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Absolute and Comparative 
Advantage 
“To Trade or not to Trade, that 
is the question.” 
As we say in economics, it 
depends and it’s all relative
Absolute and Comparative 
Advantage 
O The US produces some bananas for 
domestic consumption, but not enough to 
satisfy total demand for bananas. 
O Question: Could we produce enough IF we 
REALLY wanted to? Yes, we could probably 
even produce MORE bananas than, say, 
Guatemala where they grow easily. We 
have the technology and know-how BUT is 
it a good idea to use our scare resources to 
do so?
Absolute and Comparative 
Advantage 
O Guatemala produces some medicines for 
domestic consumption, but not enough to 
satisfy total demand for medicines. 
O Question: Could they produce enough IF 
they REALLY wanted to? Yes, they probably 
could produce enough for domestic 
consumption BUT is it a good idea to use 
their scare resources to do so?
Absolute and Comparative 
Advantage 
O A BETTER IDEA!! 
O Why don’t the US and Guatemala specialize in 
what they produce MORE efficiently rather 
than use scarce societal resources to produce 
something they are not so good at producing, 
and then TRADE with each other? 
O THIS is the fundamental principle behind the 
concept of COMPARATIVE ADVANTAGE 
O Are you ready to see how this works???
Absolute and Comparative 
Advantage 
O What follows is an analysis of 2 
economies---Country “A” and Country “B”. 
Assume they produce just 2 goods: 
O Cloth 
O Wine 
O Assume each country has different 
resources that vary in quantity and quality 
to produce these 2 goods
Given its resource endowment, if 
Country “A” allocates all it resources 
to the production of Cloth, it can 
produce 10 yards of cloth.
Given its resource endowment, if 
Country “A” allocates all it resources 
to the production of Wine, it can 
produce 20 gallons of Wine.
If we connect these two extreme points 
will have a Straight Line PPF. Country “A” 
has the ability to produce combinations 
of Cloth and Wine anyplace ON this PPF
Let’s assume Country “A” chooses to produce a 
balance of Cloth and Wine with their given 
resources. They make the Allocative Efficiency 
decision to produce 5 yards of Cloth and 10 
gallons of Wine
Given its resource endowment, if 
Country “B” allocates all it resources 
to the production of Cloth, it can 
produce 20 yards of cloth.
Given its resource endowment, if 
Country “B” allocates all it resources 
to the production of Wine, it can 
produce 20 gallons of Wine.
If we connect these two extreme points 
will have a Straight Line PPF. Country “B” 
has the ability to produce combinations 
of Cloth and Wine anyplace ON this PPF
Let’s assume Country “B” chooses to produce a 
balance of Cloth and Wine with their given 
resources. They make the Allocative Efficiency 
decision to produce 10 yards of Cloth and 10 
gallons of Wine
The first concept we want to define is ABSOLUTE 
ADVANTAGE. 
Absolute Advantage: Given its respective societal resources 
which country, in absolute terms, can produce more of one 
good than the other country.
Look at cloth production for each country. “A” can produce 10 yards 
of cloth if it allocated all of its scarce resources to the production of 
cloth. “B” can produce 20 yards of cloth if it allocates all of its scarce 
resources to the production of cloth. 
Country “B” can ABSOLUTELY produce more cloth than “A” 
Country “B” is said to have the ABSOLUTE ADVANTAGE in the 
production of Cloth
Look at wine production for each country. “A” can produce 20 gallons 
of Wine if it allocated all of its scarce resources to the production of 
wine. “B” can produce 20 gallons of Wine if it allocates all of its 
scarce resources to the production of Wine. 
In this case NEITHER country has produces more Wine that the other 
Neither country is said to have the ABSOLUTE ADVANTAGE in the 
production of Wine
Currently each country is in a state of 
“Autrarky”. This is a fancy way of saying 
they are Closed Economys and they do 
not engage in trade---they are “self-sufficient”
Assume each country is exploring the possibility of engaging in trade with each other. However, 
they are not sure which good, cloth or wine, they are better (or more efficient) at producing 
relative to the other country. 
In other words, is there one good that each country would be better off specializing 
in and then trading some of it away for the good they are not so efficient at 
producing? 
