to
remain constant
An assumption of diminishing returns is more realistic since not all
resources are of the same quality and different goods use
resources in different proportions
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Comparative Advantage 6 of 7
Extensions of the Ricardian Model continued
Dynamic Effects and Economic Growth
Trade might increase a country's stock of resources as increased
supplies become available from abroad
Free trade might increase the efficiency of resource utilization, and
free up resources for other uses
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Figure 6.3 Ghana’s PPF under Diminishing Returns
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Figure 6.4 The Influence of Free Trade on PPF
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Comparative Advantage 7 of 7
Extensions of the Ricardian Model continued
The Samuelson Critique
Dynamic gains can lead to less beneficial outcomes
Free trade has historically benefitted rich counties
Evidence for the Link between Trade and Growth
Countries that are open to trade have higher growth rates than
countries that close their economies to trade
Higher growth rates raise income levels and living standards
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Heckscher and Ohlin: Comparative advantage reflects
differences in national factor endowments (tính sẵn có của
các yếu tố sx): mức độ mà một quốc gia được ban tặng
các nguồn tài nguyên như đất đai, lao động và vốn
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Heckscher-Ohlin Theory 2 of 2
The Leontief Paradox
Leontief (1953): Since the U.S. was relatively abundant in
capital, it would export capital intensive goods and import
labor-intensive goods
Leontief found that U.S. exports were less capital intensive than
U.S. imports
Possible explanations
The U.S. has a special advantage in producing products made with
innovative technologies that are less capital intensive
Differences in technology lead to differences in productivity which
then drives trade patterns
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Should Factor Endowments or Productivity
Drive Trade?
Ricardo’s theory of trade suggests that it makes sense for a country to
specialize in production of those products that it produces most efficiently
and to buy the products that it produces less efficiently from other countries,
even if this means that the country is buying products that in reality it could
produce more efficiently itself. This means that Ricardo showed that a
country can derive advantages by trade even though it has an absolute
advantage in producing all products. The Heckscher-Ohlin theory of trade
suggests that comparative advantage for a country arises from differences in
national factor endowments (i.e., the extent to which a country is endowed
with such resources as land, labor, and capital). Ricardo’s argument focused
on relative productivity, while Heckscher-Ohlin’s argument focused on having
important resources. If you can only have one of the two— better relative
productivity or lots of resources such as land, labor, and capital—which
would you prefer, any why?
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Vernon (mid-1960s ) proposed product life-cycle
theory
As products mature both the location of sales and the
optimal production location will change affecting the flow
and direction of trade
At the time, the wealth and size of the U.S. market gave a strong
incentive to U.S. firms to develop new products
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The Product Life Cycle Theory 2 of 2
Product Life-Cycle Theory in the 21st Century
The product life cycle may not be as relevant today
Many products are now introduced in Japan or South Korea
Many new products are also introduced simultaneously into the
U.S., Europe, and Asia
Firms use globally dispersed production from the start
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Paul Krugman (1980s)
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New Trade Theory 3 of 4
Economies of Scale, First-Mover Advantages, and the
Pattern of Trade
Firms with first mover advantages những DN đi đầu (the
economic and strategic advantages that accrue to many
entrants into an industry) will develop economies of scale
and create barriers to entry for other firms
The pattern of trade we observe in the world economy may
be the result of first mover advantages and economies of
scale
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New Trade Theory 4 of 4
Implications of New Trade Theory
Nations may benefit from trade even when they do not
differ in resource endowments or technology
A country may predominate in the export of a good simply
because it was lucky enough to have one or more firms
among the first to produce that good
New trade theory at a variance with Heckscher-Ohlin
theory
New trade theory useful in explaining trade patterns
New trade theory provides an economic rationale for a
proactive trade policy that is at variance with other
free trade theories (chính phủ hỗ trợ DN để khai phá
thị trường mới)
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Porter believed existing theories of international
trade only told part of the story
Wanted to explain why a nation achieves
international success in a particular industry
Four attributes of a nation that shape the
environment in which local firms compete – Porter’s
Diamond
Chance and government can influence the national
diamond
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Figure 6.5 The Determinants of National Competitive
Advantage: Porter’s Diamond
Ngành công
nghiệp liên quan
phụ trợ
Source: Michael E. Porter, The Competitive Advantage of Nations (New York: Free Press, 1990; republished with a new introduction, 1998), p. 72
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National Competitive Advantage: Porter’s Diamond 2 of 6
Factor Endowments
Hierarchies among factors
Basic: natural resources, climate, location, demographics
Advanced: communication infrastructure, skilled labor,
technological know-how
Advanced factors more significant for competitive
advantage lợi thế bền vững
Basic factors can provide an initial advantage that is
extended by investment in advanced factors
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National Competitive Advantage: Porter’s Diamond 3 of 6
Demand Conditions
The nature of home demand for an industry’s product or
service
Influence the development of capabilities
Sophisticated and demanding customers pressure
firms to be more competitive and to produce high
quality, innovative products
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National Competitive Advantage: Porter’s Diamond 4 of 6
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National Competitive Advantage: Porter’s Diamond 5 of 6
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National Competitive Advantage: Porter’s Diamond 6 of 6
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How Important is Education?
