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International Economics

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Title: International Economics


1
International Economics
NB! Due to a crash in B3, the lecture hall is
changed to G-salen 8/12 and 15/12
  • Lecture 6. International Factor Mobility

2
Outline
  • Introduction
  • International Labor Mobility
  • Standard Analysis
  • Regulated Markets
  • International Borrowing and Lending
  • Foreign Direct Investment and Multinational Firms

3
Introduction
  • Up to now only focused on international
    integration in the form of movement of goods and
    services.
  • Another form of integration is international
    movements of factors of production.
  • Factor movements include
  • Labor migration
  • Transfer of capital via international borrowing
    and lending
  • Transactions of multinational corporations
    involving direct ownership/control of foreign
    firms

4
Introduction (cont.)
  • Factor proportions explanations for trade imply
    that trade in goods and services is a substitute
    for factor mobility
  • Instead of labor migrating from labor abundant
    country to capital abundant country, wage
    differentials are reduced by trade according to
    comparative advantages
  • Movements of factors of production are
    politically sensitive and often restricted.
  • Most countries have restrictions on immigration.
  • Restrictions on financial capital flows in many
    developing countries.
  • Restrictions on the activities of multinational
    corporations (less common today than in the 60s
    and 70s).

5
International Labor Mobility
  • Standard analysis shows that labor migration
    generates welfare gains, but just as with free
    flows of goods and services, some groups are
    likely to lose.
  • A One-Good Model
  • Assumptions
  • There are two countries (Home and Foreign).
  • There are two factors of production Land (T) and
    Labor (L).
  • Both countries produce only one good (refer to it
    as output).
  • Both countries have the same technology but
    different overall land-labor ratios.
  • Home is the labor-abundant country and Foreign is
    the land-abundant country.
  • Perfect competition prevails in all markets.

6
An Economys Production Function
7
The Marginal Product of Labor
  • area under the marginal product(ivity) of labor
    curve value of output produced total income
    (provided markets are competitive)

Real wage
Wages
8
International Labor Mobility (cont.)
  • The assumption that countries differ in terms of
    land-labor ratios imply that wage rates differ in
    the absence of labor mobility
  • The real wage is lower in Home than in Foreign
  • Suppose that workers are able to move between the
    two countries.
  • Home workers would like to move to Foreign until
    the marginal product of labor is the same in the
    two countries.
  • This movement will reduce the Home labor force
    and thus raise the real wage in Home.
  • This movement will increase the Foreign labor
    force and reduce the real wage in Foreign.

9
International Labor Mobility (cont.)
10
Causes and Effects of International Labor Mobility
Marginal product of labor
11
International Labor Mobility (cont.)
  • The redistribution of the worlds labor force
  • Leads to a convergence of real wage rates
  • Increases the worlds output as a whole
  • Each worker who moves is more productive in
    Foreign than in Home.
  • Leaves some groups worse off
  • The owners of immobile factors in labor exporting
    country and workers in labor importing country
    tend to lose.
  • Suppose the countries produce two goods, one
    labor- intensive and one land-intensive.
  • Trade offers an alternative to factor mobility
    Home can export labor and import land by
    exporting the labor-intensive good and importing
    the land-intensive good.
  • Labor migration between small countries need not
    have an effect on income distribution (but may
    affect production pattern instead)

12
International Labor Mobility with Regulated
Markets
  • In reality, wages are negotiated rather than
    determined in market with perfect competition in
    most high-wage countries.
  • More plausible setup is to have trade unions set
    wages and employers employment.
  • Unless immigrant workers are able to undercut
    negotiated wages, small incentives to migrate in
    spite of large wage differentials.
  • Exception may be for specialist jobs for which it
    is difficult to hire domestic labor
  • Small scope for undercutting in many European
    countries.
  • Labor immigration varies strongly with business
    cycle
  • Poor integration of immigrants in labor market
  • Larger scope for undercutting in the US.

13
Capital Mobility
  • Large increase in the volume of transactions in
    international capital market since 1960s.
  • They can be divided into
  • Portfolio investments, e.g.
  • A U.S. bank lends to a Swedish firm
  • A U.S. pension fund invests in equity issued by a
    Swedish corporation
  • A Swedish bank buys U.S. Treasury bonds
  • Direct investment, e.g.
  • A Swedish firm is taken over by a U.S. firm
  • The U.S. firm uses internal funds to finance the
    takeover
  • The U.S. firm borrows from a U.S. bank to finance
    to takeover

14
Capital Mobility (cont.)
  • Both types imply a movement of capital between
    countries
  • Funds financed by residents of one country are
    being used for investments in another country
  • International movements of capital are associated
    with international borrowing and lending
  • Residents of one country give up consumption
    today to finance investments in another country,
    which will generate consumption in the future
  • The borrowing country gets to consume more today
    by giving up some larger quantity of consumption
    in the future.
  • Aggregate movements are reflected in the current
    account
  • Surplus ? Production gt Absorption ? international
    lending
  • Deficit ? Production lt Absorption ? international
    borrowing

15
International Borrowing and Lending
  • Can be interpreted as intertemporal trade
  • Trade of goods today for goods in the future
  • Gains of trade if countries trade according to
    comparative advantage
  • Borrowing if comparative advantage in future
    production.
  • E.g. emerging economies
  • Capital importing countries benefit from being
    able to finance investment at a lower price.
  • Lending if comparative advantage in current
    production,
  • E.g. industrialized countries
  • Capital exporting countries benefit from earning
    a higher return on savings.