To help them decide, we are going to (1) calculate their “internal” opportunity costs of 
producing each good and (2) then compare those Opportunity Costs relative to EACH OTHER 
across their borders.
The first thing we want to do is organize our production data for each country. I like 
to use this graphic organizer below. Notice I have put each countries production 
data (from the Graphs) in the appropriate category and inserted blank boxes where 
we are going to calculate our Internal Opportunity Costs. We will then use those 
Opportunity Costs to compare each country across borders---The RED line 
represents the border between Country “A” and “B”.
Our first calculation will be to calculate Country “A”’s Opportunity Cost of producing 
Cloth in terms of Wine. 
In other words, to get cloth how much in wine production does “A” have to give up. 
Below we set 10 Cloths “10C” to 20 Wines “20W”
If we divide both sides by 10 we will reduce our ratio to a single unit on the left side. This 
Is what we want---to see how much of the other good (Wine) we have to give up in order 
to get ONE yard of Cloth. When we divide “20W” by 10 we get “2W” or 2 Wines. 
So, for Country “A” to produce 1 yard of Cloth they must give up 2 gallons of Wine.
Now, we want to move to the Right and calculate Country “A”’s Opportunity Cost of 
Producing Wine in terms or Cloth---this IS just the reciprocal of what we just did for Cloth 
in terms of Wine. 
We set the ratio “20W = 10C”
If we divide both sides by 20 we will reduce our ratio to a single unit on the left side. This 
Is what we want---to see how much of the other good (Cloth) we have to give up in order to 
get ONE gallon of Wine. When we divide “10C” by 20 we get “.5W” or .50 (half) Wines. 
So, for Country “A” to produce 1 gallon of Wine they must give up .5 yards of Cloth.
Now, lets move ACROSS the border to Country “B” and perform the SAME math as we did for 
County “A”. Remember, we are calculating each countries internal Opportunity Costs of 
Producing one good in terms of the other. 
Country “B”’s Opportunity Cost of Producing Cloth in terms of Wine is “20C = 20W”
Divide each side by 20 and we are left with a simplified ratio of: 
“1C = 1W” 
Country “B”’s Opportunity Cost of producing 1 yard of Cloth is 1 gallon of 
Wine given up
Move over to the Right side and calculate Country “B”’s Opportunity Cost of 
Producing Wine in terms of Cloth---remember, it is the reciprocal of the left side. 
“20W = 20C” Divide each side by 20
Divide each side by 20 and we are left with a simplified ratio of: 
“1W = 1C” 
Country “B”’s Opportunity Cost of producing 1 yard of Cloth is they 
have to give up 1 gallon of Wine
Ok, we have calculated the INTERNAL Opportunity Costs for 
producing Cloth and Wine for both “A” and “B”. What’s next? 
Comparative Advantage 
Now, we want to “Head for the Border” and compare each 
countries Opportunity Costs for producing a good. 
Let’s look just at Cloth right now…
To Determine which country has the Comparative Advantage in the production 
of Cloth, you want to ask yourself the following question: 
Which country produces Cloth at the LOWEST OPPORTUNITY COST? 
Look at the TWO Opportunity Cost ratios we have calculated. 
Country “A” produces a yard of cloth at the expense of 2 gallons of Wine 
Country “B” produces a yard of cloth at the expense of 1 gallon of Wine. 
Given there respective resource endowment, which country can produce cloth 
at the lowest Opportunity Cost?
….That would be Country “B”. 
To produce 1 yard of Cloth they have to give up only 1 gallon of Wine 
whereas Country “A” produces 1 yard of Cloth they have to give up 2 
gallons of Wine. So, just in terms of resources given up: 
COUNTRY “B” IS MORE EFFICIENT AT PRODUCING CLOTH THAN 
COUNTY “A” therefore…. 
Country “B” should NOT produce Wine at all and SPECIALIZE in the 
production of CLOTH. They should EXPORT Cloth and IMPORT Wine 
Country “B” is said to have the Comparative Advantage in the 
Production of Cloth…
Are you STILL not sure how to find the Country with the 
Lowest Opportunity Cost in CLOTH? 
Let me give you a hint. Just look at the numbers to the 
RIGHT of the equal sign. 
