Transcript Document
chapter three
Theories of International Trade
and Investment
McGraw-Hill/Irwin
International Business, 11/e
Copyright © 2008 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.
Learning Objectives
Understand theories of international trade
Comprehend
arguments of imposing trade
restrictions
Explain two basic kinds of import restrictions
Appreciate the relevance of changing status of
tariff and non tariff barriers
3-3
Learning Objectives
Recognize the weaknesses of GNP/capita as
economic indicator
Understand new definition of economic development
Understand why governments change from import
substitution to export promotion
Explain some theories of foreign direct investment
3-4
International Trade Theory
• Mercantilism
– Economic philosophy based on belief that
• (1) a nation’s wealth depends on
accumulated treasure, usually gold, and
• (2) to increase wealth, government
policies should promote exports and
discourage imports
3-5
Theory of Absolute Advantage
• Absolute advantage
– Theory that a nation has absolute
advantage when it can produce a larger
amount of a good or service for the same
amount of inputs as can another country or
– When it can produce the same amount of a
good or service using fewer inputs than
could another country
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Absolute Advantage
Example
Each Country Specializes
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Absolute Advantage
Terms of Trade (Ratio of International Prices)
Gains from Specialization and Trade
3-8
Theory of Comparative Advantage
• Comparative Advantage
– A nation having absolute disadvantages in
the production of two goods with respect to
another nation has a comparative or relative
advantage in the production of the good in
which its absolute disadvantage is less
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Theory of Comparative Advantage
Example
Each Country Specializes
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Comparative Advantage
Terms of Trade – at a rate of ¾ bolt of cloth for 1 ton of soybeans
Terms of Trade – at a rate of 1 bolt of cloth for 1 ton of soybeans
Gains from Specialization and Trade
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Comparative Advantage
• Production Possibility Frontiers (figure 3.1)
Figure
3.1
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Heckscher-Ohlin Theory of Factor
Endowment
• Factor Endowment
– Heckscher-Ohlin theory that countries
export products requiring large amounts of
their abundant production factors and import
products requiring large amounts of their
scarce production factors
3-13
Heckscher-Ohlin Theory of Factor
Endowment
• Leontief Paradox
– The United States, one of the most capital-intensive
countries in the world, was exporting relatively
labor-intensive products in exchange for relatively
capital-intensive products
• Differences in Taste
– A demand-side construct that is always difficult to
deal with in economic theory
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How Can Money Change The
Direction of Trade?
Example
Exchange Rate – the price of one currency stated in terms of another currency
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How Can Money Change The
Direction of Trade?
• Influences of Exchange Rate
– Currency devaluation
• The lowering of a currency’s price in
terms of other currencies
3-16
Some Newer Explanations For The
Direction Of Trade
• Linder Theory of Overlapping Demand
– Customers’ tastes are strongly affected by
income levels; therefore a nation’s income
per capita level determines the kinds of
goods they will demand
3-17
Some Newer Explanations For The
Direction Of Trade
• International Product Life Cycle (IPLC)
– Explains why a product that begins as
export eventually becomes import (figure
3.2)
• U.S. exports
• Foreign production begins
• Foreign competition in export market
• Import competition in the United States
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Figure 3.2 International Product Life
Cycle
3-19
Some Newer Explanations For The
Direction Of Trade
• Technology Life Cycle
– Production technology application of IPLC
• Economies of Scale and Experience Curve
– As a plant gets larger and output increase, the
average cost of producing each unit of output
decreases
– As firms produce more products, they learn ways to
improve production efficiency
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Some Newer Explanations For The
Direction Of Trade
• Imperfect Competition
– Economies of scale with the existence of
differentiated products--Paul Krugman
• First-Mover Theory
– Pattern of trade in goods subject to scale
economies may be determined by historical
factors
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Some Newer Explanations For The
Direction Of Trade
• National Competitive Advantage from Regional
Clusters: Porter’s Diamond Model (figure 3.3)
– National Competitiveness: a nation’s relative ability
to design, produce, distribute, or service products
while earning increasing returns on resources
• Demand conditions
• Factor Conditions
• Related and supporting industries
• Firm strategy, structure, and rivalry
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Figure 3.3 Variable Impacting Competitive
Advantage: Porter’s Diamond
Source: Reprinted by permission of the Harvard Business Review. “The Competitive Advantage of Nations” by Michael E. Porter,
March–April 1990, p. 77. Copyright © 1990 by The President and Fellows of Harvard College; all rights reserved.