Both the Heckscher-Ohlin and Michael Porter theories of trade focus to a large degree
on “factor endowments.” The Heckscher-Ohlin theory specifies endowments such as
resources as land, labor, and capital as being critical, while the Porter theory
recognizes hierarchies among these factor endowments. Education- related
endowments such as skilled labor, research facilities, and technological know-how are
what Porter calls “advanced factors.” A long-standing argument across multiple
governmental organizations, research studies, and prominent individuals is that
education drives economic, social, and environmental well-being of countries. The
extension of this argument is that education helps people become better citizens of a
country. But, what do you think education does to a customer’s product needs and
wants? Do they want more foreign products if they have more years of education
(e.g., graduate degree) compared with fewer years of education (e.g., high school)?
Or does education not influence the type of products bought by customers (i.e.,
foreign-made or home-country made)?
Sources: T. Healy and S. Cote, “The Well-Being of Nations: The Role of Human and Social Capital,” Organisation for Economic
Cooperation and Development (OECD) (2001); S. Samuel, “Importance of Education in a Country’s Progress,” HowToLearn.com,
March 13, 2013; K. Matsui, “The Economic Benefits of Educating Women,” Bloomberg Businessweek, March 7, 2013.
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Focus on Managerial Implications
LOCATION, FIRST-MOVER ADVANTAGES, AND
GOVERNMENT POLICY
There are at least three main implications for
international businesses
1. Location
This is an underlying thought in most of the theories
2. First-mover advantages
Particularly true in industries where global market can profitably
support limited number of firms
3. Government policy
Businesses can exert a strong influence on government trade
policy
©McGraw-Hill Education.
Summary
In this chapter we have
Understood why nations trade with each other.
Summarized the different theories explaining trade flows
between nations.
Recognized why many economists believe that
unrestricted free trade between nations will raise the
economic welfare of countries that participate in a free
trade system.
Explained the arguments of those who maintain that
government can play a proactive role in promoting
national competitive advantage in certain industries.
Understood the important implications that international
trade theory holds for business practice.
©McGraw-Hill Education.
Tóm tắt các lý thuyết thương mại
Các lý thuyết thương mại giải thích dòng chảy thương mại giữa các quốc gia:
Chủ nghĩa trọng thương (thế kỷ 16 và 170) khuyến khích EX và làm nản lòng IM
Học thuyết lợi thế tương đối Adam Smith (1776) thúc đẩy thương mại tự do không hạn chế David
Ricardo (thế kỷ 19) được xây dựng dựa trên ý tưởng của Smith
Heckscher và Ohlin (thế kỷ 20) đã hoàn thiện tác phẩm của Ricardo
Các lý thuyết thương mại giải thích các mô hình thương mại: Lý thuyết của Smith & Ricardo: Sự khác
biệt về năng suất lao động
Lý thuyết của Heckscher và Ohlin: Sự khác biệt về nguồn lực yếu tố sản xuất (sự tương tác giữa tỷ lệ
các yếu tố sản xuất sẵn có ở các quốc gia khác nhau và tỷ lệ các yếu tố sản xuất đó cần thiết để sản
xuất hàng hóa cụ thể)