Which one is SMALLER---”2W” or 1W”??? 
Easy Cheesy! “1W” is smaller so Country “B” produces Cloth 
at the Lower Opportunity Cost
Now, lets look at Wine. Same analysis as for Cloth. 
Which country produces Wine at the LOWEST OPPORTUNITY COST? 
Look at the TWO Opportunity Cost ratios we have calculated on the Right 
Country “A” produces a gallon of Wine at the expense of .50 yards of Cloth 
Country “B” produces a gallon of Wine at the expense of 1 yard of Cloth 
Given there respective resource endowment, which country can produce wine 
at the lowest Opportunity Cost?
….That would be Country “A”. 
To produce 1 gallon of WIne they have to give up only .50 yards 
of Cloth whereas Country “B” produces 1 gallon of Wine they 
have to give up 1 Cloth 
So, just in terms of resources given up: 
COUNTRY “A” IS MORE EFFICIENT AT PRODUCING WINE THAN 
COUNTY “B” therefore…. 
Country “A” should NOT produce CLOTH at all and SPECIALIZE 
in the production of WINE. They should EXPORT Wine and 
IMPORT Cloth 
Country “A” is said to have the Comparative Advantage in the 
Production of Wine…
Are you STILL not sure how to find the Country with the 
Lowest Opportunity Cost in WINE? 
Let me give you a hint. Just look at the numbers to the 
RIGHT of the equal sign. 
Which one is SMALLER---”.50C” or 1C”??? 
Easy Cheesy! “.50C” is smaller so Country “A” produces Wine 
at the Lower Opportunity Cost
What now? 
We have determined that Country “A” has the Comparative 
Advantage in the production of Cloth. They should specialize 
in producing Cloth and give up the production of Wine. 
We have determined that Country “B” has the Comparative 
Advantage in the production of Wine. They should specialize 
in producing Wine and give up the production of Cloth.
On the above graphs, we illustrate this SPECIALIZATION. The RED circles show the amount 
the country is going to produce and there is a RED line through the amount of the good the 
country is NO LONGER going to produce
5 Gallons of Wine 
To trade away 
Look just at Country “A”. They now produce 20 gallons of Wine BUT they only 
Want to CONSUME 10 gallons. This means they have a SURPLUS of 10 gallons 
Of Wine leftover that is available to trade away (EXPORT)---IF the price is right!
5 Gallons of Wine 
To trade away 
10 yards of cloth 
To trade away 
Look just at Country “B”. They now produce 20 yards of Cloth BUT they only 
Want to CONSUME 10 yards of Cloth. This means they have a SURPLUS of 10 yards 
Of Cloth leftover that is available to trade away (EXPORT)---IF the price is right!
15Gallons of Wine 
To trade away 
10 yards of cloth 
To trade away 
Now that these two countries are “ALL IN” in terms of Specialization, they must settle on 
some acceptable TERMS OF TRADE. 
In other words, they have to agree on a PRICE that works for each country to commit 
to specialize and make it worthwhile for them to SELL what they produce and BUY what 
they don’t produce. 
Read the following 2 points CAREFULLY: 
(1) If I produce something, I want to SELL it for MORE than what it costs me to produce it. 
(2) If I am going to BUY something, I want to BUY it for LESS than what I can produce it for.
Determining Acceptable Terms of Trade 
10 Gallons of Wine 
To trade away 
10 yards of cloth 
To trade away 
Lets look at CLOTH. Country “B” produces 1 yard of Cloth at a cost of 1 Wine. 
If they can sell a yard of Cloth for MORE than 1 Wine then they are better off. 
Country “A” produces a yard of Cloth at a cost of 2 Wines. If they can BUY a yard of Cloth 
For LESS than the 2 Wines if costs them to produce then they are better off. 
BOTTOMLINE: An Acceptable TERM OF TRADE will by ANY ratio of Cloth to Wine BETWEEN 
The 2 countries Opportunity Costs of producing Cloth. 
A Term of Trade ABOVE “1C=1W” and BELOW “1C = 2W”
Determining Acceptable Terms of Trade 
Lets look at CLOTH. Country “B” produces 1 yard of Cloth at a cost of 1 Wine. 
