Chap 1
Chap 1
why?
Chapter 1
2) Evolution and structure of
international trade and globalisation
3) Who trades with whom?
1. Evolution and structure of world
trade
• What is globalisation?
It means more intensive relations between
countries, in the area of trade in goods
and services, of mobility of men (labour)
and capital more « openness »
• Is globalisation a new phenomenon?
Lets turn to history, both old and recent
The graph below shows that there has been a first movement of
« globalisation » between 1870 and 1914 (before the first world war),
followed by a recess from 1914 to 1945, and then by a new wave of
openness since 1945 up to date
Evolution of World Trade (1870 - 1998)
100000
10000
Index base 100 in 1870
World GDP
World Exports
1000
100
1870 1913 1950 1973 1998
The table below explores a more recent period and
draws attention on differences between countries
International Trade
GDP (bn of current US dollars) (exports + imports in % of GDP)
10000
Index base 100 in 1950
100
1950 1960 1970 1980 1990 2001
Trade becomes also more and more regional: the
WTO is a multilateral agreement, but it doesnot
preclude the existence of regional agreements on
all continents of the world
BELGIUM 10 9 14 11 - - -
FRANCE 14 20 30 18 - - -
UNITED KINGDOM 0 0 - 23 - - -
7000
6000
5000
4000
3000
2000
1000
0
ly
US
UK
HK
ia
Ma s
ina
ain
Z
n
ia
rea
an
ia
Ge e
d
y
d
da
Ita
Ph sia
a
sia
o
pa
re
Ind
lan
c
Sin es
an
ia
an
ss
str
w
ali
La
an
Ch
iw
Sp
na
od
po
Ko
lay
Ne
pin
Ja
Ru
rm
ail
str
Au
Po
Ta
on
Fr
Ca
mb
ga
Th
Au
ilip
Ind
Ca
Comments of the Graph
• The larger the partner country, the larger
is trade: the USA, China, Japan trade for
ca 8 bn $, whereas Germany, Thailand
and Australia trade for 2,5 bn $
• The further is the partner country, the less
is trade: China and the UK have an
equivalent (economic) size, but Vietnam
trades much more with China. Same for
Australia and Russia.
Construction of a new graph
We calculated :
• 1) the share of trade of each partner country in
Vietnam total trade. For instance, the US, China
and Japan have each 11-12% of Vietnam total
trade
• 2) the « weight » of each partner in comparison
to Vienam’s weight; the « weight » here is the
output, the GDP. For instance, the US is 230
times as large as Vietnam, China 42 times, but
Cambodia is 1/10 of Vietnam
Two categories of partners:
neighbours and others
Vietnam Trade with neighbour countries and countries on other continents
16%
14%
USA
10%
share of country i in Vietnam total trade
SINGAPORE
8%
TAIWAN
KOREA
6%
THAILAND GERMANY
AUSTRALIA
4%
UK
2% RUSSIA FRANCE
ITALY
SPAIN
0% CANADA
0 50 100 150 200 250
GDP of country i reported to Vietanm GDP
Comment on the graph
• By building our two indexes, we take into
account that trade depends on the
economic weight of partners
• But there is another factor to take into
account: distance; it costs less to trade
with neighbours than with distant
countries. That is why the regression line
for neighbours is steeper than for distant
parners
The gravity equation
• In similarity to what exists in physics (the
discovery of Isaac Newton in the 17-th century),
economists have discovered that bilateral trade
(between two countries) depends positively on
the outputs of these countries and negatively of
their distance.
• The gravity equation takes the form
Tij = A * Yi * Yj / Dij where i and j are two countries,
T their trade, Y their GDP and D their distance
Exercise for next week
• I have recorded on an excel file trade statistics
of all countries in east and south-east Asia (up to
Australia and NZ). These data are from the IMF
DoTS for 2004
• I have also recorded the GDP of all these
countries, taken from WB data (2005)
• Your work is to find the distances in km between
all these countries
• Together, we will test the formula above,
transforming it a little: Tij/YiYj = ADij
End of lesson 1
• Are there any questions?
• Exercise: see the previous slide