Title: What Determines a Country
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3What Determines a Countrys Comparative Advantage?
- Exogenous factors are the most obvious
4Climate (long growing season)
5Natural Resources (petroleum reserves)
6But there are also endogenous factors education,
skills, capital,...
- Implies that comparative advantage can change
over time - electronic goods to pharmaceutical goods to
internet software to .
7Lets take a closer look at how capital (K) and
labor (L)affect comparative advantage
- Definitions
- capital abundant country has high K/L
- labor abundant country has low K/L
- capital intensive production uses high K/L
- labor intensive production uses low K/L
- Capital abundant countries comparative advantage
in capital intensive production - Labor abundant countries comparative advantage
in labor intensive production
8Factor Price Equalization
- Factor prices
- wage rate for labor
- rental rate for capital
- Factor price equalization even if factors are
not mobile, factor prices will tend to equalize
with trade
9What causes factor price equalization?
- suppose U.S. has high K/L
- suppose Mexico has low K/L
- then opening up trade will shift
- U.S. production toward capital intensive goods
- thus demand for capital rises in U.S
- M. production toward labor intensive goods
- thus demand for labor rises in Mexico
- U.S. wages fall and Mexican wages rise
- that is a move toward factor price equalization
- assumes ceteris paribus, productivity would rise
10Gains from Expanded Markets
- Theory combines two features of production
- economies of scale (declining ATC over the
relevant range of production) - product differentiation leads to monopolistic
competition - Focuses on intraindustry trade (same industry)
- comparative advantage focuses on interindustry
trade (different industries)
11Getting a sense of the gains from expanded markets
12Now lets develop a model to show the gains from
expanded markets
- First derive a relationship between
- the number of firms,
- the size of the market
- costs per unit (ATC)
- Second, derive a relationship between the number
of firms and the price - Third, combine the two relationships
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17Now, summarize the results using a new curve
18Recall results from monopolistic competition model
- Product differentiation
- Firms face downward sloping demand curve
- With more firms in the industry, the demand curve
shifts - and gets flatter (a point we did not emphasize
earlier), so the price falls - sketch this by hand
19Now, summarize the result that more firms lead to
a lower price in another new curve
20Put the two new curves in the same diagram look
at the long run equilibrium
21Finally, open up the economy curve shifts
showing effect of a larger market
22End of Lecture
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