If they can sell a yard of Cloth for MORE than 1 Wine then they are better off. 
10 Gallons of Wine 
To trade away 
10 yards of cloth 
To trade away 
Country “A” produces a yard of Cloth at a cost of 2 Wines. If they can BUY a yard of Cloth 
For LESS than the 2 Wines if costs them to produce then they are better off. 
BOTTOMLINE: An Acceptable TERM OF TRADE will by ANY ratio of Cloth to Wine BETWEEN 
The 2 countries Opportunity Costs of producing Cloth. 
A Term of Trade ABOVE “1C=1W” and BELOW “1C = 2W” 
**Use the SAME methodology for Wine** 
Country “A” has the Comparative Advantage in the production of Wine. 
An Acceptable Term of Trade will be a ratio of Wine to Cloth 
Between “1W=.50C” for Country “B” and “1W = 1C” for Country “A”
10 Gallons of Wine 
To trade away 
10 yards of cloth 
To trade away 
GOT THAT???? 
Lets go back to Cloth and see how this works for Country “B”. 
Assume the Terms of Trade are “1C = 1.5W” 
Notice this is IN BETWEEN each countries Opportunity Costs. 
If Country “B” trades away the SURPLUS 10 yards of Cloth it has they 
will receive 1.5 gallons of Wine for each Cloth 
So, after Country “B” sells their Cloth to Country “A” they will now 
Be able to “consume” 15 gallons of Wine (10 yards of Cloth X 1.5 Wines)
10 Gallons of Wine 
To trade away 
10 yards of cloth 
To trade away 
Country “B” STILL consumes 10 yards of cloth 
they produced, 
BUT they trade (export) away the surplus 10 
yards for 1.5 Wines each for a total of 15 
gallons of Wine (Import). They now 
Are consuming a combination of Cloth and 
Wine OUTSIDE of their ability to produce 
it WITHOUT Specialization and Trade. 
The people of Country “B” are clearly better 
off because they get to enjoy the amount of 
cloth they want to consume PLUS extra Wine! 
15 
“B”
How is this going to work our for Country “A”? 
Acceptable Terms of Trade will be a ratio of Wine to Cloth between “1 W =.50C” And “1W = 1C”. 
Hint: If we take the RECIPROCAL of the terms of trade we used for Cloth it will fall in between the 
ratio we are looking for here. 
The Reciprocal of “1C = 1.5W” is: 
“1W = .67C” 
Country “A” can SELL 1 gallon of Wine and get .67 yards of cloth for each gallon.
If Country “A” sells (EXPORTS) its surplus 5 gallons of Wine (it still 
keeps 5 gallons for its own consumption) and can receive .67 
Cloths for each gallon (IMPORT) then it can consume 6.7 yards of 
Cloth (10 Wines X .67Cloths) It can now CONSUME a 
combination of Cloth and Wine (Point “A”) GREATER than it 
could before specialization and trade. 
Country “A” is better off as well!! 
6.70 
“A” 
15
5 Gallons of Wine 
To trade away 
10 yards of cloth 
To trade away 
15 
“B” 
6.70 
“A” 
REMEMBER: The Terms of Trade MUST fall in between each countries 
Opportunity Cost of producing the goods. 
If is falls outside, on the low side or the high side, then trade will not 
Be advantageous for BOTH countries. 
Example follows
5 Gallons of Wine 
To trade away 
10 yards of cloth 
To trade away 
15 
“B” 
6.70 
“A” 
Assume the Terms of Trade were “1C = 3W” or “1W = .33C” (reciprocals) 
This means Country “B could sell 10 yards of Cloth and get 30 Wines. 
They are CLEARLY better off because they consumer 10 yards of Cloth 
And 30 gallons of Wine 
What about Country “A”?
5 Gallons of Wine 
To trade away 
10 yards of cloth 
To trade away 
15 
“B” 
6.70 
“A” 
Assume the Terms of Trade were “1C = 3W” or “1W = .33C” (reciprocals) 
Country “A” at the current terms of trade would sell it surplus 5 yards of Cloth 
For .33 gallons of Wine for a total of 1.65 gallons of Wine. 
WITHOUT TRADE, Country “A” produces 5 gallons of wine with its resources. 