3-23
Trade Restrictions: Arguments For
•
•
•
•
National Defense
Sanctions to Punish Offending Nations
Protect Infant (or Dying) Industry
Protect Domestic Jobs from Cheap
Foreign Labor
• Scientific Tariff or Fair Competition
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Trade Restrictions
• Retaliation
– Dumping: selling a product abroad for less
than the cost of production, the price in the
home market, or the price to third countries
• Social dumping
• Environmental dumping
• Financial services dumping
• Cultural dumping
• Tax dumping
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Trade Restrictions
– Subsidies: Financial contributions, provided
directly or indirectly by a government, which
confer a benefit; include grants, preferential
tax treatment, and government assumption
of normal business expenses (figure 3.4)
– Countervailing duties: Additional import
taxes levied on imports that have benefited
from export subsidies
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Figure 3.4 Value of OECD Member
Farm Subsidies
Source: “Agriculture: Support Estimates, 2004,” OECD in Figures: Statistics on the Member Countries. Accessed 7/2005
Link: http://dx.doi.org/10.1787/758034618756.
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Tariff Barriers
• Tariff
– Taxes on imported goods for the purpose of raising
their price to reduce competition for local producers
or stimulate local production
• Ad Valorem Duty
– An import duty levied as a percentage of the
invoice value of imported goods
• Specific Duty
– A fixed sum levied on a physical unit of an imported
good
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Tariff Barriers
• Compound Duty
– A combination of specific and ad valorem
duties
• Official Prices
• Variable Levy
– An import duty set at the difference between
world market prices and local governmentsupported prices
• Lower Duty for more local Input
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Nontariff Barriers
• Nontariff barriers (NTBs)
– All forms of discrimination against imports
other than import duties
• Quantitative
– Quotas: numerical limits placed on specific
classes of imports
– Voluntary export restraints (VERs): Export
quotas imposed by exporting nation
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Nontariff Barriers
• Orderly Marketing Arrangements
– Formal agreements between exporting and
importing countries that stipulate the import
or export quotas each nation will have for a
good
• Nonquantitative Nontariff Barriers
– Direct government participation in trade
– Customs and other administrative
procedures
– Standards
3-31
From Multinational to Globally
Integrated Manufacturing Systems
• Close least efficient plants, and supply
their markets with imports from other
subsidiaries
• Change multidomestic manufacturing
system to globally integrated system in
which each plant performs the activities
at which it is most efficient
3-32
International Investment Theories
• Monopolistic Advantage Theory
Theory that FDI is made by firms in oligopolistic
industries possessing technical and other advantages
over indigenous firms
• Product and Factor Market Imperfections
Superior knowledge leads to differentiated products,
and they lead to firm control on price and advantage
over indigenous firm (Hymer and Caves)
• Financial Factors
Imperfections in the foreign exchange markets (Aliber)
• International Product Life Cycle
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International Investment Theories
• Follow The Leader
• Cross Investment
– Foreign direct investment by oligopolistic firms in
each other’s home countries as a defense measure
• Internalization Theory
– An extension of the market imperfection theory: to
obtain a higher return on its investment, a firm will
transfer its superior knowledge to a foreign
subsidiary rather than sell it in the open market
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International Investment Theories
• Dynamic Capabilities
– Theory that for a firm to successfully invest
overseas, it must have ownership of unique
knowledge or resources and the ability to
dynamically create and exploit these capabilities
• Dunning’s Eclectic Theory Of International
Production
– Theory that for a firm to invest overseas, it must
have three kinds of advantages: ownershipspecific, internalization, and location-specific
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