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	<title>Economics in Plain English &#187; Barriers to trade</title>
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	<description>for students and teachers of Economics</description>
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	<copyright>Copyright © Economics in Plain English 2011 </copyright>
	<managingEditor>welkerswikinomics@gmail.com (Jason Welker)</managingEditor>
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	<itunes:subtitle>A podcast for students and teachers of Economics - theory, analysis, commentary</itunes:subtitle>
	<itunes:summary>A podcast for students and teachers of Economics - theory, analysis, commentary</itunes:summary>
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		<title>Trade balances around the world</title>
		<link>http://welkerswikinomics.com/blog/2011/10/31/trade-balances-around-the-world/</link>
		<comments>http://welkerswikinomics.com/blog/2011/10/31/trade-balances-around-the-world/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Mon, 31 Oct 2011 12:48:12 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Jason Welker</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Balance of Payments]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Balance of Trade]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Barriers to trade]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Current account]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Free Trade]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[International trade]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Protectionism]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://welkerswikinomics.com/blog/?p=2715</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[The table below shows the trade balances for the nations from which my year two IB Economics student come. They are ranked in order from the country whose trade deficit makes up the largest percentage of its GDP (Zimbabwe) to the country whose trade surplus makes up the largest percentage of its GDP (Germany). The [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<!-- Start Shareaholic LikeButtonSetTop Automatic --><!-- End Shareaholic LikeButtonSetTop Automatic --><p>The table below shows the trade balances for the nations from which my year two IB Economics student come. They are ranked in order from the country whose <a class="glossaryLink" href="http://welkerswikinomics.com/blog/glossary/trade-deficit/" title="Glossary: Trade deficit" onmouseover="tooltip.show('When a country’s total spending on imported goods and services exceeds its total revenues from the sale of exports to the rest of the world. Another term for current account deficit in the balance of payments.');" onmouseout="tooltip.hide();">trade deficit</a> makes up the largest percentage of its GDP (Zimbabwe) to the country whose <a class="glossaryLink" href="http://welkerswikinomics.com/blog/glossary/trade-surplus/" title="Glossary: Trade surplus" onmouseover="tooltip.show('When a country’s sale of exports exceeds its spending on imports. Another term for a current account surplus in the balance of payments.');" onmouseout="tooltip.hide();">trade <a class="glossaryLink" href="http://welkerswikinomics.com/blog/glossary/surplus/" title="Glossary: Surplus" onmouseover="tooltip.show('When the quantity supplied of a good is greater than the quantity demanded. Also called "excess supply". A surplus will occur if the price in a market is greater than the equilibrium price, for example, due to a government price floor.');" onmouseout="tooltip.hide();">surplus</a></a> makes up the largest percentage of its GDP (Germany). The blue bars represent the value of the deficit or surplus of each nation. As can be seen, Zimbabwe&#8217;s trade deficit is very small in dollar terms, but since its economy is also very small this deficit makes up a large percentage of its total GDP. Click on the image to visit an interactive version of the chart on which you can study the data more closely. Then answer the questions that follow.<br />
<a href="https://docs.google.com/spreadsheet/ccc?key=0Ai8gRqMjh103dHpzalVtdExockNRbVVzUHBhTkpudlE" target="_blank"><img src="https://docs.google.com/spreadsheet/oimg?key=0Ai8gRqMjh103dHpzalVtdExockNRbVVzUHBhTkpudlE&amp;oid=4&amp;zx=sz08gjis13i9" alt="" /></a><br />
<strong>Discussion Questions:</strong></p>
<ol>
<li>Identify and define the four components of an nation&#8217;s <a class="glossaryLink" href="http://welkerswikinomics.com/blog/glossary/current-account/" title="Glossary: Current account" onmouseover="tooltip.show('Measures the balance of trade in goods and services and the flow of income between one nation and all other nations. It also records monetary gifts or grants that flow into our out of a country.');" onmouseout="tooltip.hide();">current account</a> balance.</li>
<li>According to the data, which three countries are the most import dependent? Which three countries are the most export dependent? Which country has the <em>most </em>balance trade in <a class="glossaryLink" href="http://welkerswikinomics.com/blog/glossary/goods/" title="Glossary: Goods" onmouseover="tooltip.show('The physical output of a firm producing a product meant for sale and consumption in a product market. Contrast with services, which are non-physical products produced and sold by firms to consumers.');" onmouseout="tooltip.hide();">goods</a> and <a class="glossaryLink" href="http://welkerswikinomics.com/blog/glossary/services/" title="Glossary: Services" onmouseover="tooltip.show('The non-physical output of firms meant for consumption in a product market. Services are "non-tangible" goods, such as taxi rides, accounting, doctor visits, teaching, and other products that can be bought and sold, but not physically consumed.');" onmouseout="tooltip.hide();">services</a>? Which has the <em>most imbalanced</em> trade?</li>
<li>If your country is one of deficit countries above, answer the following two questions:</li>
<ol>
<li>Assuming its currencies&#8217; <a class="glossaryLink" href="http://welkerswikinomics.com/blog/glossary/exchange-rate/" title="Glossary: Exchange rate" onmouseover="tooltip.show('The price of one currency in terms expressed in terms of another currency, determined in the forex market.');" onmouseout="tooltip.hide();">exchange rates</a> is floating, explain how persistent current account deficits will affect a country&#8217;s exchange rate over time?</li>
<li>Summarize and explain the likely effects of a current account deficit on the following: a) the <a class="glossaryLink" href="http://welkerswikinomics.com/blog/glossary/financial-account/" title="Glossary: Financial account" onmouseover="tooltip.show('Measures the flow of funds for investment in real assets (such as factories or office building) or financial assets (such as stocks and bonds) between a nation and the rest of the world.');" onmouseout="tooltip.hide();">financial account</a> balance, b) domestic <a class="glossaryLink" href="http://welkerswikinomics.com/blog/glossary/interest-rate/" title="Glossary: Interest rate" onmouseover="tooltip.show('The opportunity cost of money. Either the cost of borrowing money or the cost of spending money. What would be given up by not saving money.');" onmouseout="tooltip.hide();"><a class="glossaryLink" href="http://welkerswikinomics.com/blog/glossary/interest/" title="Glossary: Interest" onmouseover="tooltip.show('The payment for capital in the resource market. Firms pay interest on the money they borrow to acquire capital equipment (technology). Households receive interest for providing their savings to banks, who make the loans to the firms paying interest.');" onmouseout="tooltip.hide();">interest</a> rates</a>, and c) national debt.</li>
</ol>
<li>If your country is one of the surplus countries above, answer the following two questions:</li>
<ol>
<li>Assuming its currencies&#8217; exchange rates is floating, explain how persistent current account surpluses will affect a country&#8217;s exchange rate over time?</li>
<li>Summarize and explain the likely effects of a <a class="glossaryLink" href="http://welkerswikinomics.com/blog/glossary/current-account-surplus/" title="Glossary: Current account surplus" onmouseover="tooltip.show('When the value of a nation's exports to the rest of the world exceeds the value of its imports from the rest of the world. Also called a trade surplus.');" onmouseout="tooltip.hide();">current account surplus</a> on the following: a) domestic savings rates, b) the financial account balance.</li>
</ol>
<li>What are the various methods a country can take to reduce a <a class="glossaryLink" href="http://welkerswikinomics.com/blog/glossary/current-account-deficit/" title="Glossary: Current account deficit" onmouseover="tooltip.show('When the value of a nation's imports from abroad exceeds the value of the exports from that nation to the rest of the world. Also called a trade deficit.');" onmouseout="tooltip.hide();">current account deficit</a>? What is the benefit of having a balanced current account as opposed to a large deficit or surplus?</li>
</ol><div class="shr-publisher-2715"></div><!-- Start Shareaholic LikeButtonSetBottom Automatic --><!-- End Shareaholic LikeButtonSetBottom Automatic --><p>Related posts:<ol>
<li><a href='http://welkerswikinomics.com/blog/2010/11/10/yeah-we-have-a-trade-deficit-so-what/' rel='bookmark' title='Yeah, we have a trade deficit, SO WHAT?!'>Yeah, we have a trade deficit, SO WHAT?!</a></li>
<li><a href='http://welkerswikinomics.com/blog/2008/12/12/the-marshall-lerner-condition-the-j-curve-and-the-us-trade-deficit/' rel='bookmark' title='The Marshall-Lerner Condition, the J-curve, and the US trade deficit'>The Marshall-Lerner Condition, the J-curve, and the US trade deficit</a></li>
<li><a href='http://welkerswikinomics.com/blog/2010/04/16/tradesurplus/' rel='bookmark' title='Trade surpluses are not all they&#8217;re cracked up to be!'>Trade surpluses are not all they&#8217;re cracked up to be!</a></li>
</ol></p>]]></content:encoded>
			<wfw:commentRss>http://welkerswikinomics.com/blog/2011/10/31/trade-balances-around-the-world/feed/</wfw:commentRss>
		<slash:comments>0</slash:comments>
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		<item>
		<title>Protectionism&#8217;s many weaknesses</title>
		<link>http://welkerswikinomics.com/blog/2011/09/29/protectionisms-many-weaknesses/</link>
		<comments>http://welkerswikinomics.com/blog/2011/09/29/protectionisms-many-weaknesses/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Thu, 29 Sep 2011 10:15:46 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Jason Welker</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Barriers to trade]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Free Trade]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Globalization]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Protection]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Protectionism]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Tariffs]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Trade]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://welkerswikinomics.com/blog/?p=2557</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[After our lesson on tariffs and protectionism the other day, one of my year 2 IB Econ students emailed me with a few questions she had not had the chance to ask in class. I thought I&#8217;d post my responses here, since they were such good questions! Question: Hi Mr Welker, I asked this on Monday’s blog about self-sufficiency, [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<!-- Start Shareaholic LikeButtonSetTop Automatic --><!-- End Shareaholic LikeButtonSetTop Automatic --><p>After our lesson on <a class="glossaryLink" href="http://welkerswikinomics.com/blog/glossary/tariff/" title="Glossary: Tariff" onmouseover="tooltip.show('Taxes placed on goods imported from other countries. Meant to protect domestic producers from foreign competition.');" onmouseout="tooltip.hide();">tariffs</a> and <a class="glossaryLink" href="http://welkerswikinomics.com/blog/glossary/protectionism/" title="Glossary: Protectionism" onmouseover="tooltip.show('Protectionism: The use of tariffs, quotas or subsidies to give domestic producers a competitive advantage over foreign producers. Meant to protect domestic production and employment from foreign competition.');" onmouseout="tooltip.hide();">protectionism</a> the other day, one of my year 2 IB Econ students emailed me with a few questions she had not had the chance to ask in class. I thought I&#8217;d post my responses here, since they were such good questions!</p>
<blockquote><p><strong>Question: </strong>Hi Mr Welker, I asked this on Monday’s blog about self-sufficiency, but no one answered my question and I have been meaning to ask this in class but I always get distracted and I forget. And perhaps you have already answered this, pardon me if you have.</p>
<p>Since <a class="glossaryLink" href="http://welkerswikinomics.com/blog/glossary/exports/" title="Glossary: Exports" onmouseover="tooltip.show('The spending by foreigners on domestically produced goods and services. Counts as an injection into a nation’s circular flow of income.');" onmouseout="tooltip.hide();">Exports</a> and <a class="glossaryLink" href="http://welkerswikinomics.com/blog/glossary/investment/" title="Glossary: Investment" onmouseover="tooltip.show('A component of aggregate demand, it includes all spending on capital equipment, inventories, and technology by firms. This does not include financial investment, which is the purchase of financial assets (stocks and bonds), not included in GDP because they are only purely financial investments.');" onmouseout="tooltip.hide();">Investment</a> have a great effect on <a class="glossaryLink" href="http://welkerswikinomics.com/blog/glossary/economic-growth/" title="Glossary: Economic growth" onmouseover="tooltip.show('An increase in the output of goods and services in a nation between two periods of time.');" onmouseout="tooltip.hide();">economic growth</a>, why would a government want to protect its nation by imposing barriers to trade? Because by doing so, foreign firms cannot invest in that nation and potentially create job opportunities and also contribute to that nations GDP since, even though it’s a foreign investment, the revenue is collected by that government.</p></blockquote>
<p><strong>Answer: </strong>Protectionism is not typically aimed at reducing the amount of exports from the nation engaging in it, rather reducing the amount of <a class="glossaryLink" href="http://welkerswikinomics.com/blog/glossary/imports/" title="Glossary: Imports" onmouseover="tooltip.show('Spending on goods and services produced in foreign nations. Counts as a leakage from a nation’s circular flow of income.');" onmouseout="tooltip.hide();">imports</a> or promoting increased exports. You’re exactly right that exports and investment contribute to aggregate <a class="glossaryLink" href="http://welkerswikinomics.com/blog/glossary/demand/" title="Glossary: Demand" onmouseover="tooltip.show('A schedule or curve showing the quantities of a particular good demanded at a range of price in a particular period of time.');" onmouseout="tooltip.hide();">demand</a> (and therefore economic growth and employment) in a nation. But imports are a ‘leakage’ from the nation&#8217;s economy, and the greater the level of import spending, the lower a nation’s <a class="glossaryLink" href="http://welkerswikinomics.com/blog/glossary/net-exports/" title="Glossary: Net exports" onmouseover="tooltip.show('A component of aggregate demand. Equals the income earned from the sale of exports to the rest of the world minus expenditures by domestic consumers on imports.');" onmouseout="tooltip.hide();">net exports</a>. A nation with a <a class="glossaryLink" href="http://welkerswikinomics.com/blog/glossary/trade-deficit/" title="Glossary: Trade deficit" onmouseover="tooltip.show('When a country’s total spending on imported goods and services exceeds its total revenues from the sale of exports to the rest of the world. Another term for current account deficit in the balance of payments.');" onmouseout="tooltip.hide();">trade deficit</a> actually experiences negative net exports. The purpose of protectionism is to reduce import spending, or increase export revenues, and thereby increase net exports and <a class="glossaryLink" href="http://welkerswikinomics.com/blog/glossary/aggregate-demand/" title="Glossary: Aggregate Demand" onmouseover="tooltip.show('A schedule or curve which shows the total demand for the goods and services of a nation at a range of price levels and at a given period of time.');" onmouseout="tooltip.hide();">aggregate demand</a> and employment in the nation.</p>
