Movement of Money, Capital, and People: Lecture Outline
Movement of Money, Capital, and People: Lecture Outline
Lecture Outline
• Goods, Capital, and Labor flowed across
national frontiers in unprecedented quantities
– As with trade, endowments and the HO theorem help
us understand the pattern of these factor flows
(Figures 1-5)
– And SS theorem helps us understand the domestic
distributional effects of factor flows and the structure
of interests
• Distinct pro-globalization and anti-globalization groups
• “Convergence” during the Golden Age
Economic theory says poor countries should
have caught up (converged) with the rich
– Evidence of convergence in the Golden Era?
1
Figure 1: Immigration 1870-1913
European Periphery
Denmark -14 •Labor flowed from where it
Norway -24 was abundant (cheap) to where
Sweden -20
it was scare (and expensive).
Italy -39 That is, from the Europe
Portugal -5
Spain -6
periphery to Areas of Recent
Ireland -45 Settlement (ARS).
European Indus trial Core •This raised wages in the
France -1
Germany -4
Europe periphery and led to
Great Britain -11 falling wages in ARS.
Netherlands -3
•Thus, inequality fell in the “old
Areas of Recent Settlement
Argentina 86 world” and increased in the
Aus tralia 42 “new world”
Canada 44
US 24
3
Figure 3: Int’l Capital Flows: 1880-1913
From France and Germany
From England
20% 10%
COMMONWEALTH
(esp. Canada, Australia) Balkans
Latin America
Capital flowed from where it was abundant to where it was scare. English
investors focused on Areas of Recent Settlement while French and
German investors went to developing regions on the continent.
4
Figure 4: European Trade Policy
•Tariffs were not
uniformly low in
Europe, and they rose
after 1870 (except in
England).
•The United States (not
in figure) had high
tariffs throughout the
period.
5
Figure 5: Commodity Prices Converge
ANGLO-AMERICAN COMMODITY PRICE CONVERGENCE
7
Growth Theory (cont.)
• So what explains productivity growth?
– Higher productivity (Y/L) requires better technology or
more capital (tools for workers). New and better ways of
producing goods raises productivity
• If there are no impediments to the flow and use of
technology and capital, then countries or regions
that are behind in productivity should have higher
productivity growth: they should be catching up
with rich countries!
– This is because technology should spread rapidly to poor
nations through international trade and foreign direct
investment, the internet, etc
– And capital should flow to where returns are higher (in
poorer countries where capital is scare)
8
Figure 6: Catching-up is known as the “Convergence
Hypotheses” represented graphically below
9
Figure 7: When all countries are considered, there’s
not much evidence of convergence recently
10
Figure 8: But countries that integrated with the
global economy saw large productivity gains and
grew fast
Note: Countries in the “More Globalized” group include China, Mexico, Argentina, Philippines,
Malaysia, Thailand, India, Bangladesh and Brazil.
Source: David Dollar and Art Kraay, “Trade, Growth, and Poverty.” 2001
11
Reasons for lack of catching up