International Trade Theories: Laissez-Faire Approaches: in This Approach Market Forces Determine Trading
International Trade Theories: Laissez-Faire Approaches: in This Approach Market Forces Determine Trading
Absolute Advantage
This theory was developed by Adam Smith. This theory
believes that country’s wealth is based on its available
goods and services rather than on gold.
Some countries produce some goods more efficiently than
other countries.
Why the citizens of any country should have to buy
domestically produced goods when they could buy those
goods more cheaply from abroad?
Each country would specialize in those products that gave
it competitive advantage if trade were unrestricted.
Classical Trade Theories
Benefits of specialization
Labor could become more skilled by repeating the
same tasks.
Labor would not lose time in switching from the
production of one kind of product to another
Long production runs would provide incentives for
the development of more effective working methods.
Classical Trade Theories
How it works?
Country name
Costa Rica United States of America
100 resources 100 resources
4 unit = 1 ton of coffee 100 unit = 5 ton of coffee
10 unit = 1 ton of wheat 100 unit = 20 ton of wheat
Half/half
12.5 ton of coffee 2.5 of coffee
5 ton of wheat 10 tons of wheat
Total production
15 tons of coffee
15 tons of wheat
Using absolute advantage
25 tons of coffee 20 tons of wheat.
Theory of comparative advantage
How it works?
Half/half
5 tons of wheat 10 tons of coffee
5 tons of coffee 12.5 tons of wheat
Total
15 tons of coffee
17.5 tons of wheat
After comparative advantage
Costa Rica USA
10 tons of coffee 25 tons of wheat
Factor – proportion theory
Process technology:
South Asian countries use small machines that need
human labor for growing rice. Developed countries
like Italy used capital intensive method.
Product technology:
Manufacturing needs acquired advantage, large
number of skilled man power and capital.
Developed country: Acquired advantage
Developing country: Natural advantage
Neo-Factor proportion Theory
Economies of Scale: It explains that with rising output, unit cost decreases.
The producers achieve internal economies of scales. A country with large
production possesses an edge over other countries with regards to export.
However, a small country can reap such advantages if it produces exportable
in large quantities
Country similarity theory
Product differentiation:
Trade also occurs because companies differentiate
products thus creating two-way trade in similar
products.
USA: Boeing, tourism. Europe: Airbus, tourism.
The effects of cultural similarity
Spain and Latin America, France and Africa,
England and south Asia.
Country similarity theory
Specialization:
Because of natural advantages some countries are
better in producing certain things than other
countries.
When this natural advantage become countries
absolute advantage then specialization starts
Specialization makes any country better in
production by doing same thing again and again.
Gains from trade
Employment:
Professor/ secretary analogy
Professor has absolute advantage over secretary on
both research and office works. (suppose)
But professor will choose research work because
research work makes more money than office works
and create an employment for secretary.
Gains from trade