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Summary - Unit 4 ECON4 - Economics: International Trade £7.66
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Summary - Unit 4 ECON4 - Economics: International Trade

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Detailed notes on international trade using the AQA Macroeconomic A level specification.

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  • August 7, 2024
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MACRO 15

INTERNATIONAL TRADE



Trade blocs

 3 main types
 Preferential trade agreements between countries where trade
barriers are reduced on some but not all goods
 Free trade agreements
 Customs union



International Trade

 Different factor endowments mean some countries can produce
goods and services more efficiently than others
 Absolute advantage
o Country is able to produce more of a good or service with the
same amount of resources or same amount of good or service
with fewer resources
 Comparative advantage
o Country can produce goods at lower opportunity cost
o Sacrifices less resources in production
o More important
o Opportunity cost = sacrifice / gain
 There can be gains from trade if each country specialises in the
production of the product in which it has the lower opportunity cost



Limitations of the theory of comparative advantage

 Assumes goods are homogenous
 Factors of production are assumed too be perfectly mobile
 Assumed perfect knowledge
 Governments may restrict trade
 Transport costs may outweigh any comparative advantage
 Increased specialisation may lead to diseconomies of scale
 Comparative advantage measures static advantage but not dynamic
advantage
o India could become good at producing books if it made
investment

, Terms of trade

 Measures rate of exchange of one good or service for another
 Terms of trade must lie within the opportunity cost ratios for both
countries for international trade to be mutually beneficial
 Calculate terms of trade as index number
 Terms of trade = 100 x average export price index / average import
price index
 If export prices are rising faster than import prices terms of trade
index will rise
o Fewer exports have to be given up in exchange for a given
volume of imports
 If import prices rise faster than export prices the terms of trade
deteriorate
o More exports have to be sold to finance a given amount of
imported goods and services
 Terms of trade fluctuate in line with changes in export and import
prices
 Exchange rate and rate of inflation can both influence direction of
any change in terms of trade



The distinction between comparative and absolute advantage

 Absolute advantage
o When a country can supply a product using fewer resources
than another nation
o If a country is using the same factors of production and can
produce more of a product it has absolute advantage
 Comparative advantage
o The relative opportunity cost of production for a good or
service is lower in one nation than another country
o Country is relatively more productively efficient than another
o Specialise scarce resources in the goods and services best at
making
o Opens up gains from specialisation and trade which can lead
to a more efficient allocation of resources
 Theoretical assumptions make it unrealistic
 Constant returns to scale
o No economies of scale, would amplify gains from trade
 Perfect factor mobility
 No trade barriers
o Tariffs and quotas
 Low transportation costs

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