<p>As for foreign investment, one of the consequences of a large trade deficit is increased foreign ownership of domestic resources or <a class="glossaryLink" href="http://welkerswikinomics.com/blog/glossary/factors-of-production/" title="Glossary: Factors of Production" onmouseover="tooltip.show('Include the human and natural resource needed to produce any good or service: Land, labor, capital and entrepreneurship');" onmouseout="tooltip.hide();">factors of production</a>. Since a country that imports more than it exports spends more on foreign <a class="glossaryLink" href="http://welkerswikinomics.com/blog/glossary/goods/" title="Glossary: Goods" onmouseover="tooltip.show('The physical output of a firm producing a product meant for sale and consumption in a product market. Contrast with services, which are non-physical products produced and sold by firms to consumers.');" onmouseout="tooltip.hide();">goods</a> than it earns from the sale of its own goods to foreigners, foreign governments and firms end up with large amounts of that country’s <a class="glossaryLink" href="http://welkerswikinomics.com/blog/glossary/money/" title="Glossary: Money" onmouseover="tooltip.show('Any object that can be used to facilitate the exchange of goods and services in a market.');" onmouseout="tooltip.hide();">money</a> that is NOT being spent on that country’s goods. Much of this ends up back in the deficit country as foreign investment. Sometimes foreigners will buy government <a class="glossaryLink" href="http://welkerswikinomics.com/blog/glossary/bond/" title="Glossary: Bond" onmouseover="tooltip.show('hA certificate of debt issued by a company or a government to an investor.');" onmouseout="tooltip.hide();">bonds</a> (invest in the deficit country’s debt, in other words), but sometimes the money comes back home as foreigners buying up factories and real estate. Foreign investment may indeed help create jobs at home, but so does domestic investment, and when foreigners invest it means the country’s resources are now owned by <a class="glossaryLink" href="http://welkerswikinomics.com/blog/glossary/interest/" title="Glossary: Interest" onmouseover="tooltip.show('The payment for capital in the resource market. Firms pay interest on the money they borrow to acquire capital equipment (technology). Households receive interest for providing their savings to banks, who make the loans to the firms paying interest.');" onmouseout="tooltip.hide();">interests</a> abroad, which many countries view as a threat to their national and economic security. This can also serve as a justification for protectionism: to prevent foreign ownership of domestic assets.</p>
<blockquote><p><strong>Question: </strong>Also if the country is not exporting, it’s not enjoying the benefits of revenue from exported goods that could boost their economic growth. And anyway, isn’t the point of making money to spend it? Otherwise what is the <a class="glossaryLink" href="http://welkerswikinomics.com/blog/glossary/incentive/" title="Glossary: Incentive" onmouseover="tooltip.show('Refers to the motivation an individual has to undertake a particular action.');" onmouseout="tooltip.hide();">incentive</a> of being employed and earning an <a class="glossaryLink" href="http://welkerswikinomics.com/blog/glossary/income/" title="Glossary: Income" onmouseover="tooltip.show('The money earned by households for providing their resources (land, labor and capital) to firms in the resource market. Incomes include wages, interest, rent and profit.');" onmouseout="tooltip.hide();">income</a>? Unless of course, one can argue that income earned can then be spent on domestically produced goods.</p></blockquote>
<p>Again, the purpose of protectionism is not to reduce a country’s exports, rather to reduce its imports and to increase its exports. But you have made a very important observation here that points to a major flaw in the argument for protectionism. The purpose of exporting goods it to make money to spend on imported goods, otherwise, WHY TRADE? A country gains from trade not only because it has a wider <a class="glossaryLink" href="http://welkerswikinomics.com/blog/glossary/market/" title="Glossary: Market" onmouseover="tooltip.show('A place where buyers and sellers meat to engage in mutual trade. Prices are set by the interaction of demand and supply in a market.');" onmouseout="tooltip.hide();">market</a> for its own goods, but because the people of the nation have a wider market from which to choose the goods they themselves can consume. When a nation erects barriers to trade, it will ultimately have the effect of reducing not only imports, but possibly the nation&#8217;s own exports. Since foreigners earn less money from selling goods to the protected nation, they have less money to spend on that nation’s goods!</p>
<p>All protectionism can hope to do is increase the welfare of particular industries while reducing the welfare of the rest of society. It is rarely justifiable on the grounds that it will increase the total welfare of society as a whole, unless of course the protected industry is one vital to national security, such as the defense sectors or the energy sector (even this one is debatable!)</p>
<blockquote><p><strong>Question: </strong>Or do <a class="glossaryLink" href="http://welkerswikinomics.com/blog/glossary/government-spending/" title="Glossary: Government spending" onmouseover="tooltip.show('A component of a nation's GDP, consisting of all expenditures made by a nation's government in a year on public goods, services and infrastructure in a nation.');" onmouseout="tooltip.hide();">government spending</a> (through subsidies, and creating job opportunities) and increased <a class="glossaryLink" href="http://welkerswikinomics.com/blog/glossary/consumption/" title="Glossary: Consumption" onmouseover="tooltip.show('A component of a nation’s aggregate demand, measures the total spending by domestic households on domestically produced goods and services.');" onmouseout="tooltip.hide();">consumption</a> due to income gains caused by government intervention overcome these factors and compensate for the lost opportunity of exports and investments.</p></blockquote>
<p>Increasing government spending to off-set the fall in social welfare resulting from protectionism will only lead to greater inefficiency in society. Government may have to spend more on <a class="glossaryLink" href="http://welkerswikinomics.com/blog/glossary/unemployment/" title="Glossary: Unemployment" onmouseover="tooltip.show('The state of an individual who is of working age, actively seeking work, but unable to find a job.');" onmouseout="tooltip.hide();">unemployment</a> benefits for workers whose jobs are lost due to protectionism, which may require higher taxes on those workers whose jobs are being protected. As explained above, one industry’s gain leads to a loss of welfare for society as a whole. This is the problem with protectionism. It favors certain industries but imposes higher <a class="glossaryLink" href="http://welkerswikinomics.com/blog/glossary/price/" title="Glossary: Price" onmouseover="tooltip.show('This is the amount paid for a good determined by the supply and demand for the good in the market. Price rises and falls as demand and supply rise and fall.');" onmouseout="tooltip.hide();">prices</a> on consumers and higher costs of production on other industries. It should not be the government’s job to “pick winners and losers” in the global economy. By protecting certain industries, however, government attempts to do just that, but society as a whole loses.</p>
<blockquote><p>I hope you understand what I am asking for here. Whenever you have time, I would love to hear your perspective.</p>
<p>Maphrida</p></blockquote>
<p>Great questions, Maphrida!</p>
<p><strong>Discussion Questions:</strong></p>
<ol>
<li>How might protectionism lead to an increase in aggregate demand and domestic employment?</li>
<li>Why does a large trade deficit lead to a build-up of foreign ownership of domestic factors of production?</li>
<li>Discuss the view that protectionism in the form of tariffs on particular goods helps certain industries but harms the rest of society. Can you imagine an example of a protectionist policy that could increase the welfare of society as a whole?</li>
<li>Explain how a protectionist policy that makes imports more expensive and thus reduces demand for imported goods can ultimately lead to a reduction in demand for the protected country&#8217;s exports abroad.</li>
</ol><div class="shr-publisher-2557"></div><!-- Start Shareaholic LikeButtonSetBottom Automatic --><!-- End Shareaholic LikeButtonSetBottom Automatic --><p>Related posts:<ol>
<li><a href='http://welkerswikinomics.com/blog/2010/10/07/obamas-bad-decision/' rel='bookmark' title='US / China Trade War &#8211; Could this be the beginning?'>US / China Trade War &#8211; Could this be the beginning?</a></li>
<li><a href='http://welkerswikinomics.com/blog/2010/10/04/the-high-cost-of-tariffs/' rel='bookmark' title='The high cost of tariffs'>The high cost of tariffs</a></li>
<li><a href='http://welkerswikinomics.com/blog/2010/09/30/free-trade-debate-to-what-extent-has-globalization-based-on-free-trade-contributed-to-global-economic-growth-and-development/' rel='bookmark' title='Free Trade Debate: to what extent has globalization based on free trade contributed to global economic growth and development?'>Free Trade Debate: to what extent has globalization based on free trade contributed to global economic growth and development?</a></li>
</ol></p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<slash:comments>5</slash:comments>
		</item>
		<item>
		<title>Yeah, we have a trade deficit, SO WHAT?!</title>
		<link>http://welkerswikinomics.com/blog/2010/11/10/yeah-we-have-a-trade-deficit-so-what/</link>
		<comments>http://welkerswikinomics.com/blog/2010/11/10/yeah-we-have-a-trade-deficit-so-what/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Tue, 09 Nov 2010 20:59:59 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Jason Welker</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Balance of Payments]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Balance of Trade]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Barriers to trade]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[capital account]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[China]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Exchange Rates]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Exports]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Globalization]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[International trade]]></category>
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		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://welkerswikinomics.com/blog/?p=2115</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[The following is an excerpt from Chapter 22  - &#8220;Balance of Payments&#8221; of my soon to be published textbook &#8220;Pearson Baccalaureate Economics&#8221; If the total spending by a nation&#8217;s residents on goods and services imported from the rest of the world exceeds the revenues earned by the nation&#8217;s producers from the sale of exports to [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<!-- Start Shareaholic LikeButtonSetTop Automatic --><!-- End Shareaholic LikeButtonSetTop Automatic --><p><em>The following is an excerpt from Chapter 22  - &#8220;Balance of Payments&#8221; of my soon to be published textbook &#8220;Pearson Baccalaureate Economics&#8221;</em></p>
<p>If the total spending by a nation&#8217;s residents on goods and services imported from the rest of the world exceeds the revenues earned by the nation&#8217;s producers from the sale of exports to the rest of the world, the nation is likely experiencing a <a class="glossaryLink" href="http://welkerswikinomics.com/blog/glossary/current-account-deficit/" title="Glossary: Current account deficit" onmouseover="tooltip.show('When the value of a nation's imports from abroad exceeds the value of the exports from that nation to the rest of the world. Also called a trade deficit.');" onmouseout="tooltip.hide();"><a class="glossaryLink" href="http://welkerswikinomics.com/blog/glossary/current-account/" title="Glossary: Current account" onmouseover="tooltip.show('Measures the balance of trade in goods and services and the flow of income between one nation and all other nations. It also records monetary gifts or grants that flow into our out of a country.');" onmouseout="tooltip.hide();">current account</a> deficit</a>. The situation is not at all uncommon among many of the world&#8217;s trading nations. The map belowmap  represents nations by their cumulative current account balances over the years 1980-2008. The red countries all accumulated current account deficits over the three decades, with the largest by far being the United States with a cumulative deficit of $7.3 trillion. The green countries are ones which have had a cumulative <a class="glossaryLink" href="http://welkerswikinomics.com/blog/glossary/surplus/" title="Glossary: Surplus" onmouseover="tooltip.show('When the quantity supplied of a good is greater than the quantity demanded. Also called "excess supply". A surplus will occur if the price in a market is greater than the equilibrium price, for example, due to a government price floor.');" onmouseout="tooltip.hide();">surplus</a> in their current accounts, the largest surplus belonging to Japan at $2.7 trillion, followed by China at $1.5 trillion.</p>
<p style="text-align: center;"><a href="http://welkerswikinomics.com/blog/wp-content/uploads/2010/11/Current-Account-map.png"><img class="aligncenter size-large wp-image-2119" title="Current Account map" src="http://welkerswikinomics.com/blog/wp-content/uploads/2010/11/Current-Account-map-1024x466.png" alt="" width="737" height="336" /></a></p>
<p>source: <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Cumulative_Current_Account_Balance.png" target="_blank">http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Cumulative_Current_Account_Balance.png</a></p>
<p>The top ten current account deficit nations are represented below. It is obvious from this chart that the United States alone accounts for a larger current account deficit then the next nine countries combined. At $7.3 trillion dollars in deficits over 28 years, the US deficit surpasses Spain&#8217;s (at number 2) by 1,000 percent.</p>
<p><a href="http://welkerswikinomics.com/blog/wp-content/uploads/2010/11/Current-Acccount-deficit-leaders.png"><img class="aligncenter size-full wp-image-2116" title="Current Acccount deficit leaders" src="http://welkerswikinomics.com/blog/wp-content/uploads/2010/11/Current-Acccount-deficit-leaders.png" alt="" width="600" height="371" /></a></p>
<p>The consequences of a nation having a current account deficit are not immediately clear. It should be pointed out that it is debatable whether a <a class="glossaryLink" href="http://welkerswikinomics.com/blog/glossary/trade-deficit/" title="Glossary: Trade deficit" onmouseover="tooltip.show('When a country’s total spending on imported goods and services exceeds its total revenues from the sale of exports to the rest of the world. Another term for current account deficit in the balance of payments.');" onmouseout="tooltip.hide();">trade deficit</a> is necessarily a bad thing, in fact. Below we will examine some of the facts about current account deficits, and we will conclude by evaluating the pros and cons for countries that run deficits in the <a class="glossaryLink" href="http://welkerswikinomics.com/blog/glossary/short-run/" title="Glossary: Short-run" onmouseover="tooltip.show('<strong>(In microeconomics):</strong> The period of time over which the amount of land and capital employed in the production of a good is fixed in quantity. "The fixed-plant period". Labor and raw materials are the only variable resources in the short run. <strong>(In macroeconomics):</strong> The period of time over which wages and prices are relatively inflexible. A fall in aggregate demand will lead to unemployment and recession in the short-run. Due to the inability of the nation's producers to reduce wages paid to worker, they must lay workers off to reduce costs as demand falls.');" onmouseout="tooltip.hide();">short-run</a> and in the long-run.</p>
<p>Implications of persistent current account deficits: When a country like like those above experience deficits in the current account for year after year, there are some predictable consequences that may have adverse effects on the nation&#8217;s macroeconomy. These include currency <a class="glossaryLink" href="http://welkerswikinomics.com/blog/glossary/depreciation/" title="Glossary: Depreciation" onmouseover="tooltip.show('A decrease in the value of one currency relative to another, resulting from a decrease in demand for or an increase in the supply of the currency on the forex market.');" onmouseout="tooltip.hide();">depreciation</a>, foreign ownership of domestic assets, higher <a class="glossaryLink" href="http://welkerswikinomics.com/blog/glossary/interest-rate/" title="Glossary: Interest rate" onmouseover="tooltip.show('The opportunity cost of money. Either the cost of borrowing money or the cost of spending money. What would be given up by not saving money.');" onmouseout="tooltip.hide();"><a class="glossaryLink" href="http://welkerswikinomics.com/blog/glossary/interest/" title="Glossary: Interest" onmouseover="tooltip.show('The payment for capital in the resource market. Firms pay interest on the money they borrow to acquire capital equipment (technology). Households receive interest for providing their savings to banks, who make the loans to the firms paying interest.');" onmouseout="tooltip.hide();">interest</a> rates</a> and foreign <a class="glossaryLink" href="http://welkerswikinomics.com/blog/glossary/indebtedness/" title="Glossary: Indebtedness" onmouseover="tooltip.show('When a country owes money to lenders, generally foreigners, requiring a large percentage of any tax revenues collected to go towards servicing the national debt. Presents an obstacle to economic development since poor countries find they have little money left over for the provision of public goods to citizens.');" onmouseout="tooltip.hide();">indebtedness</a>.</p>