These terms of trade are NOT Advantageous to “A” so trade will not occur
6.70 
“B” 
“A” 
15 
Summation: 
Even if a country, given its resource endowment, can produce 
more of a good relative to what another country can produce 
with its resource endowment, BOTH countries can benefit by 
specializing in the production of the good in which they have the 
COMPARATIVE ADVANTAGE. 
“Do what you do best and trade for the rest”
Absolute and comparative advantage
Absolute and comparative advantage

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Absolute and comparative advantage

  • 1. Absolute and Comparative Advantage “To Trade or not to Trade, that is the question.” As we say in economics, it depends and it’s all relative
  • 2. Absolute and Comparative Advantage O The US produces some bananas for domestic consumption, but not enough to satisfy total demand for bananas. O Question: Could we produce enough IF we REALLY wanted to? Yes, we could probably even produce MORE bananas than, say, Guatemala where they grow easily. We have the technology and know-how BUT is it a good idea to use our scare resources to do so?
  • 3. Absolute and Comparative Advantage O Guatemala produces some medicines for domestic consumption, but not enough to satisfy total demand for medicines. O Question: Could they produce enough IF they REALLY wanted to? Yes, they probably could produce enough for domestic consumption BUT is it a good idea to use their scare resources to do so?
  • 4. Absolute and Comparative Advantage O A BETTER IDEA!! O Why don’t the US and Guatemala specialize in what they produce MORE efficiently rather than use scarce societal resources to produce something they are not so good at producing, and then TRADE with each other? O THIS is the fundamental principle behind the concept of COMPARATIVE ADVANTAGE O Are you ready to see how this works???
  • 5.
  • 6. Absolute and Comparative Advantage O What follows is an analysis of 2 economies---Country “A” and Country “B”. Assume they produce just 2 goods: O Cloth O Wine O Assume each country has different resources that vary in quantity and quality to produce these 2 goods
  • 7. Given its resource endowment, if Country “A” allocates all it resources to the production of Cloth, it can produce 10 yards of cloth.
  • 8. Given its resource endowment, if Country “A” allocates all it resources to the production of Wine, it can produce 20 gallons of Wine.
  • 9. If we connect these two extreme points will have a Straight Line PPF. Country “A” has the ability to produce combinations of Cloth and Wine anyplace ON this PPF
  • 10. Let’s assume Country “A” chooses to produce a balance of Cloth and Wine with their given resources. They make the Allocative Efficiency decision to produce 5 yards of Cloth and 10 gallons of Wine
  • 11. Given its resource endowment, if Country “B” allocates all it resources to the production of Cloth, it can produce 20 yards of cloth.
  • 12. Given its resource endowment, if Country “B” allocates all it resources to the production of Wine, it can produce 20 gallons of Wine.
  • 13. If we connect these two extreme points will have a Straight Line PPF. Country “B” has the ability to produce combinations of Cloth and Wine anyplace ON this PPF
  • 14. Let’s assume Country “B” chooses to produce a balance of Cloth and Wine with their given resources. They make the Allocative Efficiency decision to produce 10 yards of Cloth and 10 gallons of Wine
  • 15. The first concept we want to define is ABSOLUTE ADVANTAGE. Absolute Advantage: Given its respective societal resources which country, in absolute terms, can produce more of one good than the other country.
  • 16. Look at cloth production for each country. “A” can produce 10 yards of cloth if it allocated all of its scarce resources to the production of cloth. “B” can produce 20 yards of cloth if it allocates all of its scarce resources to the production of cloth. Country “B” can ABSOLUTELY produce more cloth than “A” Country “B” is said to have the ABSOLUTE ADVANTAGE in the production of Cloth
  • 17. Look at wine production for each country. “A” can produce 20 gallons of Wine if it allocated all of its scarce resources to the production of wine. “B” can produce 20 gallons of Wine if it allocates all of its scarce resources to the production of Wine. In this case NEITHER country has produces more Wine that the other Neither country is said to have the ABSOLUTE ADVANTAGE in the production of Wine
  • 18. Currently each country is in a state of “Autrarky”. This is a fancy way of saying they are Closed Economys and they do not engage in trade---they are “self-sufficient”
  • 19. Assume each country is exploring the possibility of engaging in trade with each other. However, they are not sure which good, cloth or wine, they are better (or more efficient) at producing relative to the other country. In other words, is there one good that each country would be better off specializing in and then trading some of it away for the good they are not so efficient at producing? To help them decide, we are going to (1) calculate their “internal” opportunity costs of producing each good and (2) then compare those Opportunity Costs relative to EACH OTHER across their borders.