16
International Borrowing and Lending, cont.
  • Imagine an economy that consumes only one good
    and will exist for only two periods, present and
    future.
  • Intertemporal production possibility frontier
  • Represents a trade-off between present and future
    production of the single consumption good.
  • Its shape will differ among countries
  • Some countries will be biased toward present
    output.
  • Some countries will be biased toward future
    output.

17
The Intertemporal Production Possibility Frontier
18
International Borrowing and Lending, cont.
  • The difference between present production and
    present consumption is investment in future
    production.
  • In order to give up consumption of one unit
    today, (1r) units are required in future
    consumption, where r is the real interest rate on
    borrowing.
  • The relative price of future consumption is
    1/(1r).
  • The relative price of present consumption is 1r.
  • With perfect competition, production will take
    place where the slope of the intertemporal
    production possibility frontier is equal to the
    relative price between present and future
    consumption.

19
Determining Homes Intertemporal Production
Pattern
Isovalue lines with slope (1 r)
Q
20
International Borrowing and Lending, cont.
  • A country can trade over time by borrowing or
    lending.
  • When a country borrows, it gets the right to
    purchase some quantity of consumption at present
    in return for repayment of some larger quantity
    in the future.
  • The quantity of repayment in future will be (1
    r) times the quantity borrowed in present.
  • Assume that Home has a comparative advantage in
    present production (so that its production
    possibilities are biased toward present
    production).
  • In the absence of international borrowing and
    lending Foreign would have a high relative price
    of future consumption (i.e., low r).
  • Low interest rate corresponds to a low return on
    investment.

21
Homes Intertemporal Trade
Indifference curves
D
22
International Borrowing and Lending, cont.
  • Production and consumption patterns
  • Period 1 (present)
  • Homes production is greater than its consumption
    ? current account surplus
  • Period 2 (future)
  • Reversal of current account
  • Gains from intertemporal trade
  • Home benefits from earning a higher return on
    savings and from a better allocation between
    present and future consumption.

23
Foreign Direct Investment
  • Foreign direct investment (FDI) refers to
    investment in which a firm directly controls or
    owns a subsidiary in another country.
  • Involves not only a transfer of resources but
    also the acquisition of control.
  • The subsidiary does not simply have a financial
    obligation to the parent company it is part of
    the same organizational structure.
  • If a foreign company invests in at least 10 of
    the stock of a subsidiary, the two firms are
    typically classified as a multinational
    corporation.
  • A multinational firm is a vehicle for
    international borrowing and lending
  • They provide financing to their foreign
    subsidiaries

24
Why do firms seek to extend control outside their
country?
  • Rephrase question into questions dealing with
  • Location why is a good produced in two countries
    rather than in one country and then exported to
    the other country?
  • Internalization why is production in different
    locations carried out by the same firm rather
    than by separate firms?

25
Why production in more than one location?
  • Activities attracted to where necessary factors
    of production are located.
  • Mining occurs where minerals are.
  • Labor intensive production occurs where
    relatively large pools of labor live.
  • Transport costs and other barriers to trade make
    local production relatively cheap compared to
    exports.
  • With economies of scale in production there is a
    trade-off between locating production close to
    factors and/or consumers and the disadvantage of
    spreading out production.

26
Why activities within the same organization?
  • Because it is more profitable than carrying out
    activities in separate organizations.
  • Reasons for this include
  • Technology transfers transferring technology may
    be easier within an organization than through the
    market.
  • Patent or property rights may be weak or
    non-existent.
  • Knowledge may not be easily packaged and sold.
  • Vertical integration involves consolidation of
    different stages of a production process.
  • May be more efficient than having different
    stages being operated by separate firms.
  • E.g. having compressor and refrigerator producers
    consolidating into one organization may be more
    efficient than having them as separate
    organizations.

27
Multinational Corporations in the U.S.
28
Multinational Corporations in Sweden (cont.)
29
Employment by Swedish Multinational Corporations
30
Summary
  • A simple model of labor migration predicts that
    labor will migrate to countries with higher labor
    productivity and higher wage rates.
  • Real wages are predicted to fall due to
    immigration.
  • Real wages are predicted to rise due to
    emigration.
  • Collective agreements reduce the scope for
    migration and serve as an impediment to real wage
    equalization.
  • International borrowing and lending can be
    described as intertemporal trade.
  • Countries with profitable investment
    opportunities borrow funds today and repay
    lenders in the future.
  • Multinational corporations undertake foreign
    direct investment when there are location and
    internalization advantages associated with the
    foreign activities.

31
Summary (cont.)
  • It happens when the advantages of local
    production outweigh the disadvantages of
    spreading out production, provided that it is
    more efficient to carry out activities within the
    same organization.
  • Internalization advantages may arise because
    internalizing technology transfers or vertical
    integration is efficient.
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