<p>The effect of a current account deficit on the <a class="glossaryLink" href="http://welkerswikinomics.com/blog/glossary/exchange-rate/" title="Glossary: Exchange rate" onmouseover="tooltip.show('The price of one currency in terms expressed in terms of another currency, determined in the forex market.');" onmouseout="tooltip.hide();">exchange rate</a>: In the previous chapter you learned about the determinants of the exchange rate of a nation&#8217;s currency relative to another currency. One of the primary determinants of a currency&#8217;s exchange rate is the <a class="glossaryLink" href="http://welkerswikinomics.com/blog/glossary/demand/" title="Glossary: Demand" onmouseover="tooltip.show('A schedule or curve showing the quantities of a particular good demanded at a range of price in a particular period of time.');" onmouseout="tooltip.hide();">demand</a> for the nation&#8217;s <a class="glossaryLink" href="http://welkerswikinomics.com/blog/glossary/exports/" title="Glossary: Exports" onmouseover="tooltip.show('The spending by foreigners on domestically produced goods and services. Counts as an injection into a nation’s circular flow of income.');" onmouseout="tooltip.hide();">exports</a> relative to the demand for <a class="glossaryLink" href="http://welkerswikinomics.com/blog/glossary/imports/" title="Glossary: Imports" onmouseover="tooltip.show('Spending on goods and services produced in foreign nations. Counts as a leakage from a nation’s circular flow of income.');" onmouseout="tooltip.hide();">imports</a> from other countries. With this in mind, we can examine the likely effects of a current account deficit on a nation&#8217;s currency&#8217;s exchange rate. Additionally, we will see that under a <a class="glossaryLink" href="http://welkerswikinomics.com/blog/glossary/floating-exchange-rate/" title="Glossary: Floating exchange rate" onmouseover="tooltip.show('When a currency’s price relative to other currencies is determined by the free interaction of supply and demand in international forex markets.');" onmouseout="tooltip.hide();">floating exchange rate</a> system, deficits in the current account should be automatically corrected due to adjustments in exchange rates.</p>
<p>When households and firms in one nation demand more of other countries&#8217; output than the rest of the world demands of theirs, there is upward pressure on the value of trading partners&#8217; currencies and downward pressure on the importing nation&#8217;s currency. In this way, a movement towards a current account deficit should cause the deficit country&#8217;s currency to weaken.</p>
<p><a href="http://welkerswikinomics.com/blog/wp-content/uploads/2010/11/Current-Account-deficit-exchange-rate.png"><img class="aligncenter size-full wp-image-2117" title="Current Account deficit exchange rate" src="http://welkerswikinomics.com/blog/wp-content/uploads/2010/11/Current-Account-deficit-exchange-rate.png" alt="" width="600" height="308" /></a></p>
<p>As an illustration, say that New Zealand&#8217;s imports from Japan begin to rise due to rising <a class="glossaryLink" href="http://welkerswikinomics.com/blog/glossary/income/" title="Glossary: Income" onmouseover="tooltip.show('The money earned by households for providing their resources (land, labor and capital) to firms in the resource market. Incomes include wages, interest, rent and profit.');" onmouseout="tooltip.hide();">incomes</a> in New Zealand and the corresponding increase in demand for imports. Assuming Japan&#8217;s demand for New Zealand&#8217;s output does not change, New Zealand will move towards a deficit in its current account and Japan towards a surplus. In the foreign exchange <a class="glossaryLink" href="http://welkerswikinomics.com/blog/glossary/market/" title="Glossary: Market" onmouseover="tooltip.show('A place where buyers and sellers meat to engage in mutual trade. Prices are set by the interaction of demand and supply in a market.');" onmouseout="tooltip.hide();">market</a>, demand for Japanese yen will rise while the <a class="glossaryLink" href="http://welkerswikinomics.com/blog/glossary/supply/" title="Glossary: Supply" onmouseover="tooltip.show('A schedule or curve showing the direct relationship between the quantity of output firms produce in a particular period of time and the various prices of the good.');" onmouseout="tooltip.hide();">supply</a> of NZ$ in Japan increases, as seen above, depreciating the NZ$.</p>
<p>The downward pressure on exchange rates resulting from an increase in a nation&#8217;s current account deficit should have a self-correcting effect on the trade imbalance. As the NZ$ weakens relative to its trading partners&#8217; currencies, consumers in New Zealand will start to find imports more and more expensive, while consumers abroad will, over time, begin to find products from New Zealand cheaper. In this way, a flexible exchange rate system should, in the long-run, eliminate surpluses and deficits between nations in the current account. The persistence of global trade imbalances illustrated in the map above is evidence that in reality, the ability of flexible exchange rates to maintain balance in nations&#8217; current accounts is quite limited.</p>
<p>Foreign ownership of domestic assets: By definition, the balance of payments must always equal zero. For this reason, a deficit in the current account must be offset by a surplus in the capital and <a class="glossaryLink" href="http://welkerswikinomics.com/blog/glossary/financial-account/" title="Glossary: Financial account" onmouseover="tooltip.show('Measures the flow of funds for investment in real assets (such as factories or office building) or financial assets (such as stocks and bonds) between a nation and the rest of the world.');" onmouseout="tooltip.hide();">financial accounts</a>. If the <a class="glossaryLink" href="http://welkerswikinomics.com/blog/glossary/money/" title="Glossary: Money" onmouseover="tooltip.show('Any object that can be used to facilitate the exchange of goods and services in a market.');" onmouseout="tooltip.hide();">money</a> spent by a deficit country on <a class="glossaryLink" href="http://welkerswikinomics.com/blog/glossary/goods/" title="Glossary: Goods" onmouseover="tooltip.show('The physical output of a firm producing a product meant for sale and consumption in a product market. Contrast with services, which are non-physical products produced and sold by firms to consumers.');" onmouseout="tooltip.hide();">goods</a> from abroad ends up in the does not end up returning to the deficit country for the purchase of goods and <a class="glossaryLink" href="http://welkerswikinomics.com/blog/glossary/services/" title="Glossary: Services" onmouseover="tooltip.show('The non-physical output of firms meant for consumption in a product market. Services are "non-tangible" goods, such as taxi rides, accounting, doctor visits, teaching, and other products that can be bought and sold, but not physically consumed.');" onmouseout="tooltip.hide();">services</a>, it will be re-invested into the county through foreign acquisition of domestic real and financial assets, or held in reserve by surplus nations&#8217; central banks.</p>
<p>Essentially, a country with a large current account deficit, since it cannot export enough goods and services to make up for its spending on imports, instead ends up &#8220;exporting ownership&#8221; of its financial and real assets. This could take the form of foreign direct <a class="glossaryLink" href="http://welkerswikinomics.com/blog/glossary/investment/" title="Glossary: Investment" onmouseover="tooltip.show('A component of aggregate demand, it includes all spending on capital equipment, inventories, and technology by firms. This does not include financial investment, which is the purchase of financial assets (stocks and bonds), not included in GDP because they are only purely financial investments.');" onmouseout="tooltip.hide();">investment</a> in domestic firms, increased portfolio investment by foreigners in the domestic economy, and foreign ownership of domestic government debt, or the build up of foreign reserves of the deficit nation&#8217;s currency.</p>
<p>The effect on interest rates: A persistent deficit in the current account can have adverse effects on the interest rates and investment in the deficit country. As explained above, a current account deficit can put downward pressure on a nation&#8217;s exchange rate, which causes <a class="glossaryLink" href="http://welkerswikinomics.com/blog/glossary/inflation/" title="Glossary: Inflation" onmouseover="tooltip.show('A rise in the average level of prices in the economy over time (percentage change in the CPI).');" onmouseout="tooltip.hide();">inflation</a> in the deficit country as imported goods, services and raw materials become more expensive. In order to prevent massive currency depreciation, the country&#8217;s central bank may be forced to tighten the <a class="glossaryLink" href="http://welkerswikinomics.com/blog/glossary/money-supply/" title="Glossary: Money supply" onmouseover="tooltip.show('The vertical curve representing the total supply of reserves in a nation’s banking system. Determined by the monetary policy actions of the central bank. Increases (shifts to the right) lead to lower interest rates and are the result of expansionary monetary policies. Decreases (shifts to the left) lead to higher interest rates and are the result of contractionary monetary policies.');" onmouseout="tooltip.hide();">money supply</a> and raise domestic interest rates to attract foreign investors and keep demand for the currency and the exchange rate stable. Additionally, since a current account deficit must be offset by a financial account surplus, the deficit country&#8217;s government may need to offer higher interest rates on government bonds to attract foreign investors. Higher borrowing rates for the government and the <a class="glossaryLink" href="http://welkerswikinomics.com/blog/glossary/private-sector/" title="Glossary: Private sector" onmouseover="tooltip.show('Refers to the activities undertaken by the private households and firms in an economy. "Private sector spending" includes household consumption and investment by private, non-government-owned firms.');" onmouseout="tooltip.hide();">private sector</a> can slow domestic investment and <a class="glossaryLink" href="http://welkerswikinomics.com/blog/glossary/economic-growth/" title="Glossary: Economic growth" onmouseover="tooltip.show('An increase in the output of goods and services in a nation between two periods of time.');" onmouseout="tooltip.hide();">economic growth</a> in the deficit nation.</p>
<p>Side note: While the interest rate effect of a large current account deficit should be negative (i.e. causing interest rates to rise in the deficit country), in recent years the country with the largest trade deficit, the United States, has actually experienced record low interest rates even while maintaining persistent current account deficits. This can be understood by examining by the macroeconomic conditions of the US and global economies, in which <a class="glossaryLink" href="http://welkerswikinomics.com/blog/glossary/deflation/" title="Glossary: Deflation" onmouseover="tooltip.show('A decrease in the average price level of a nation’s output over time.');" onmouseout="tooltip.hide();">deflation</a> posed a greater threat than inflation over the years 2008-2010. The fear of deflation combined with low confidence in the private sector among international investors has kept demand for US government bonds high even as the US trade deficit has grown, allowing the US government and central bank to keep interest rates low and continue to attract foreign investors.</p>
<p>Whereas under &#8220;normal&#8221; macroeconomic conditions a build up of US dollars among America&#8217;s trading partners would require the US to raise interest rates to create an <a class="glossaryLink" href="http://welkerswikinomics.com/blog/glossary/incentive/" title="Glossary: Incentive" onmouseover="tooltip.show('Refers to the motivation an individual has to undertake a particular action.');" onmouseout="tooltip.hide();">incentive</a> for foreign investors to re-invest that money into the US economy, in the environment of uncertainty and low confidence in the private sector that has prevailed over the last several years, America&#8217;s trading partners have been willing to finance its current account deficit at record low interest rates.</p>
<p>The effect on indebtedness: A large current account deficit is synonymous with a large financial account surplus. One source of credits in the financial account is foreign ownership of domestic government bonds (i.e. debt). When a central bank from another nation buys government bonds from a nation with which it has a large <a class="glossaryLink" href="http://welkerswikinomics.com/blog/glossary/current-account-surplus/" title="Glossary: Current account surplus" onmouseover="tooltip.show('When the value of a nation's exports to the rest of the world exceeds the value of its imports from the rest of the world. Also called a trade surplus.');" onmouseout="tooltip.hide();">current account surplus</a>, the deficit nation is essentially going into debt to the surplus nation. For instance, as of August 2010, the Chinese central bank held $868 billion of United States Treasury Securities (government <a class="glossaryLink" href="http://welkerswikinomics.com/blog/glossary/bond/" title="Glossary: Bond" onmouseover="tooltip.show('hA certificate of debt issued by a company or a government to an investor.');" onmouseout="tooltip.hide();">bonds</a>) on its balance sheet. In total, the amount of US debt owned by foreign nations in 2010 was $4.2 trillion, or around 50% of the country&#8217;s total national debt and 30% of its GDP.source: http://www.ustreas.gov/tic/mfh.txt</p>
<p>On the one hand, foreign lending to a deficit nation is beneficial because it keeps demand for government bonds high and interest rates low, which allows the deficit country&#8217;s government to finance its budget without raising taxes on domestic households and firms. On the other hand, every dollar borrowed from a foreigner has to be repaid with interest. Interest payments on the national debt cost US taxpayers over $400 billion in 2010, making up around 10% of the federal budget. Nearly half of this went to foreign holders of US debt, meaning almost $200 billion of US taxpayer money was handed over to foreign interests, without adding a single dollar to <a class="glossaryLink" href="http://welkerswikinomics.com/blog/glossary/aggregate-demand/" title="Glossary: Aggregate Demand" onmouseover="tooltip.show('A schedule or curve which shows the total demand for the goods and services of a nation at a range of price levels and at a given period of time.');" onmouseout="tooltip.hide();">aggregate demand</a> in the US.</p>
<p><a href="http://welkerswikinomics.com/blog/wp-content/uploads/2010/11/Current-Account-foreign-debt.png"><img class="aligncenter size-full wp-image-2118" title="Current Account foreign debt" src="http://welkerswikinomics.com/blog/wp-content/uploads/2010/11/Current-Account-foreign-debt.png" alt="" width="600" height="371" /></a></p>
<p>The <a class="glossaryLink" href="http://welkerswikinomics.com/blog/glossary/opportunity-cost/" title="Glossary: Opportunity cost" onmouseover="tooltip.show('What must be given up to have anything else. Not necessarily monetary costs, rather include what you could do with the resources you use to undertake any activity or exchange.');" onmouseout="tooltip.hide();">opportunity cost</a> of foreign owned national debt is the <a class="glossaryLink" href="http://welkerswikinomics.com/blog/glossary/public-good/" title="Glossary: Public good" onmouseover="tooltip.show('Goods or services which are non-excludable by the producers and non-rivalrous in consumption. Because of these characteristics, private sector firms have little or no incentive to produce them, since they would be impossible to sell. Therefore, government must provide public goods. Examples include street lamps, sidewalks and national defense.');" onmouseout="tooltip.hide();">public goods</a> and services that could have been provided with the money that instead is owed in interest to foreign creditors. If the US current account were more balanced, foreign countries like China would not have the massive reserves of US dollars to invest in government debt in the first place, and the taxpayer money going to pay interest on this debt could instead be invested in the domestic economy to promote economic growth and <a class="glossaryLink" href="http://welkerswikinomics.com/blog/glossary/development/" title="Glossary: Development" onmouseover="tooltip.show('Improvements in standards of living of a nation measured by income, education and health');" onmouseout="tooltip.hide();">development</a>.</p>
<p><strong>Discussion Questions:</strong></p>
<ol>
<li>Why would a large current account deficit cause a nation&#8217;s currency to depreciate? How could a weaker currency automatically reduce a nation&#8217;s current account deficit?</li>
<li>Why should governments be concerned about a large trade deficit? What is one policy a government could implement to reduce a deficit in the current account?</li>
<li>Would a nation with a large trade deficit be better off without trade at all? Why or why not?</li>
<li>Discuss the validity of the following claim: &#8220;Americans buy tons of Chinese imports, but the Chinese don&#8217;t buy anything from America, this is why the US has such a huge trade deficit with China&#8221;. To what extent is this claim true or false?</li>
</ol><div class="shr-publisher-2115"></div><!-- Start Shareaholic LikeButtonSetBottom Automatic --><!-- End Shareaholic LikeButtonSetBottom Automatic --><p>Related posts:<ol>
<li><a href='http://welkerswikinomics.com/blog/2011/10/31/trade-balances-around-the-world/' rel='bookmark' title='Trade balances around the world'>Trade balances around the world</a></li>
<li><a href='http://welkerswikinomics.com/blog/2008/12/12/the-marshall-lerner-condition-the-j-curve-and-the-us-trade-deficit/' rel='bookmark' title='The Marshall-Lerner Condition, the J-curve, and the US trade deficit'>The Marshall-Lerner Condition, the J-curve, and the US trade deficit</a></li>
<li><a href='http://welkerswikinomics.com/blog/2010/11/11/okay-a-trade-deficit-is-bad-what-can-we-do-about-it/' rel='bookmark' title='Okay, a trade deficit is bad, what can we do about it?'>Okay, a trade deficit is bad, what can we do about it?</a></li>
</ol></p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>The clear and simple gains from trade</title>