  • 20. The first thing we want to do is organize our production data for each country. I like to use this graphic organizer below. Notice I have put each countries production data (from the Graphs) in the appropriate category and inserted blank boxes where we are going to calculate our Internal Opportunity Costs. We will then use those Opportunity Costs to compare each country across borders---The RED line represents the border between Country “A” and “B”.
  • 21. Our first calculation will be to calculate Country “A”’s Opportunity Cost of producing Cloth in terms of Wine. In other words, to get cloth how much in wine production does “A” have to give up. Below we set 10 Cloths “10C” to 20 Wines “20W”
  • 22. If we divide both sides by 10 we will reduce our ratio to a single unit on the left side. This Is what we want---to see how much of the other good (Wine) we have to give up in order to get ONE yard of Cloth. When we divide “20W” by 10 we get “2W” or 2 Wines. So, for Country “A” to produce 1 yard of Cloth they must give up 2 gallons of Wine.
  • 23. Now, we want to move to the Right and calculate Country “A”’s Opportunity Cost of Producing Wine in terms or Cloth---this IS just the reciprocal of what we just did for Cloth in terms of Wine. We set the ratio “20W = 10C”
  • 24. If we divide both sides by 20 we will reduce our ratio to a single unit on the left side. This Is what we want---to see how much of the other good (Cloth) we have to give up in order to get ONE gallon of Wine. When we divide “10C” by 20 we get “.5W” or .50 (half) Wines. So, for Country “A” to produce 1 gallon of Wine they must give up .5 yards of Cloth.
  • 25. Now, lets move ACROSS the border to Country “B” and perform the SAME math as we did for County “A”. Remember, we are calculating each countries internal Opportunity Costs of Producing one good in terms of the other. Country “B”’s Opportunity Cost of Producing Cloth in terms of Wine is “20C = 20W”
  • 26. Divide each side by 20 and we are left with a simplified ratio of: “1C = 1W” Country “B”’s Opportunity Cost of producing 1 yard of Cloth is 1 gallon of Wine given up
  • 27. Move over to the Right side and calculate Country “B”’s Opportunity Cost of Producing Wine in terms of Cloth---remember, it is the reciprocal of the left side. “20W = 20C” Divide each side by 20
  • 28. Divide each side by 20 and we are left with a simplified ratio of: “1W = 1C” Country “B”’s Opportunity Cost of producing 1 yard of Cloth is they have to give up 1 gallon of Wine
  • 29. Ok, we have calculated the INTERNAL Opportunity Costs for producing Cloth and Wine for both “A” and “B”. What’s next? Comparative Advantage Now, we want to “Head for the Border” and compare each countries Opportunity Costs for producing a good. Let’s look just at Cloth right now…
  • 30. To Determine which country has the Comparative Advantage in the production of Cloth, you want to ask yourself the following question: Which country produces Cloth at the LOWEST OPPORTUNITY COST? Look at the TWO Opportunity Cost ratios we have calculated. Country “A” produces a yard of cloth at the expense of 2 gallons of Wine Country “B” produces a yard of cloth at the expense of 1 gallon of Wine. Given there respective resource endowment, which country can produce cloth at the lowest Opportunity Cost?