		<link>http://welkerswikinomics.com/blog/2010/10/08/welkers-daily-links-10232008/</link>
		<comments>http://welkerswikinomics.com/blog/2010/10/08/welkers-daily-links-10232008/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Thu, 07 Oct 2010 16:30:09 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Jason Welker</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Balance of Trade]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Barriers to trade]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Comparative advantage]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Free Markets]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Free Trade]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Trade]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://welkerswikinomics.com/blog/2008/10/24/welkers-daily-links-10232008/</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Russell Roberts of George Mason University is a well-known advocate of free trade. This article is one of my favorite and certainly one of the clearest explanations of the mutual benefits resulting from free trade that I have read. Foreign Policy: Why We Trade &#8211; by Russ Roberts To hear most politicians talk, you’d think [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<!-- Start Shareaholic LikeButtonSetTop Automatic --><!-- End Shareaholic LikeButtonSetTop Automatic --><p>Russell Roberts of George Mason University is a well-known advocate of <a class="glossaryLink" href="http://welkerswikinomics.com/blog/glossary/free-trade/" title="Glossary: Free Trade" onmouseover="tooltip.show('The exchange of goods and services between different countries undertaken without any government intervention.');" onmouseout="tooltip.hide();">free trade</a>. This article is one of my favorite and certainly one of the clearest explanations of the mutual benefits resulting from free trade that I have read.</p>
<p><a rel="nofollow" href="http://www.foreignpolicy.com/story/cms.php?story_id=4044">Foreign Policy: Why We Trade &#8211; by Russ Roberts</a></p>
<blockquote><p>To hear most politicians talk, you’d think that <a class="glossaryLink" href="http://welkerswikinomics.com/blog/glossary/exports/" title="Glossary: Exports" onmouseover="tooltip.show('The spending by foreigners on domestically produced goods and services. Counts as an injection into a nation’s circular flow of income.');" onmouseout="tooltip.hide();">exports</a> are the key to a country’s prosperity and that <a class="glossaryLink" href="http://welkerswikinomics.com/blog/glossary/imports/" title="Glossary: Imports" onmouseover="tooltip.show('Spending on goods and services produced in foreign nations. Counts as a leakage from a nation’s circular flow of income.');" onmouseout="tooltip.hide();">imports</a> are a threat to its way of life. <a class="glossaryLink" href="http://welkerswikinomics.com/blog/glossary/trade-deficit/" title="Glossary: Trade deficit" onmouseover="tooltip.show('When a country’s total spending on imported goods and services exceeds its total revenues from the sale of exports to the rest of the world. Another term for current account deficit in the balance of payments.');" onmouseout="tooltip.hide();">Trade deficits</a>—importing more than we export—are portrayed as the road to ruin&#8230; Politicians are always talking about the necessity of other countries’ opening their <a class="glossaryLink" href="http://welkerswikinomics.com/blog/glossary/market/" title="Glossary: Market" onmouseover="tooltip.show('A place where buyers and sellers meat to engage in mutual trade. Prices are set by the interaction of demand and supply in a market.');" onmouseout="tooltip.hide();">markets</a> to American products. They never mention the virtues of opening U.S. markets to foreign products.</p>
<p>This perspective on imports and exports is called mercantilism. It goes back to the 14th century and has about as much intellectual rigor as alchemy, another landmark of the pre-Enlightenment era.</p>
<p>The logic of “exports, good—imports, bad” seems straightforward at first—after all, when a factory closes because of foreign competition, there seem to be fewer jobs than there otherwise would be. Don’t imports cause factories to close? Don’t exports build factories?</p>
<p>But is the logic really so clear? As a thought experiment, take what would seem to be the ideal situation for a mercantilist. Suppose we only export and import nothing. The ultimate <a class="glossaryLink" href="http://welkerswikinomics.com/blog/glossary/trade-surplus/" title="Glossary: Trade surplus" onmouseover="tooltip.show('When a country’s sale of exports exceeds its spending on imports. Another term for a current account surplus in the balance of payments.');" onmouseout="tooltip.hide();">trade <a class="glossaryLink" href="http://welkerswikinomics.com/blog/glossary/surplus/" title="Glossary: Surplus" onmouseover="tooltip.show('When the quantity supplied of a good is greater than the quantity demanded. Also called "excess supply". A surplus will occur if the price in a market is greater than the equilibrium price, for example, due to a government price floor.');" onmouseout="tooltip.hide();">surplus</a></a>. So we work and use raw materials and effort and creativity to produce stuff for others without getting anything in return. There’s another name for that. It’s called slavery. How can a country get rich working for others?</p>
<p>Then there’s the mercantilist nightmare: We import from abroad, but foreigners buy nothing from us. What would the world be like if every morning you woke up and found a Japanese car in your driveway, Chinese clothing in your closet, and French wine in your cellar? All at no cost. Does that sound like heaven or hell? The only analogy I can think of is Santa Claus. How can a country get poor from free stuff? Or cheap stuff? How do imports hurt us?</p>
<p>We don’t export to create jobs. We export so we can have <a class="glossaryLink" href="http://welkerswikinomics.com/blog/glossary/money/" title="Glossary: Money" onmouseover="tooltip.show('Any object that can be used to facilitate the exchange of goods and services in a market.');" onmouseout="tooltip.hide();">money</a> to buy the stuff that’s hard for us to make—or at least hard for us to make as cheaply. We export because that’s the only way to get imports. If people would just give us stuff, then we wouldn’t have to export. But the world doesn’t work that way.</p>
<p>It’s the same in our daily lives. It’s great when people give us presents—a loaf of banana bread or a few tomatoes from the garden. But a new car would be better. Or even just a cheaper car. But the people who bring us cars and clothes and watches and shoes expect something in return. That’s OK. That’s the way the world works. But let’s not fool ourselves into thinking the goal of life is to turn away bargains from outside our house or outside our country because we’d rather make everything ourselves. Self-sufficiency is the road to poverty.</p>
<p>And imports don’t destroy jobs. They destroy jobs in certain industries. But because trade allows us to buy <a class="glossaryLink" href="http://welkerswikinomics.com/blog/glossary/goods/" title="Glossary: Goods" onmouseover="tooltip.show('The physical output of a firm producing a product meant for sale and consumption in a product market. Contrast with services, which are non-physical products produced and sold by firms to consumers.');" onmouseout="tooltip.hide();">goods</a> more cheaply than we otherwise could, resources are freed up to expand existing opportunities and to create new ones. That’s why we trade—to leverage the skills of others who can produce things more effectively than we can, freeing us to make things we otherwise wouldn’t be able to afford.</p></blockquote>
<p><strong>Discussion Questions:</strong></p>
<ol>
<li>&#8220;Self-sufficiency is the road to poverty&#8221; &#8211; Discuss&#8230;</li>
<li>Explain the logical economic fallacy of the mercantilist philosophy of &#8220;exports good, imports bad&#8221;</li>
<li>&#8220;&#8230;because trade allows us to buy goods more cheaply than we otherwise could, resources are freed up to expand existing opportunities and to create new ones&#8221;. What basic economic principle is Professor Roberts alluding to here?</li>
</ol><div class="shr-publisher-594"></div><!-- Start Shareaholic LikeButtonSetBottom Automatic --><!-- End Shareaholic LikeButtonSetBottom Automatic --><p>Related posts:<ol>
<li><a href='http://welkerswikinomics.com/blog/2008/08/20/international-trade-made-simple/' rel='bookmark' title='International Trade Made Simple'>International Trade Made Simple</a></li>
<li><a href='http://welkerswikinomics.com/blog/2008/10/21/fair-trade-vs-free-trade-the-problem-with-dumping/' rel='bookmark' title='Fair trade vs. free trade: the problem with &#8220;dumping&#8221;'>Fair trade vs. free trade: the problem with &#8220;dumping&#8221;</a></li>
<li><a href='http://welkerswikinomics.com/blog/2010/10/07/obamas-bad-decision/' rel='bookmark' title='US / China Trade War &#8211; Could this be the beginning?'>US / China Trade War &#8211; Could this be the beginning?</a></li>
</ol></p>]]></content:encoded>
			<wfw:commentRss>http://welkerswikinomics.com/blog/2010/10/08/welkers-daily-links-10232008/feed/</wfw:commentRss>
		<slash:comments>75</slash:comments>
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		<title>US / China Trade War &#8211; Could this be the beginning?</title>
		<link>http://welkerswikinomics.com/blog/2010/10/07/obamas-bad-decision/</link>
		<comments>http://welkerswikinomics.com/blog/2010/10/07/obamas-bad-decision/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 06 Oct 2010 20:57:25 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Jason Welker</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Barriers to trade]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[China]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Comparative advantage]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Competition]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Exports]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Free Markets]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Free Trade]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Globalization]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[International trade]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Protection]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Tariffs]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Trade]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[WTO]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://welkerswikinomics.com/blog/?p=1118</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[This post was originally published on September 15, 2009. It is being reposted today for my year 2 IB Econ students, who are studying free trade and protectionism as part of Unit 4 of the IB Econ course. US president Barack Obama made a speech directly to Wall Street today. In his speech, Obama reflected [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<!-- Start Shareaholic LikeButtonSetTop Automatic --><!-- End Shareaholic LikeButtonSetTop Automatic --><p><em>This post was originally published on September 15, 2009. It is being reposted today for my year 2 IB Econ students, who are studying free trade and <a class="glossaryLink" href="http://welkerswikinomics.com/blog/glossary/protectionism/" title="Glossary: Protectionism" onmouseover="tooltip.show('Protectionism: The use of tariffs, quotas or subsidies to give domestic producers a competitive advantage over foreign producers. Meant to protect domestic production and employment from foreign competition.');" onmouseout="tooltip.hide();">protectionism</a> as part of Unit 4 of the IB Econ course.</em></p>
<p>US president Barack Obama made a speech directly to Wall Street today. In his speech, Obama reflected on the many lessons America has learned in the last year since the financial crisis began. <a href="http://money.cnn.com/2009/09/14/news/economy/obama_wall_street_anniversary_speech/index.htm" target="_blank">He urged</a> his audience of investors, bankers and brokers that</p>
<blockquote><p>&#8220;Normalcy cannot lead to complacency,&#8221; Obama said. &#8220;Unfortunately, there are some in the financial industry who are misreading this moment. Instead of learning the lessons of Lehman and the crisis from which we are still recovering, they are choosing to ignore them.&#8221;</p>
<p>&#8220;They do so not just at their own peril, but at our nation&#8217;s,&#8221; the president added.</p></blockquote>
<p>In addition to his warnings about the threat posed by overly risky financial <a class="glossaryLink" href="http://welkerswikinomics.com/blog/glossary/market/" title="Glossary: Market" onmouseover="tooltip.show('A place where buyers and sellers meat to engage in mutual trade. Prices are set by the interaction of demand and supply in a market.');" onmouseout="tooltip.hide();">markets</a> to the US economy, President Obama expressed his commitment to free trade and &#8220;the fight against protectionism&#8221;.<br />
<object classid="clsid:d27cdb6e-ae6d-11cf-96b8-444553540000" width="425" height="344" codebase="http://download.macromedia.com/pub/shockwave/cabs/flash/swflash.cab#version=6,0,40,0"><param name="allowFullScreen" value="true" /><param name="allowscriptaccess" value="always" /><param name="src" value="http://www.youtube.com/v/pSkqNtx3iJs&amp;hl=en&amp;fs=1&amp;start=540" /><param name="allowfullscreen" value="true" /><embed type="application/x-shockwave-flash" width="425" height="344" src="http://www.youtube.com/v/pSkqNtx3iJs&amp;hl=en&amp;fs=1&amp;start=540" allowscriptaccess="always" allowfullscreen="true"></embed></object></p>
<p>Obama says:</p>
<blockquote><p>&#8230;enforcing trade agreements is part and parcel of maintaining an open and free trading system.</p></blockquote>
<p>The enforcement of existing trade agreements Obama refers to is his way of justifying <a href="http://www.ft.com/cms/s/0/f67c6fe6-a024-11de-b9ef-00144feabdc0.html?ftcamp=rss" target="_blank">a decision his administration made</a> over the weekend that actually limits free trade between America and one of its largest trading partners, China.</p>
<blockquote><p>Trade relations between two of the world’s biggest economies deteriorated after Barack Obama, US president, signed an order late on Friday to impose a new duty of 35 per cent on Chinese tyre <a class="glossaryLink" href="http://welkerswikinomics.com/blog/glossary/imports/" title="Glossary: Imports" onmouseover="tooltip.show('Spending on goods and services produced in foreign nations. Counts as a leakage from a nation’s circular flow of income.');" onmouseout="tooltip.hide();">imports</a> on top of an existing 4 per cent <a class="glossaryLink" href="http://welkerswikinomics.com/blog/glossary/tariff/" title="Glossary: Tariff" onmouseover="tooltip.show('Taxes placed on goods imported from other countries. Meant to protect domestic producers from foreign competition.');" onmouseout="tooltip.hide();">tariff</a>.</p>
<p>In his first big test on world trade since taking office in January, Mr Obama sided with America’s trade unions, which have complained that a “surge” in imports of Chinese-made tyres had caused 7,000 job losses among US factory workers.</p></blockquote>
<p>So, in his speech today, Obama decries protectionism and calls for expanded trade and <a class="glossaryLink" href="http://welkerswikinomics.com/blog/glossary/free-trade-agreement/" title="Glossary: Free Trade Agreement" onmouseover="tooltip.show('An agreement between two or more nations to reduce or eliminate barriers to trade across member states. Meant to achieve a more efficient allocation of resources between nations and a larger market for member nation's exports, as well as a larger variety of goods for domestic consumers to enjoy.');" onmouseout="tooltip.hide();"><a class="glossaryLink" href="http://welkerswikinomics.com/blog/glossary/free-trade/" title="Glossary: Free Trade" onmouseover="tooltip.show('The exchange of goods and services between different countries undertaken without any government intervention.');" onmouseout="tooltip.hide();">free trade</a> agreements</a> which are &#8220;absolutely essential to our economic future&#8221;. But only three days ago, he supported a blatantly protectionist measure aimed at keeping foreign produced <a class="glossaryLink" href="http://welkerswikinomics.com/blog/glossary/goods/" title="Glossary: Goods" onmouseover="tooltip.show('The physical output of a firm producing a product meant for sale and consumption in a product market. Contrast with services, which are non-physical products produced and sold by firms to consumers.');" onmouseout="tooltip.hide();">goods</a> out of America in order to save a few thousand American jobs.</p>
<p>Obama&#8217;s decision is a bad one for several reasons. As an economics teacher, I will turn firstly to a diagram for an illustration of the net loss to the American people of higher tariffs on imported tires:<br />
<a href="http://welkerswikinomics.com/blog/wp-content/uploads/2009/09/Untitled_1.jpeg"><img class="alignnone size-full wp-image-1126" title="Tire protection" src="http://welkerswikinomics.com/blog/wp-content/uploads/2009/09/Untitled_1.jpeg" alt="Tire protection" width="664" height="297" /></a></p>