  • 31. ….That would be Country “B”. To produce 1 yard of Cloth they have to give up only 1 gallon of Wine whereas Country “A” produces 1 yard of Cloth they have to give up 2 gallons of Wine. So, just in terms of resources given up: COUNTRY “B” IS MORE EFFICIENT AT PRODUCING CLOTH THAN COUNTY “A” therefore…. Country “B” should NOT produce Wine at all and SPECIALIZE in the production of CLOTH. They should EXPORT Cloth and IMPORT Wine Country “B” is said to have the Comparative Advantage in the Production of Cloth…
  • 32. Are you STILL not sure how to find the Country with the Lowest Opportunity Cost in CLOTH? Let me give you a hint. Just look at the numbers to the RIGHT of the equal sign. Which one is SMALLER---”2W” or 1W”??? Easy Cheesy! “1W” is smaller so Country “B” produces Cloth at the Lower Opportunity Cost
  • 33. Now, lets look at Wine. Same analysis as for Cloth. Which country produces Wine at the LOWEST OPPORTUNITY COST? Look at the TWO Opportunity Cost ratios we have calculated on the Right Country “A” produces a gallon of Wine at the expense of .50 yards of Cloth Country “B” produces a gallon of Wine at the expense of 1 yard of Cloth Given there respective resource endowment, which country can produce wine at the lowest Opportunity Cost?
  • 34. ….That would be Country “A”. To produce 1 gallon of WIne they have to give up only .50 yards of Cloth whereas Country “B” produces 1 gallon of Wine they have to give up 1 Cloth So, just in terms of resources given up: COUNTRY “A” IS MORE EFFICIENT AT PRODUCING WINE THAN COUNTY “B” therefore…. Country “A” should NOT produce CLOTH at all and SPECIALIZE in the production of WINE. They should EXPORT Wine and IMPORT Cloth Country “A” is said to have the Comparative Advantage in the Production of Wine…
  • 35. Are you STILL not sure how to find the Country with the Lowest Opportunity Cost in WINE? Let me give you a hint. Just look at the numbers to the RIGHT of the equal sign. Which one is SMALLER---”.50C” or 1C”??? Easy Cheesy! “.50C” is smaller so Country “A” produces Wine at the Lower Opportunity Cost
  • 36. What now? We have determined that Country “A” has the Comparative Advantage in the production of Cloth. They should specialize in producing Cloth and give up the production of Wine. We have determined that Country “B” has the Comparative Advantage in the production of Wine. They should specialize in producing Wine and give up the production of Cloth.
  • 37. On the above graphs, we illustrate this SPECIALIZATION. The RED circles show the amount the country is going to produce and there is a RED line through the amount of the good the country is NO LONGER going to produce
  • 38. 5 Gallons of Wine To trade away Look just at Country “A”. They now produce 20 gallons of Wine BUT they only Want to CONSUME 10 gallons. This means they have a SURPLUS of 10 gallons Of Wine leftover that is available to trade away (EXPORT)---IF the price is right!
  • 39. 5 Gallons of Wine To trade away 10 yards of cloth To trade away Look just at Country “B”. They now produce 20 yards of Cloth BUT they only Want to CONSUME 10 yards of Cloth. This means they have a SURPLUS of 10 yards Of Cloth leftover that is available to trade away (EXPORT)---IF the price is right!
  • 40. 15Gallons of Wine To trade away 10 yards of cloth To trade away Now that these two countries are “ALL IN” in terms of Specialization, they must settle on some acceptable TERMS OF TRADE. In other words, they have to agree on a PRICE that works for each country to commit to specialize and make it worthwhile for them to SELL what they produce and BUY what they don’t produce. Read the following 2 points CAREFULLY: (1) If I produce something, I want to SELL it for MORE than what it costs me to produce it. (2) If I am going to BUY something, I want to BUY it for LESS than what I can produce it for.