<p>The key point to notice in the above graph is that a tariff on imported tires results in a net loss of welfare in America. The blue area represents the increase in the welfare of tire manufactures (this could be interpreted as the jobs saved in the tire industry and the <a class="glossaryLink" href="http://welkerswikinomics.com/blog/glossary/profit/" title="Glossary: Profit" onmouseover="tooltip.show('The payment to the entrepreneur in the resource market. A business owner expects to earn a "normal" level of profit, otherwise it will not be worth his while to remain in a market. In this regard, profit is a cost of production, because if a minimum profit is not earned a firm will shut down.');" onmouseout="tooltip.hide();">profits</a> earned due to higher <a class="glossaryLink" href="http://welkerswikinomics.com/blog/glossary/price/" title="Glossary: Price" onmouseover="tooltip.show('This is the amount paid for a good determined by the supply and demand for the good in the market. Price rises and falls as demand and supply rise and fall.');" onmouseout="tooltip.hide();">prices</a>); the black areas, on the other hand, are welfare loss. Since all tire consumers in America pay more for their tires due to the 35% tariff, real <a class="glossaryLink" href="http://welkerswikinomics.com/blog/glossary/income/" title="Glossary: Income" onmouseover="tooltip.show('The money earned by households for providing their resources (land, labor and capital) to firms in the resource market. Incomes include wages, interest, rent and profit.');" onmouseout="tooltip.hide();">income</a> is affected negatively for the nation as a whole.</p>
<p>One effect of the protectionist policy the graph does not illustrate, and perhaps the most serious negative impact of the tariff on America, is the response the Chinese are likely to take to what they interpret as a violation of existing free trade agreements between the US and China.</p>
<blockquote><p>“This is a grave act of trade protectionism,” Mr Chen said in a statement. “Not only does it violate WTO rules, it contravenes commitments the US government made at the [April] G20 financial summit.”</p>
<p>Beijing said it had requested WTO-sanctioned consultations with the US over Washington’s new duties on tyres. Yao Jian, a commerce ministry spokesman, said the duties were in ”violation of WTO rules”.</p>
<p>China said it would now investigate imports of US poultry and vehicles, responding to complaints from domestic companies.</p></blockquote>
<p>The problems with protectionism are myriad. Clearly American consumers suffer through higher tire prices. In addition, Chinese manufacturers will see sales fall as their product becomes less competitive in the US market. According to the CCTV report below, as many as 9,000 workers in the Chinese tire industry will lose their livelihoods due to declining <a class="glossaryLink" href="http://welkerswikinomics.com/blog/glossary/demand/" title="Glossary: Demand" onmouseover="tooltip.show('A schedule or curve showing the quantities of a particular good demanded at a range of price in a particular period of time.');" onmouseout="tooltip.hide();">demand</a> from the US. But the unforseen effects of the US tariff on Chinese tires is the <em>retaliatory measures</em> China will almost certainly take. If China imposes new tariffs on American automobiles and poultry, the scenario in the graph above will be reversed, and Chinese consumers will face higher prices, Chinese car and poultry producers will experience rising sales, while the American auto worker and chicken farmer will suffer.</p>
<p><object classid="clsid:d27cdb6e-ae6d-11cf-96b8-444553540000" width="425" height="344" codebase="http://download.macromedia.com/pub/shockwave/cabs/flash/swflash.cab#version=6,0,40,0"><param name="allowFullScreen" value="true" /><param name="allowscriptaccess" value="always" /><param name="src" value="http://www.youtube.com/v/c3EsgYtzruY&amp;hl=en&amp;fs=1&amp;" /><param name="allowfullscreen" value="true" /><embed type="application/x-shockwave-flash" width="425" height="344" src="http://www.youtube.com/v/c3EsgYtzruY&amp;hl=en&amp;fs=1&amp;" allowscriptaccess="always" allowfullscreen="true"></embed></object></p>
<p>Free trade tends to result in <em>net benefits</em> for economies that choose to participate in it. American tire manufacturers are certainly harmed by cheap Chinese imports; however, America as a whole benefits through cheaper goods, more consumer <a class="glossaryLink" href="http://welkerswikinomics.com/blog/glossary/surplus/" title="Glossary: Surplus" onmouseover="tooltip.show('When the quantity supplied of a good is greater than the quantity demanded. Also called "excess supply". A surplus will occur if the price in a market is greater than the equilibrium price, for example, due to a government price floor.');" onmouseout="tooltip.hide();">surplus</a>, higher incomes in China and therefore greater demand for imports of products made in America. The road to protectionism is a dangerous path to take for the Obama administration. Justifying these new tariffs by claiming that they &#8220;enforce existing free trade agreements&#8221; is a political maneuver aimed at covering up the truth, which is that the Obama administration has sided with a special <a class="glossaryLink" href="http://welkerswikinomics.com/blog/glossary/interest/" title="Glossary: Interest" onmouseover="tooltip.show('The payment for capital in the resource market. Firms pay interest on the money they borrow to acquire capital equipment (technology). Households receive interest for providing their savings to banks, who make the loans to the firms paying interest.');" onmouseout="tooltip.hide();">interest</a> group to save a few thousand jobs and garner political favor at a time when 700,000 American jobs are being lost each month. By doing so, he is calling into question his own commitment to free trade, and harming America&#8217;s image as a global proponent of global economic integration.</p>
<p><strong>Discussion Questions:</strong></p>
<ol>
<li>Why is the Chinese government so upset about a new <a class="glossaryLink" href="http://welkerswikinomics.com/blog/glossary/taxes/" title="Glossary: Tax" onmouseover="tooltip.show('A payment made by an individual or a firm to the government, usually levied on income, property or the consumption of goods and services. Taxes are a leakage from the circular flow of income, but they provide government with the money they use to provide government services and public goods.');" onmouseout="tooltip.hide();">tax</a> on such an insignificant product as automobile tires?</li>
<li>&#8220;Self-sufficiency is the road to poverty&#8221;: Do you agree?</li>
<li>Some would say that it is a small price to pay for Americans to face higher prices for one product like tires in order to &#8220;save&#8221; 7,000 Americans&#8217; jobs. Would you agree? Why or why not?</li>
<li>If 7,000 Americans were to lose their jobs due to free trade with China, what would we call the type of <a class="glossaryLink" href="http://welkerswikinomics.com/blog/glossary/unemployment/" title="Glossary: Unemployment" onmouseover="tooltip.show('The state of an individual who is of working age, actively seeking work, but unable to find a job.');" onmouseout="tooltip.hide();">unemployment</a> experienced by these workers? Is this the same type of unemployment experienced by the 700,000 workers who have lost their jobs each month during the last year of <a class="glossaryLink" href="http://welkerswikinomics.com/blog/glossary/recession/" title="Glossary: Recession" onmouseover="tooltip.show('A decrease in the total output of goods and services in a nation between two periods of time. Could be caused by a decrease in aggregate demand or in aggregate supply.');" onmouseout="tooltip.hide();">recession</a> in the United States?</li>
</ol><div class="shr-publisher-1118"></div><!-- Start Shareaholic LikeButtonSetBottom Automatic --><!-- End Shareaholic LikeButtonSetBottom Automatic --><p>Related posts:<ol>
<li><a href='http://welkerswikinomics.com/blog/2008/10/22/mccain-vs-obama-on-the-costs-and-benefits-of-free-trade/' rel='bookmark' title='McCain vs. Obama on the costs and benefits of free trade'>McCain vs. Obama on the costs and benefits of free trade</a></li>
<li><a href='http://welkerswikinomics.com/blog/2009/09/23/tit-tat-tariff-china-and-americas-latest-shoving-match-is-underway/' rel='bookmark' title='Tit, tat, tariff&#8230; China and America&#8217;s latest shoving match is underway'>Tit, tat, tariff&#8230; China and America&#8217;s latest shoving match is underway</a></li>
<li><a href='http://welkerswikinomics.com/blog/2010/09/30/free-trade-debate-to-what-extent-has-globalization-based-on-free-trade-contributed-to-global-economic-growth-and-development/' rel='bookmark' title='Free Trade Debate: to what extent has globalization based on free trade contributed to global economic growth and development?'>Free Trade Debate: to what extent has globalization based on free trade contributed to global economic growth and development?</a></li>
</ol></p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>The high cost of tariffs</title>
		<link>http://welkerswikinomics.com/blog/2010/10/04/the-high-cost-of-tariffs/</link>
		<comments>http://welkerswikinomics.com/blog/2010/10/04/the-high-cost-of-tariffs/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Mon, 04 Oct 2010 12:22:50 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Jason Welker</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Barriers to trade]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Efficiency]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Free Trade]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Protectionism]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Tariffs]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Trade]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://welkerswikinomics.com/blog/?p=2078</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[CBC News &#8211; Money &#8211; Shipping industry gets tariff break A tariff is a tax on imported goods or services aimed at raising the price of foreign products to make domestically produced substitutes more attractive to consumers. A tariff is a form of protectionism, which we study in unit 4.1 of the IB Economics course. [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<!-- Start Shareaholic LikeButtonSetTop Automatic --><!-- End Shareaholic LikeButtonSetTop Automatic --><p><a href="http://www.cbc.ca/money/story/2010/10/01/shipping-tariffs-reduced.html?ref=rss" target="_blank">CBC News &#8211; Money &#8211; Shipping industry gets tariff break</a></p>
<p>A <a class="glossaryLink" href="http://welkerswikinomics.com/blog/glossary/tariff/" title="Glossary: Tariff" onmouseover="tooltip.show('Taxes placed on goods imported from other countries. Meant to protect domestic producers from foreign competition.');" onmouseout="tooltip.hide();">tariff</a> is a <a class="glossaryLink" href="http://welkerswikinomics.com/blog/glossary/taxes/" title="Glossary: Tax" onmouseover="tooltip.show('A payment made by an individual or a firm to the government, usually levied on income, property or the consumption of goods and services. Taxes are a leakage from the circular flow of income, but they provide government with the money they use to provide government services and public goods.');" onmouseout="tooltip.hide();">tax</a> on imported goods or <a class="glossaryLink" href="http://welkerswikinomics.com/blog/glossary/services/" title="Glossary: Services" onmouseover="tooltip.show('The non-physical output of firms meant for consumption in a product market. Services are "non-tangible" goods, such as taxi rides, accounting, doctor visits, teaching, and other products that can be bought and sold, but not physically consumed.');" onmouseout="tooltip.hide();">services</a> aimed at raising the price of foreign products to make domestically produced <a class="glossaryLink" href="http://welkerswikinomics.com/blog/glossary/substitute/" title="Glossary: Substitute" onmouseover="tooltip.show('When a good can be used instead of another good, the two goods are substitutes. For instance, Coke and Pepsi are substitutes. The demand for one good is directly related to the price of its substitutes.');" onmouseout="tooltip.hide();">substitutes</a> more attractive to consumers. A tariff is a form of <a class="glossaryLink" href="http://welkerswikinomics.com/blog/glossary/protectionism/" title="Glossary: Protectionism" onmouseover="tooltip.show('Protectionism: The use of tariffs, quotas or subsidies to give domestic producers a competitive advantage over foreign producers. Meant to protect domestic production and employment from foreign competition.');" onmouseout="tooltip.hide();">protectionism</a>, which we study in unit 4.1 of the IB Economics course.</p>
<p>Tariffs are appealing to policymakers as a tool for protecting domestic firms from foreign competition. Used wisely, a barrier to trade such as a tariff can promote the development of certain vital industries in the domestic economy that might otherwise not exist due to the existent of more efficient, lower cost foreign competition. Tariffs benefit domestic producers but harm domestic consumers, who must pay a higher price for the imported good than they would have to under purely free trade.</p>
<p>The Canadian government has, until recently, charged a 25% tariff on cargo ships, tankers and large ferries built in foreign countries. As of this month, however, this tariff is being removed.</p>
<blockquote><p>Imported cargo ships, tankers and large ferries will no longer be subject to a 25 per cent tariff, Finance Minister Jim Flaherty announced Friday.</p>
<p>The measure is aimed at making it cheaper for Canadian shipowners to replace aging fleets with more modern and more efficient vessels.</p>
<p>Waiving the tariff will save the industry $25 million a year for the next 10 years, the government estimates.</p>
<p>&#8220;These were tariffs that don&#8217;t serve any purpose because … the ships to which they apply are not capable of being made competitively in Canada,&#8221; Flaherty told reporters&#8230;</p></blockquote>
<p>The effects of a tariff in the Canadian ship market can be illustrated using a simple <a class="glossaryLink" href="http://welkerswikinomics.com/blog/glossary/supply/" title="Glossary: Supply" onmouseover="tooltip.show('A schedule or curve showing the direct relationship between the quantity of output firms produce in a particular period of time and the various prices of the good.');" onmouseout="tooltip.hide();">supply</a> and demand diagram. The diagram below shows the Canadian ship market before the removal of the 25% tariff and after its removal.</p>
<p style="text-align: center;"><a href="http://welkerswikinomics.com/blog/wp-content/uploads/2010/10/canada-ship-market.png"><img class="aligncenter size-full wp-image-2087" title="canada ship market" src="http://welkerswikinomics.com/blog/wp-content/uploads/2010/10/canada-ship-market.png" alt="" width="491" height="506" /></a></p>
<p>The domestic supply and demand curves for ships in Canada are shown above. Notice that the domestic equilibrium price for ships in Canada without trade is very high. This is because Canadian ship builders have high costs of production and therefore would require a very high price in order to be able to build ships domestically.</p>
<p>So where do Canadian ship buyers get their ships from? The article mentions that one Canadian company bought ships from a Turkish ship builder. Besides Turkey, some of the other countries that specialize in ship production include Denmark, South Korea, China and Japan. The world supply of ships is represented by the blue line. In a purely free trade environment, the price of ships in Canada is determined by the intersection of domestic demand and world supply, at a price of Pw.</p>
<p>The world price of ships is completely unresponsive to changes in demand from Canadian ship buyers. This explains why world supply is horizontal. Since the Canadian market makes up such a small proportion of the total market for ships, an increase in demand in Canada will have no impact on the world price of ships. Therefore, the world supply curve as seen by Canada ship buyers is perfectly elastic. Canadian ship buyers can buy as few ships or as many ships as they like without affecting world price.</p>
<p>A tariff is a tax, and a tax is a determinant of supply. A tariff of 25% increases the costs of imported ships, and <a class="glossaryLink" href="http://welkerswikinomics.com/blog/glossary/shift/" title="Glossary: Shift" onmouseover="tooltip.show('Refers to movements of curves in an economic diagram either inward or outward, up or down.');" onmouseout="tooltip.hide();">shifts</a> the world supply curve upwards. This raises the price of imported ships, and decreases the <a class="glossaryLink" href="http://welkerswikinomics.com/blog/glossary/quantity/" title="Glossary: Quantity" onmouseover="tooltip.show('This is the amount of output produced and consumed in a market determined by the supply and demand. As supply and demand change, the quantity in the market changes as well.');" onmouseout="tooltip.hide();">quantity</a> demanded of ships in Canada from Q3 to Q2 ships. Notice that at the higher world price of Pwt, there are a few domestic ship builders in Canada willing and able to produce and sell ships, so domestic quantity supplied increases from 0 to Q1.</p>
<p>The existence of a tariff reduces the number of imported ships in Canada from 0Q3 to Q1Q2. Domestic producers of ships, who without protection would not be able to compete and therefore produce zero ships, instead produce Q1 and enjoy producer <a class="glossaryLink" href="http://welkerswikinomics.com/blog/glossary/surplus/" title="Glossary: Surplus" onmouseover="tooltip.show('When the quantity supplied of a good is greater than the quantity demanded. Also called "excess supply". A surplus will occur if the price in a market is greater than the equilibrium price, for example, due to a government price floor.');" onmouseout="tooltip.hide();">surplus</a> represented by the triangle X. The Canadian government collects taxes on the imported ships represented by the area Z, found by multiplying the number of imported ships (Q1Q2) by the amount of the tariff (Pwt-Pw).</p>
<p>The tariff on imported ships did little good for the Canadian ship market. Canadian ship builders were already uncompetitive and benefited little if at all. While the government did earn revenues from the tax, the net effect on the market was a loss of welfare represented by the triangles labelled Y in the graph above. These gray areas represent the net welfare loss (or dead weight loss) of the ship tariff.</p>
<p>The consumers of ships, which are in fact Canadian companies that produce other goods and services, such as the ferry companies that provide access to Canada’s several remote coastal and island communities, were clearly harmed by the 25% tariff, since the price of ships is a resource cost and the tariff translated into lower supply and higher prices for consumers of ferry services. The tariff’s effect on ship buyers in Canada is visible in the graph above. At a price of Pw, the total consumer surplus in the ship market is the area of VXYZ. With the higher price resulting from the tariff, however, consumer surplus is only the are V, while producer surplus increased only to the area X and government surplus (the tax revenue from the tariff) is area Z. The net effect, however, is a loss of total welfare of the triangles labelled Y.</p>
<p>The tariff’s removal, on the other hand, increases the welfare of ship consumers back to VXYZ, eliminating the dead weight loss and increasing total welfare and efficiency in the ship market. This also benefits the customers of the companies that buy ships, including ferry passengers, as evidenced in the article</p>
<blockquote><p>“The duty remission to BC Ferries will allow it to implement a two per cent rate reduction for its users later this month, the Finance Department said.”</p></blockquote>
<p>A tariff on imports is a protectionist measure aimed at increasing domestic producer surplus in a market in which domestic firms face competition from lower cost foreign producers. However, it should be observed that a tariff generally creates a net loss of welfare for society as a whole, as the consumers of the taxed good face a higher price and demand a lower quantity of output. While a tariff reduces imports may increase domestic production, the benefit to producers comes at the cost of lost consumer surplus and a net loss of welfare in the market as a whole. The tariff also leads to allocative inefficiency in a market, as domestic resources are over-allocated towards the production of a good on which imports are subject to tariffs.</p>
<p>Removing tariffs on ships increases the benefit to ship buyers, who in turn pass that benefit on to their own customers, lowering the prices of important services such as shipping and ferry service to Canadian consumers. In addition, foreign producers of ships increase their sales in Canada and experience greater demand, benefiting foreign producers and workers. The increase in foreign income may mean more demand for Canada’s exports in turn, increasing employment in other sectors of the Canadian economy in which they do have a comparative advantage over their trading partners. Overall the elimination of tariffs increases total welfare, eliminates dead weight loss, and leads to a more efficient allocation of a nation’s resources towards the goods it is able to competitively produce in the global economy.</p>
<p><strong>Discussion Questions:</strong></p>
<ol>
<li>What was the intended purpose of the 25% tariff on imported ships? Was this a valid reason to tax foreign built ships?</li>
<li>Who are the various “stakeholders” affected by a tariff on imported ships. Try to identify five different stakeholders who are affected by the tariff and its removal.</li>
<li>Why does the removal of a tariff improve allocative efficiency in a country? Does it also improve <a class="glossaryLink" href="http://welkerswikinomics.com/blog/glossary/productive-efficiency-2/" title="Glossary: Productive efficiency" onmouseover="tooltip.show('When a good is produces in the least cost manner, productive efficiency is achieved. This means that firms producing the good are achieving the lowest possible average production cost; in other words, they are producing at the lowest point on their average total cost curve, where marginal cost intersects the ATC. Among the four market structures (perfect competition, monopolistic competition, oligopoly and monopoly), only perfectly competitive firms will achieve productive efficiency in the long-run, since the price in the market will always be competed down to the firms' minimum ATC.');" onmouseout="tooltip.hide();">productive efficiency</a>?</li>
</ol><div class="shr-publisher-2078"></div><!-- Start Shareaholic LikeButtonSetBottom Automatic --><!-- End Shareaholic LikeButtonSetBottom Automatic --><p>Related posts:<ol>
<li><a href='http://welkerswikinomics.com/blog/2007/10/17/ib-graphing-and-understanding-the-economic-impacts-of-protectionism/' rel='bookmark' title='IB &#8211; Graphing  and understanding the economic impacts of protectionism'>IB &#8211; Graphing  and understanding the economic impacts of protectionism</a></li>
<li><a href='http://welkerswikinomics.com/blog/2009/09/23/tit-tat-tariff-china-and-americas-latest-shoving-match-is-underway/' rel='bookmark' title='Tit, tat, tariff&#8230; China and America&#8217;s latest shoving match is underway'>Tit, tat, tariff&#8230; China and America&#8217;s latest shoving match is underway</a></li>
<li><a href='http://welkerswikinomics.com/blog/2008/09/25/whats-koreas-beef-with-the-us-on-trade/' rel='bookmark' title='What&#8217;s Korea&#8217;s &#8220;beef&#8221; with the US on free trade?'>What&#8217;s Korea&#8217;s &#8220;beef&#8221; with the US on free trade?</a></li>
</ol></p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Free Trade Debate: to what extent has globalization based on free trade contributed to global economic growth and development?</title>
		<link>http://welkerswikinomics.com/blog/2010/09/30/free-trade-debate-to-what-extent-has-globalization-based-on-free-trade-contributed-to-global-economic-growth-and-development/</link>
		<comments>http://welkerswikinomics.com/blog/2010/09/30/free-trade-debate-to-what-extent-has-globalization-based-on-free-trade-contributed-to-global-economic-growth-and-development/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Thu, 30 Sep 2010 10:25:07 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Jason Welker</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Barriers to trade]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Free Trade]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Globalization]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Protectionism]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Tariffs]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Trade]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://welkerswikinomics.com/blog/?p=2065</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Today in class, my IB year 2 students undertook a debate on the extent to which free trade has contributed to or hurt the well-being of the world&#8217;s people. In preparation for this debate, students were asked to research and bookmark to our class&#8217;s Diigo group one article offering evidence in support of their argument. The [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<!-- Start Shareaholic LikeButtonSetTop Automatic --><!-- End Shareaholic LikeButtonSetTop Automatic --><p>Today in class, my IB year 2 students undertook a debate on the extent to which free trade has contributed to or hurt the well-being of the world&#8217;s people. In preparation for this debate, students were asked to research and bookmark to our class&#8217;s Diigo group one article offering evidence in support of their argument.</p>
<p>The debate was framed around a quote from Paul Krugman from chapter 11 of the excellent book, <em>Naked Economics</em>.</p>
<blockquote>
<div id="_mcePaste">&#8220;You could say that <a class="glossaryLink" href="http://welkerswikinomics.com/blog/glossary/globalization/" title="Glossary: Globalization" onmouseover="tooltip.show('The emerging inter-connectedness of the world's national economies and cultures');" onmouseout="tooltip.hide();">globalization</a>, driven not by human goodness but by the <a class="glossaryLink" href="http://welkerswikinomics.com/blog/glossary/profit/" title="Glossary: Profit" onmouseover="tooltip.show('The payment to the entrepreneur in the resource market. A business owner expects to earn a "normal" level of profit, otherwise it will not be worth his while to remain in a market. In this regard, profit is a cost of production, because if a minimum profit is not earned a firm will shut down.');" onmouseout="tooltip.hide();">profit</a> motive, has done far more good for more people than all the foreign aid and <a class="glossaryLink" href="http://welkerswikinomics.com/blog/glossary/soft-loan/" title="Glossary: Soft loan" onmouseover="tooltip.show('Loans made by foreign governments or international financial institution to less developed countries at favorable interest rates, lower than those the country would have paid if borrowing from a private bank. Allows less developed countries to keep interest payments low while acquiring much needed financing for economic development projects.');" onmouseout="tooltip.hide();">soft loans</a> provided by well-intentioned governments and aid agencies.&#8221;</div>
</blockquote>
<div>I was very impressed with their well thought out viewpoints, considering we have only just started our Unit 4: International Trade section of the IB course. Below are the summaries of my student&#8217;s arguments for and against <a class="glossaryLink" href="http://welkerswikinomics.com/blog/glossary/free-trade/" title="Glossary: Free Trade" onmouseover="tooltip.show('The exchange of goods and services between different countries undertaken without any government intervention.');" onmouseout="tooltip.hide();">free trade</a>. Next to their names are links to the articles they found to support their argument.</div>
<div>-</div>
<div><strong><span style="color: #ff0000;"><span style="text-decoration: underline;">Anti-trade arguments</span></span></strong></div>
<div><strong>Ika:</strong></div>
<div>
<ul>
<li>80% of the toys sold in America are made in China.</li>
<li>Foreign companies make toys in factories operated and owned by Chinese.</li>
<li>Working conditions in China are horrible with a minimum <a class="glossaryLink" href="http://welkerswikinomics.com/blog/glossary/wage/" title="Glossary: Wage" onmouseover="tooltip.show('The payment to labor in the resource market.');" onmouseout="tooltip.hide();">wages</a> that is far too low.</li>
<li>In addition to low wages, standards of worker safety are lower than the United States, leading to exploitation of <a class="glossaryLink" href="http://welkerswikinomics.com/blog/glossary/labor/" title="Glossary: Labor" onmouseover="tooltip.show('The work undertaken by humans towards the production of goods and services');" onmouseout="tooltip.hide();">labor</a> to produce cheap toys for Americans.</li>
<li>To make matters worse, the <a class="glossaryLink" href="http://welkerswikinomics.com/blog/glossary/price/" title="Glossary: Price" onmouseover="tooltip.show('This is the amount paid for a good determined by the supply and demand for the good in the market. Price rises and falls as demand and supply rise and fall.');" onmouseout="tooltip.hide();">prices</a> of a certain toy may vary greatly from rich country to rich country. For example, a doll that sells for $29 in the USA sells for $64 in Holland. How is this fair?</li>
<li><em>The cost of labor makes up less than 5% of the price of the toy. </em></li>
<li>Free trade only increases the profits of the capitalists, but does not help the workers in the poor countries where products are manufactured.</li>
</ul>
</div>
<div><strong>Koen: </strong><span style="font-family: Helvetica, Arial, sans-serif;"><a id="title_link_3" style="color: #0044cc; text-decoration: none; border-bottom-width: 1px; border-bottom-style: solid; border-bottom-color: #c9d7f1;" title="The Negative Impact of Free Trade | eHow.com" href="http://www.ehow.com/about_5452992_negative-impact-trade.html" target="_blank">The Negative Impact of Free Trade | eHow.com</a></span></div>
<div>
<ul>
<li>Due to free trade, <a class="glossaryLink" href="http://welkerswikinomics.com/blog/glossary/demand/" title="Glossary: Demand" onmouseover="tooltip.show('A schedule or curve showing the quantities of a particular good demanded at a range of price in a particular period of time.');" onmouseout="tooltip.hide();">demand</a> for labor in more developed countries decreases since production occurs in other countries where it&#8217;s cheaper to produce.</li>
<li>This means jobs lost in rich countries, so less <a class="glossaryLink" href="http://welkerswikinomics.com/blog/glossary/economic-growth/" title="Glossary: Economic growth" onmouseover="tooltip.show('An increase in the output of goods and services in a nation between two periods of time.');" onmouseout="tooltip.hide();">economic growth</a>, less <a class="glossaryLink" href="http://welkerswikinomics.com/blog/glossary/consumption/" title="Glossary: Consumption" onmouseover="tooltip.show('A component of a nation’s aggregate demand, measures the total spending by domestic households on domestically produced goods and services.');" onmouseout="tooltip.hide();">consumption</a>, lower <a class="glossaryLink" href="http://welkerswikinomics.com/blog/glossary/income/" title="Glossary: Income" onmouseover="tooltip.show('The money earned by households for providing their resources (land, labor and capital) to firms in the resource market. Incomes include wages, interest, rent and profit.');" onmouseout="tooltip.hide();">incomes</a>.</li>
<li>Growth in some countries comes at the expense of growth in other countries. There are winners and LOSERS in free trade.</li>
</ul>
</div>
<div><strong>Sarah: </strong><span style="font-family: Helvetica, Arial, sans-serif;"><a id="title_link_5" style="color: #0044cc; text-decoration: none; border-bottom-width: 1px; border-bottom-style: solid; border-bottom-color: #0044cc;" title="Doha trade deal 'will hurt Africa' | Environment | The Guardian" href="http://www.guardian.co.uk/environment/2005/nov/15/development.hearafrica05" target="_blank">Doha trade deal &#8216;will hurt Africa&#8217; | Environment | The Guardian</a></span></div>
<div>
<ul>
<li>Under free trade as we call it today, subsidies to farmers in Europe make it difficult for African farmers to compete.</li>
<li>Africa accounts for less of the total trade in the world today than it did in 1990, mostly because of its inability to export produce due to subsidies to farmers in Europe.</li>
<li>With less access to advanced <a class="glossaryLink" href="http://welkerswikinomics.com/blog/glossary/capital/" title="Glossary: Capital" onmouseover="tooltip.show('Human-made resources (machinery and equipment) used to produce goods and services; goods which do not directly satisfy human wants.');" onmouseout="tooltip.hide();">capital</a> and the lack of government  subsidies, African farmers find it difficult to compete on the global produce <a class="glossaryLink" href="http://welkerswikinomics.com/blog/glossary/market/" title="Glossary: Market" onmouseover="tooltip.show('A place where buyers and sellers meat to engage in mutual trade. Prices are set by the interaction of demand and supply in a market.');" onmouseout="tooltip.hide();">market</a>.</li>
<li>Free trade hurts poor countries&#8217; farmers and therefore increases the gap between rich and poor.</li>
</ul>
</div>
<div style="text-align: center;"><strong><span style="font-weight: normal;"><img class="size-full wp-image-2066 alignnone" style="margin: 5px;" title="Katine-farmer-woman" src="http://welkerswikinomics.com/blog/wp-content/uploads/2010/09/Katine-farmer-woman.jpg" alt="" width="460" height="276" /></span></strong></div>
<div><strong><span style="font-weight: normal;"> </span>Silvia:</strong></div>
<div>
<ul>
<li>Trade liberalization creates some losers as it increases the gap between those with skills to work in the global market and those who don&#8217;t have those skills.</li>
<li>Trade leads to an increase in inequality and more <a class="glossaryLink" href="http://welkerswikinomics.com/blog/glossary/relative-poverty/" title="Glossary: Relative poverty" onmouseover="tooltip.show('The state of earning an income that puts one in the lowest income level within his or her own country. Unlike absolute povery, it exists everywhere, since within even the richest nations a proportion of the population earns relatively less than the top income earners.');" onmouseout="tooltip.hide();">relative poverty</a>.</li>
<li>Trade creates severe tensions between big and small firms and workers who succeed and those who lag behind.</li>
<li>Export growth can exacerbate the exploitation of natural resources. Without environmental protection, trade may make us richer but at the price of future <a class="glossaryLink" href="http://welkerswikinomics.com/blog/glossary/development/" title="Glossary: Development" onmouseover="tooltip.show('Improvements in standards of living of a nation measured by income, education and health');" onmouseout="tooltip.hide();">development</a>.</li>
</ul>
</div>
<div><strong><span style="color: #ff0000;"><span style="text-decoration: underline;">Pro-trade arguments</span></span></strong></div>
<div><strong>Duy Anh: </strong><span style="font-family: Helvetica, Arial, sans-serif;"><a id="title_link_4" style="color: #0044cc; text-decoration: none; border-bottom-width: 1px; border-bottom-style: solid; border-bottom-color: #c9d7f1;" title="allAfrica.com: Africa: Free Trade Area for East, Southern Africa Making Progress" href="http://allafrica.com/stories/201009141128.html" target="_blank">allAfrica.com: Africa: Free Trade Area for East, Southern Africa Making Progress</a></span></div>
<div>
<ul>