  • 41. Determining Acceptable Terms of Trade 10 Gallons of Wine To trade away 10 yards of cloth To trade away Lets look at CLOTH. Country “B” produces 1 yard of Cloth at a cost of 1 Wine. If they can sell a yard of Cloth for MORE than 1 Wine then they are better off. Country “A” produces a yard of Cloth at a cost of 2 Wines. If they can BUY a yard of Cloth For LESS than the 2 Wines if costs them to produce then they are better off. BOTTOMLINE: An Acceptable TERM OF TRADE will by ANY ratio of Cloth to Wine BETWEEN The 2 countries Opportunity Costs of producing Cloth. A Term of Trade ABOVE “1C=1W” and BELOW “1C = 2W”
  • 42. Determining Acceptable Terms of Trade Lets look at CLOTH. Country “B” produces 1 yard of Cloth at a cost of 1 Wine. If they can sell a yard of Cloth for MORE than 1 Wine then they are better off. 10 Gallons of Wine To trade away 10 yards of cloth To trade away Country “A” produces a yard of Cloth at a cost of 2 Wines. If they can BUY a yard of Cloth For LESS than the 2 Wines if costs them to produce then they are better off. BOTTOMLINE: An Acceptable TERM OF TRADE will by ANY ratio of Cloth to Wine BETWEEN The 2 countries Opportunity Costs of producing Cloth. A Term of Trade ABOVE “1C=1W” and BELOW “1C = 2W” **Use the SAME methodology for Wine** Country “A” has the Comparative Advantage in the production of Wine. An Acceptable Term of Trade will be a ratio of Wine to Cloth Between “1W=.50C” for Country “B” and “1W = 1C” for Country “A”
  • 43. 10 Gallons of Wine To trade away 10 yards of cloth To trade away GOT THAT???? Lets go back to Cloth and see how this works for Country “B”. Assume the Terms of Trade are “1C = 1.5W” Notice this is IN BETWEEN each countries Opportunity Costs. If Country “B” trades away the SURPLUS 10 yards of Cloth it has they will receive 1.5 gallons of Wine for each Cloth So, after Country “B” sells their Cloth to Country “A” they will now Be able to “consume” 15 gallons of Wine (10 yards of Cloth X 1.5 Wines)
  • 44. 10 Gallons of Wine To trade away 10 yards of cloth To trade away Country “B” STILL consumes 10 yards of cloth they produced, BUT they trade (export) away the surplus 10 yards for 1.5 Wines each for a total of 15 gallons of Wine (Import). They now Are consuming a combination of Cloth and Wine OUTSIDE of their ability to produce it WITHOUT Specialization and Trade. The people of Country “B” are clearly better off because they get to enjoy the amount of cloth they want to consume PLUS extra Wine! 15 “B”
  • 45. How is this going to work our for Country “A”? Acceptable Terms of Trade will be a ratio of Wine to Cloth between “1 W =.50C” And “1W = 1C”. Hint: If we take the RECIPROCAL of the terms of trade we used for Cloth it will fall in between the ratio we are looking for here. The Reciprocal of “1C = 1.5W” is: “1W = .67C” Country “A” can SELL 1 gallon of Wine and get .67 yards of cloth for each gallon.
  • 46. If Country “A” sells (EXPORTS) its surplus 5 gallons of Wine (it still keeps 5 gallons for its own consumption) and can receive .67 Cloths for each gallon (IMPORT) then it can consume 6.7 yards of Cloth (10 Wines X .67Cloths) It can now CONSUME a combination of Cloth and Wine (Point “A”) GREATER than it could before specialization and trade. Country “A” is better off as well!! 6.70 “A” 15
  • 47. 5 Gallons of Wine To trade away 10 yards of cloth To trade away 15 “B” 6.70 “A” REMEMBER: The Terms of Trade MUST fall in between each countries Opportunity Cost of producing the goods. If is falls outside, on the low side or the high side, then trade will not Be advantageous for BOTH countries. Example follows
  • 48. 5 Gallons of Wine To trade away 10 yards of cloth To trade away 15 “B” 6.70 “A” Assume the Terms of Trade were “1C = 3W” or “1W = .33C” (reciprocals) This means Country “B could sell 10 yards of Cloth and get 30 Wines. They are CLEARLY better off because they consumer 10 yards of Cloth And 30 gallons of Wine What about Country “A”?
  • 49. 5 Gallons of Wine To trade away 10 yards of cloth To trade away 15 “B” 6.70 “A” Assume the Terms of Trade were “1C = 3W” or “1W = .33C” (reciprocals) Country “A” at the current terms of trade would sell it surplus 5 yards of Cloth For .33 gallons of Wine for a total of 1.65 gallons of Wine. WITHOUT TRADE, Country “A” produces 5 gallons of wine with its resources. These terms of trade are NOT Advantageous to “A” so trade will not occur
  • 50. 6.70 “B” “A” 15 Summation: Even if a country, given its resource endowment, can produce more of a good relative to what another country can produce with its resource endowment, BOTH countries can benefit by specializing in the production of the good in which they have the COMPARATIVE ADVANTAGE. “Do what you do best and trade for the rest”