<li>Africa is establishing <a class="glossaryLink" href="http://welkerswikinomics.com/blog/glossary/free-trade-area/" title="Glossary: Free trade area" onmouseover="tooltip.show('An agreement between nations to reduce or remove tariffs and quotas on all goods traded between the member states. Nations can maintain their own external barriers to trade, thus this is a lower level of economic integration than a customs union, but it represents a higher level of integration than a preferential trade area.');" onmouseout="tooltip.hide();">Free Trade Areas</a> to improve the flow of <a class="glossaryLink" href="http://welkerswikinomics.com/blog/glossary/goods/" title="Glossary: Goods" onmouseover="tooltip.show('The physical output of a firm producing a product meant for sale and consumption in a product market. Contrast with services, which are non-physical products produced and sold by firms to consumers.');" onmouseout="tooltip.hide();">goods</a> and <a class="glossaryLink" href="http://welkerswikinomics.com/blog/glossary/services/" title="Glossary: Services" onmouseover="tooltip.show('The non-physical output of firms meant for consumption in a product market. Services are "non-tangible" goods, such as taxi rides, accounting, doctor visits, teaching, and other products that can be bought and sold, but not physically consumed.');" onmouseout="tooltip.hide();">services</a> across country. If trade were not beneficial, then why would so many countries be clamoring to enter a free trade area?</li>
<li>When workers can move freely in a region it can lead to better, more efficient resource allocation. The same is true of capital, goods and services. Larger markets lead to more efficiency and greater opportunities for employment and for business operators.</li>
<li>Reducing <a class="glossaryLink" href="http://welkerswikinomics.com/blog/glossary/tariff/" title="Glossary: Tariff" onmouseover="tooltip.show('Taxes placed on goods imported from other countries. Meant to protect domestic producers from foreign competition.');" onmouseout="tooltip.hide();">tariffs</a>, <a class="glossaryLink" href="http://welkerswikinomics.com/blog/glossary/quota/" title="Glossary: Quota" onmouseover="tooltip.show('A physical limit on the quantity of a good produced in a foreign country allowed to be imported. Meant to restrict imports, allowing domestic producers to sell a greater quantity on the domestic market.');" onmouseout="tooltip.hide();">quotas</a> and other barriers to trade increases efficiency and allows for more opportunities for all those who live within a free trade areal.</li>
</ul>
</div>
<p><strong>Christopher: </strong><span style="font-family: Helvetica, Arial, sans-serif;"><a id="title_link_0" style="color: #0044cc; text-decoration: none; border-bottom-width: 1px; border-bottom-style: solid; border-bottom-color: #c9d7f1;" title="Foreign Trade, Not Foreign Aid « John Stossel" href="http://stossel.blogs.foxbusiness.com/2010/01/19/foreign-trade-not-foreign-aid" target="_blank">Foreign Trade, Not Foreign Aid « John Stossel</a></span></p>
<div>
<ul>
<li>If we help developing countries improve and increase their trade with each other and the rest of the world, it will create jobs, allow entrepreneurs to start companies and therefore reduce <a class="glossaryLink" href="http://welkerswikinomics.com/blog/glossary/unemployment/" title="Glossary: Unemployment" onmouseover="tooltip.show('The state of an individual who is of working age, actively seeking work, but unable to find a job.');" onmouseout="tooltip.hide();">unemployment</a>.</li>
<li>Greater opportunities and less unemployment leads to more social stability, reduction in poverty, and less likelihood that the poor people of the world will become &#8220;extremists&#8221; or result to violence and terrorism to express their dissatisfaction with the world.</li>
<li>More trade and international relationships reduces likelihood of conflict between and within poor countries.</li>
<li>We should expect to see social and political stability arising from increased economic opportunity.</li>
<li>Free trade WILL increase economic opportunities in poor countries.</li>
</ul>
</div>
<div><strong>General comments from the class after both sides have presented their arguments</strong></div>
<div>
<ul>
<li>Unlike aid, free trade cannot be &#8220;used up&#8221;. Aid is a one-off, when it&#8217;s gone it&#8217;s over, but trade can be self-perpetuating.</li>
<li>On the other hand, Sarah says,  <em>&#8220;but it all depends on the kind of aid and how it is used!&#8221;</em></li>
<li><em> </em>Aid can be invested responsibly, but often times it is not.</li>
<li>So maybe there is room for BOTH aid AND trade.</li>
<li>Lara says,  <em>&#8220;In extreme circumstances, aid is necessary. In other, trade is better as a long-run means of achieving growth and development&#8221;</em></li>
</ul>
</div>
<p>The exercise of debating the pros and cons of free trade for rich and poor countries was rewarding and provided an interesting and engaging way to introduce Unit 4 of the IB Economics course. The final two units, on International Trade and Economic Development, are closely tied, as one of the main strategies for achieving improvements in people&#8217;s standards of living is to improve the unfettered access to resource, good and service markets across national boundaries. We will be revisiting the debate on the effectiveness of trade versus aid at promoting the objectives of economic development repeatedly throughout the rest of the second year of IB economics.</p>
<p>For now, some questions went unresolved in today&#8217;s debate, and I will ask my student and any other interested reader to respond to those questions in the comments below.</p>
<p><strong>Discussion questions:</strong></p>
<div>
<ol>
<li>Is it possible that free trade has increased not only the <em>relative poverty</em> in the world, but also the number of people living in <em><a class="glossaryLink" href="http://welkerswikinomics.com/blog/glossary/absolute-poverty/" title="Glossary: Absolute poverty" onmouseover="tooltip.show('The state of people who live on less than absolute poverty.25 per day (purchasing power parity), as defined by the World Bank. Generally, such individual are unable to afford the basic necessities of life: food, shelter, education, health, etc.');" onmouseout="tooltip.hide();">absolute poverty</a></em>? In other words, trade makes the rich get richer, but does it make the poor get poorer? Or do the poor just <em>feel poorer</em> due to increased wealth and income of the rich?</li>
<li>In 1970, the economies of China and Africa were roughly the same size, and the average income of a Chinese person was around the same as an African&#8217;s. Today, China&#8217;s economy is more than three time&#8217;s the size of Africa&#8217;s. What has China done differently than Africa to lead to such a huge income gap between the two regions?</li>
<li>Why should people in Europe, America and other high income regions of the world care about the economic development of the world&#8217;s poorest countries? Does improving the lives of Africans require that we in Europe and the rich West make sacrifices in our own standards of living?</li>
<li>African countries want Europe to stop subsidizing its farmers to make it easier for African farmers to compete. But doing so would mean the loss of an important part of European history and culture. Why would less subsidies to farmers in Europe help Africa, and should Europe listen to Africa on this issue or not?</li>
</ol>
</div><div class="shr-publisher-2065"></div><!-- Start Shareaholic LikeButtonSetBottom Automatic --><!-- End Shareaholic LikeButtonSetBottom Automatic --><p>Related posts:<ol>
<li><a href='http://welkerswikinomics.com/blog/2012/01/26/fair-trad/' rel='bookmark' title='Fair versus Free Trade as means to promote Economic Development'>Fair versus Free Trade as means to promote Economic Development</a></li>
<li><a href='http://welkerswikinomics.com/blog/2009/09/14/the-lord-of-the-ring-of-free-trade-is-globalization-really-a-force-of-evil-in-the-world/' rel='bookmark' title='The Lord of the Ring of Free Trade: Is globalization really a force of evil in the world?'>The Lord of the Ring of Free Trade: Is globalization really a force of evil in the world?</a></li>
<li><a href='http://welkerswikinomics.com/blog/2007/05/02/does-free-trade-really-mean-lower-prices-a-debate-between-two-economists-much-smarter-than-me/' rel='bookmark' title='Does free trade really mean lower prices? A debate between two economists much smarter than me'>Does free trade really mean lower prices? A debate between two economists much smarter than me</a></li>
</ol></p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>US Exports: the key to job creation? Obama thinks so&#8230;</title>
		<link>http://welkerswikinomics.com/blog/2010/02/05/us-exports-the-key-to-job-creation-obama-thinks-so/</link>
		<comments>http://welkerswikinomics.com/blog/2010/02/05/us-exports-the-key-to-job-creation-obama-thinks-so/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Fri, 05 Feb 2010 08:45:33 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Jason Welker</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Balance of Trade]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Barriers to trade]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[China]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Economic Growth]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Exports]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Free Trade]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Unemployment]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://welkerswikinomics.com/blog/?p=1513</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Obamas Efforts To Boost Exports Face Hurdles : NPR President Obama thinks the key to recovering the millions of American jobs lost during the recession lies in boosting exports to the rest of the world: The plan sounds great. As we learn in AP and IB Economics, free trade leads to benefits for nations that [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<!-- Start Shareaholic LikeButtonSetTop Automatic --><!-- End Shareaholic LikeButtonSetTop Automatic --><p><a href="http://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=123360712">Obamas Efforts To Boost Exports Face Hurdles : NPR</a></p>
<p>President Obama thinks the key to recovering the millions of American jobs lost during the <a class="glossaryLink" href="http://welkerswikinomics.com/blog/glossary/recession/" title="Glossary: Recession" onmouseover="tooltip.show('A decrease in the total output of goods and services in a nation between two periods of time. Could be caused by a decrease in aggregate demand or in aggregate supply.');" onmouseout="tooltip.hide();">recession</a> lies in boosting <a class="glossaryLink" href="http://welkerswikinomics.com/blog/glossary/exports/" title="Glossary: Exports" onmouseover="tooltip.show('The spending by foreigners on domestically produced goods and services. Counts as an injection into a nation’s circular flow of income.');" onmouseout="tooltip.hide();">exports</a> to the rest of the world:<br />
<object classid="clsid:d27cdb6e-ae6d-11cf-96b8-444553540000" width="400" height="386" codebase="http://download.macromedia.com/pub/shockwave/cabs/flash/swflash.cab#version=6,0,40,0"><param name="src" value="http://www.npr.org/v2/?i=123360712&amp;m=123363135&amp;t=audio" /><param name="wmode" value="opaque" /><param name="allowfullscreen" value="true" /><embed type="application/x-shockwave-flash" width="400" height="386" src="http://www.npr.org/v2/?i=123360712&amp;m=123363135&amp;t=audio" allowfullscreen="true" wmode="opaque"></embed></object></p>
<p>The plan sounds great. As we learn in AP and IB Economics, <a class="glossaryLink" href="http://welkerswikinomics.com/blog/glossary/free-trade/" title="Glossary: Free Trade" onmouseover="tooltip.show('The exchange of goods and services between different countries undertaken without any government intervention.');" onmouseout="tooltip.hide();">free trade</a> leads to benefits for nations that choose to participate in it. Of course, promoting free trade will harm some industries and workers whose jobs end up being &#8220;off-shored&#8221; or &#8220;out-sourced&#8221; to countries with cheaper or more qualified <a class="glossaryLink" href="http://welkerswikinomics.com/blog/glossary/labor/" title="Glossary: Labor" onmouseover="tooltip.show('The work undertaken by humans towards the production of goods and services');" onmouseout="tooltip.hide();">labor</a>; but Obama&#8217;s hope is that promoting free trade will result in a net gain of 2 million American jobs.</p>
<p>The goal of doubling US exports in 5 years, however, may be overly ambitious. According to the <a href="https://www.cia.gov/library/publications/the-world-factbook/rankorder/2078rank.html?countryName=United%20States&amp;countryCode=us&amp;regionCode=na&amp;rank=4#us" target="_blank">CIA World Factbook</a>, the US is currently the fourth largest exporter in the world, sending just around $1 trillion worth of <a class="glossaryLink" href="http://welkerswikinomics.com/blog/glossary/goods/" title="Glossary: Goods" onmouseover="tooltip.show('The physical output of a firm producing a product meant for sale and consumption in a product market. Contrast with services, which are non-physical products produced and sold by firms to consumers.');" onmouseout="tooltip.hide();">goods</a> and <a class="glossaryLink" href="http://welkerswikinomics.com/blog/glossary/services/" title="Glossary: Services" onmouseover="tooltip.show('The non-physical output of firms meant for consumption in a product market. Services are "non-tangible" goods, such as taxi rides, accounting, doctor visits, teaching, and other products that can be bought and sold, but not physically consumed.');" onmouseout="tooltip.hide();">services</a> abroad in 2009, behind the EU with $1.9 trillion, China with $1.2 trillion and Germany with $1.18 trillion of exports. Obama&#8217;s goal to double US exports would propel the US to the single largest exporting nation in the world, putting it right around where the 27 nations of the European Union are today.</p>
<p>To achieve his goal, Obama proposals include three strategies for boosting <a class="glossaryLink" href="http://welkerswikinomics.com/blog/glossary/demand/" title="Glossary: Demand" onmouseover="tooltip.show('A schedule or curve showing the quantities of a particular good demanded at a range of price in a particular period of time.');" onmouseout="tooltip.hide();">demand</a> and <a class="glossaryLink" href="http://welkerswikinomics.com/blog/glossary/supply/" title="Glossary: Supply" onmouseover="tooltip.show('A schedule or curve showing the direct relationship between the quantity of output firms produce in a particular period of time and the various prices of the good.');" onmouseout="tooltip.hide();">supply</a> of US exports.</p>
<ul>
<li>On the supply side he suggests continuing recent guarantees for payment by foreign buyers. Essentially such a scheme reduces the risks that often accompany international commerce, reducing the &#8220;costs&#8221; of exporting firms, which in essence increases the supply of exports from the US.</li>
<li>On the demand side the US must pressure China to revalue its currency. A stronger RMB (and a weaker dollar) will increase China&#8217;s demand for US goods and services.</li>
<li>Also on the demand side, the US should push through free trade agreements with South Korea, Panama and Columbia, which have encountered obstacles among US lawmakers who fear that more free trade may actually mean a loss of US jobs.</li>
</ul>
<p>Free trade agreements, export payment guarantees and a weaker US dollar in China will help Obama reach his goal. Chances are, however, that it will ultimately be unattainable. Doubling US exports would propel the US to the top of the list of exporting countries, surpassing even China, today&#8217;s current leader, by $700 billion more than the country exported last year. The impact on US GDP would undoubtedly be enormous, adding upwards of  $1 trillion to the US economy.</p>
<p>Creating jobs through trade is controversial, as many Americans still believe trade is partially to blame for the <em>loss </em> of American jobs in recent years.</p>
<blockquote><p>&#8220;The average voter in the U.S. has been pretty on the fence about whether they want more trade coming into the United States,&#8221; Slaughter says. &#8220;The <a class="glossaryLink" href="http://welkerswikinomics.com/blog/glossary/income/" title="Glossary: Income" onmouseover="tooltip.show('The money earned by households for providing their resources (land, labor and capital) to firms in the resource market. Incomes include wages, interest, rent and profit.');" onmouseout="tooltip.hide();">income</a> pressures that a lot of households have faced in recent years have sort of shifted that balance where more voters now are a lot more wary of <a class="glossaryLink" href="http://welkerswikinomics.com/blog/glossary/globalization/" title="Glossary: Globalization" onmouseover="tooltip.show('The emerging inter-connectedness of the world's national economies and cultures');" onmouseout="tooltip.hide();">globalization</a> than they used to be.&#8221;</p></blockquote>
<p>While his goal is lofty, Obama is on the right track towards growing the US economy and promoting job creation. Trade benefits Americans not just because it will increase demand for our goods and services abroad, but because it will lead to lower <a class="glossaryLink" href="http://welkerswikinomics.com/blog/glossary/price/" title="Glossary: Price" onmouseover="tooltip.show('This is the amount paid for a good determined by the supply and demand for the good in the market. Price rises and falls as demand and supply rise and fall.');" onmouseout="tooltip.hide();">prices</a> for many of the things we enjoy consuming at home, ultimately increasing real incomes in America while also creating jobs.</p>
<p>The graph below presents a simple explanation of how the above strategies can result in more jobs in US export industries.</p>
<p><a href="http://welkerswikinomics.com/blog/wp-content/uploads/2010/02/US-China-trade_1.png"><img class="alignnone size-full wp-image-1515" title="US China trade_1" src="http://welkerswikinomics.com/blog/wp-content/uploads/2010/02/US-China-trade_1.png" alt="" width="605" height="391" /></a></p>
<p><strong>Discussion Questions:</strong></p>
<ol>
<li>How does China manipulate the value of its currency? Why is such manipulation harmful to US exporters?</li>
<li>How does a government payment guarantee for exporters actually <em>reduce the costs of doing business </em>for US exporting firms?</li>
<li>Do you believe that more <a class="glossaryLink" href="http://welkerswikinomics.com/blog/glossary/free-trade-agreement/" title="Glossary: Free Trade Agreement" onmouseover="tooltip.show('An agreement between two or more nations to reduce or eliminate barriers to trade across member states. Meant to achieve a more efficient allocation of resources between nations and a larger market for member nation's exports, as well as a larger variety of goods for domestic consumers to enjoy.');" onmouseout="tooltip.hide();">free trade agreements</a> with countries like South Korea and Panama will <em>create jobs </em>or <em>destroy jobs</em> in the United States? Explain.</li>
</ol><div class="shr-publisher-1513"></div><!-- Start Shareaholic LikeButtonSetBottom Automatic --><!-- End Shareaholic LikeButtonSetBottom Automatic --><p>Related posts:<ol>
<li><a href='http://welkerswikinomics.com/blog/2011/04/11/a-glimmer-of-hope-rising-incomes-in-china-lead-to-rising-demand-for-us-exports/' rel='bookmark' title='&#8220;A glimmer of hope&#8221; &#8211; rising incomes in China lead to rising demand for US exports'>&#8220;A glimmer of hope&#8221; &#8211; rising incomes in China lead to rising demand for US exports</a></li>
<li><a href='http://welkerswikinomics.com/blog/2008/10/22/mccain-vs-obama-on-the-costs-and-benefits-of-free-trade/' rel='bookmark' title='McCain vs. Obama on the costs and benefits of free trade'>McCain vs. Obama on the costs and benefits of free trade</a></li>
<li><a href='http://welkerswikinomics.com/blog/2007/11/20/exports-good-imports-also-good/' rel='bookmark' title='Exports, good &#8211; Imports, ALSO GOOD!'>Exports, good &#8211; Imports, ALSO GOOD!</a></li>
</ol></p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Exchange rates, currency manipulations, and the balance of trade</title>
		<link>http://welkerswikinomics.com/blog/2009/10/26/exchange-rates-currency-manipulations-and-the-balance-of-trade/</link>
		<comments>http://welkerswikinomics.com/blog/2009/10/26/exchange-rates-currency-manipulations-and-the-balance-of-trade/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Mon, 26 Oct 2009 07:10:10 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Jason Welker</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Balance of Payments]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Balance of Trade]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Barriers to trade]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[China]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Currency]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Exchange Rates]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Foreign exchange markets]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Recession]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Trade]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[WTO]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://welkerswikinomics.com/blog/2008/11/14/exchange-rates-currency-manipulations-and-the-balance-of-trade/</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[FT.com &#124; The Economists’ Forum &#124; Imbalances and undervalued exchange rates: Rehabilitating Keynes In our year 2 IB Economics class, we are beginning the part of our International Trade unit on exchange rates and the balance of trade . While the market for a particular currency reflects many of the same characteristics as a product [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<!-- Start Shareaholic LikeButtonSetTop Automatic --><!-- End Shareaholic LikeButtonSetTop Automatic --><p><a href="http://blogs.ft.com/wolfforum/2008/11/imbalances-and-undervalued-exchange-rates-rehabilitating-keynes/">FT.com | The Economists’ Forum | Imbalances and undervalued exchange rates: Rehabilitating Keynes</a></p>
<p>In our year 2 IB Economics class, we are beginning the part of our International Trade unit on exchange rates and the balance of trade . While the market for a particular currency reflects many of the same characteristics as a product market (i.e. upward sloping su<img style="max-width: 800px; float: right; margin-top: 10px; margin-bottom: 10px; margin-left: 10px;" src="http://welkerswikinomics.com/blog/wp-content/uploads/2008/11/exchange-rates-3.jpeg" alt="" width="370" height="323" />pply curve, downward sloping demand curve), the consequences of a change the <em>price of a currency (the exchange rate) </em>is far more powerful than a change in the price of a particular good or service in a product market.</p>
<p>How does the value of a country&#8217;s currency affect that country&#8217;s balance of trade with other countries? To understand this important concept, we first need to know something about the process by which currencies are exchanged when two countries trade. Let&#8217;s look at an example:</p>
<p>When an American consumer wants to buy an iPod that was made in China she will have to pay for it in US dollars, since that&#8217;s what she earns her <a class="glossaryLink" href="http://welkerswikinomics.com/blog/glossary/wage/" title="Glossary: Wage" onmouseover="tooltip.show('The payment to labor in the resource market.');" onmouseout="tooltip.hide();">wages</a> in from selling her labor in the <a class="glossaryLink" href="http://welkerswikinomics.com/blog/glossary/resource-market/" title="Glossary: Resource market" onmouseover="tooltip.show('The market in a nation's circular flow in which households provide firms with the factors of production (land, labor and capital) in exchange for money incomes (rent, wages and interest). Firms are the buyers, households are the sellers in the resource market.');" onmouseout="tooltip.hide();">resource <a class="glossaryLink" href="http://welkerswikinomics.com/blog/glossary/market/" title="Glossary: Market" onmouseover="tooltip.show('A place where buyers and sellers meat to engage in mutual trade. Prices are set by the interaction of demand and supply in a market.');" onmouseout="tooltip.hide();">market</a></a>. Apple now has the consumer&#8217;s $300, which gets split up to cover all the costs the company faced in the manufacture, distribution, marketing and sale of the iPod. Part of that $300 (say $100) will go to the manager of the factory in China where it was made.</p>
<p>The factory manager in Shanghai faces his own costs he must cover. He must pay <a class="glossaryLink" href="http://welkerswikinomics.com/blog/glossary/rent/" title="Glossary: Rent" onmouseover="tooltip.show('The price of land resources. Rent must be paid by producers, either as an explicit cost or as an opportunity cost for those who own the land resources employed in production.');" onmouseout="tooltip.hide();">rent</a> on his factory space, <a class="glossaryLink" href="http://welkerswikinomics.com/blog/glossary/interest/" title="Glossary: Interest" onmouseover="tooltip.show('The payment for capital in the resource market. Firms pay interest on the money they borrow to acquire capital equipment (technology). Households receive interest for providing their savings to banks, who make the loans to the firms paying interest.');" onmouseout="tooltip.hide();">interest</a> on the loans he took out to acquire <a class="glossaryLink" href="http://welkerswikinomics.com/blog/glossary/capital/" title="Glossary: Capital" onmouseover="tooltip.show('Human-made resources (machinery and equipment) used to produce goods and services; goods which do not directly satisfy human wants.');" onmouseout="tooltip.hide();">capital</a>, and wages to the workers assembling iPods on his factory floor. The problem is, these costs are all in Chinese yuan, but he&#8217;s holding the US dollars that Apple paid him for his iPod. In order to cover his costs, the Chinese factory owner must take the $100 to a Chinese bank and swap it for RMB. The local bank that changes his <a class="glossaryLink" href="http://welkerswikinomics.com/blog/glossary/money/" title="Glossary: Money" onmouseover="tooltip.show('Any object that can be used to facilitate the exchange of goods and services in a market.');" onmouseout="tooltip.hide();">money</a> now hands the $100 over to China&#8217;s central bank (the PBOC) which prints and exchanges RMB to the bank at whatever the prevailing <a class="glossaryLink" href="http://welkerswikinomics.com/blog/glossary/exchange-rate/" title="Glossary: Exchange rate" onmouseover="tooltip.show('The price of one currency in terms expressed in terms of another currency, determined in the forex market.');" onmouseout="tooltip.hide();">exchange rate</a> is at the time.</p>
<p>Ultimately, China&#8217;s central bank will decide what to do with its holding of US dollars. Most of the dollars are loaned back to the United States through China&#8217;s purchase of US Treasury securities (the IOUs the US government sells to finance its deficits). China&#8217;s voracious <a class="glossaryLink" href="http://welkerswikinomics.com/blog/glossary/demand/" title="Glossary: Demand" onmouseover="tooltip.show('A schedule or curve showing the quantities of a particular good demanded at a range of price in a particular period of time.');" onmouseout="tooltip.hide();">demand</a> for US dollar denominated assets keeps the demand for (and the the value of) dollars high on <a class="glossaryLink" href="http://welkerswikinomics.com/blog/glossary/foreign-exchange-market/" title="Glossary: Foreign exchange market" onmouseover="tooltip.show('The market in which international buyers and sellers exchange foreign currencies for one another to buy and sell goods, services, and assets from various countries. It is where a currency’s exchange rate relative to other currencies is determined.');" onmouseout="tooltip.hide();">foreign exchange markets</a>, meaning the RMB remains relatively cheap for Americans and therefore Chinese manufactured <a class="glossaryLink" href="http://welkerswikinomics.com/blog/glossary/goods/" title="Glossary: Goods" onmouseover="tooltip.show('The physical output of a firm producing a product meant for sale and consumption in a product market. Contrast with services, which are non-physical products produced and sold by firms to consumers.');" onmouseout="tooltip.hide();">goods</a> attractive.</p>
<p>China&#8217;s policy of exchange rate manipulation has upset many American politicians over the years, who often blame China for America&#8217;s shrinking manufacturing sector. A weak RMB means the cost of producing things like iPods in China is far lower than it would be in the US. By keeping demand for dollars high on the foreign exchange markets through its incessant demand for US treasury securities and other financial and real assets, while simultaneously hoarding vast reserves of US dollars in its central bank, thus keeping <a class="glossaryLink" href="http://welkerswikinomics.com/blog/glossary/supply/" title="Glossary: Supply" onmouseover="tooltip.show('A schedule or curve showing the direct relationship between the quantity of output firms produce in a particular period of time and the various prices of the good.');" onmouseout="tooltip.hide();">supply</a> of dollars on foreign exchange markets low <em><strong>(see graph)</strong></em>, China has prevented the RMB from appreciating, fueling the growth of the country&#8217;s export-manufacturing sector.</p>
<p>China&#8217;s currency manipulations may soon ilicit a response from the United States as president-elect Barack Obama takes office next year. Facing a <a class="glossaryLink" href="http://welkerswikinomics.com/blog/glossary/recession/" title="Glossary: Recession" onmouseover="tooltip.show('A decrease in the total output of goods and services in a nation between two periods of time. Could be caused by a decrease in aggregate demand or in aggregate supply.');" onmouseout="tooltip.hide();">recession</a> and rising <a class="glossaryLink" href="http://welkerswikinomics.com/blog/glossary/unemployment/" title="Glossary: Unemployment" onmouseover="tooltip.show('The state of an individual who is of working age, actively seeking work, but unable to find a job.');" onmouseout="tooltip.hide();">unemployment</a>, combined with <a href="http://welkerswikinomics.com/blog/2008/11/05/up-up-and-away-why-are-the-dollar-and-the-yen-on-the-rise-2/">the recent appreciation of the US dollar</a>, the pressure is on Obama to take immediate action to restore America&#8217;s manufacturing sector. According to the Financial Times blog &#8220;the Economists&#8217; Forum&#8221;:</p>
<blockquote><p>If the US economy takes a downturn and the dollar continues to strengthen, a resurgence of protectionist pressures is likely. This time around, these pressures could well take the form of unilateral action against competitive currencies. It is noteworthy that President-elect Obama has actively and repeatedly supported action against “currency manipulation.”</p></blockquote>
<p>The &#8220;competitive currency&#8221; perceived to pose the greatest threat to America&#8217;s inustrial sector is certainly the Chinese RMB. Currency manipulation is a form of <a class="glossaryLink" href="http://welkerswikinomics.com/blog/glossary/protectionism/" title="Glossary: Protectionism" onmouseover="tooltip.show('Protectionism: The use of tariffs, quotas or subsidies to give domestic producers a competitive advantage over foreign producers. Meant to protect domestic production and employment from foreign competition.');" onmouseout="tooltip.hide();">protectionism</a>, which in a time of global economic slowdowns poses a larger threat than ever to both developed and developing nations&#8217; economies alike. For this reason, the World Trade Organization may need to employ carrot and stick methods to create <a class="glossaryLink" href="http://welkerswikinomics.com/blog/glossary/incentive/" title="Glossary: Incentive" onmouseover="tooltip.show('Refers to the motivation an individual has to undertake a particular action.');" onmouseout="tooltip.hide();">incentives</a> for China to liberalize its currency controls and allow the RMB to strengthan against the dollar and other major currencies:</p>
<blockquote><p>How would this new rule against undervalued exchange rates be incorporated in the WTO? Through negotiation. The (WTO) should place rules on undervalued exchange rates&#8230;. The US and EU have been the principal demandeurs for action by China in the past. But it is important to remember that until very recently, a number of developing countries—Brazil, Mexico, Korea, Turkey and South Africa—were affected by the competitive pressure from the undervalued (RMB). Indeed, some months ago, the Indian Prime Minister urged China to follow a more market-based exchange rate policy. For obvious reasons, more emerging market countries have not voiced their concerns, but it is possible that a coalition of affected countries could unite on this issue.</p>
<p>Clearly, Chinese concerns have to be addressed for any new rules to be crafted and commonly agreed&#8230; First, China’s major trading partners could pledge granting China the status of a “market economy” in the WTO contingent on it eliminating currency undervaluation and moving to a market-based system. This status would have significant value for China by shielding it against unilateral trade actions such as anti-<a class="glossaryLink" href="http://welkerswikinomics.com/blog/glossary/dumping/" title="Glossary: Dumping" onmouseover="tooltip.show('The practice of producers in one nation selling their output at a price lower than their costs of production in another nation. Considered a justification for protectionism by the World Trade Organization.');" onmouseout="tooltip.hide();">dumping</a> and countervailing duties by trading partners. Second, as part of radical governance reform of the IMF, which is desirable in itself, China should be offered a substantially larger voting share in the IMF commensurate with its economic status.</p></blockquote>
<p><strong>Discussion Questions:<br />
</strong></p>
<ol>
<li>How does China continuing to undervalue its currency threaten the industrial economies of its largest trading partners?</li>
<li>What is China&#8217;s purpose for maintaining the low value of the RMB relative to the currencies of other nations?</li>
<li>What would be a unilateral protectionist measure an Obama administration may advocate if the WTO refuses to take action against China&#8217;s currency manipulations? How would you advise president-elect Obama on the issue of whether to take protectionist action against China in the context of the current economic crisis in America?</li>
</ol><div class="shr-publisher-617"></div><!-- Start Shareaholic LikeButtonSetBottom Automatic --><!-- End Shareaholic LikeButtonSetBottom Automatic --><p>Related posts:<ol>
<li><a href='http://welkerswikinomics.com/blog/2010/11/23/exchange-rates-and-trade-a-delicate-balancing-act-currently-out-of-balance/' rel='bookmark' title='Exchange rates and trade: a delicate balancing act, currently out of balance!'>Exchange rates and trade: a delicate balancing act, currently out of balance!</a></li>
<li><a href='http://welkerswikinomics.com/blog/2007/11/02/interest-rates-and-exchange-rates-the-interesting-case-of-the-renmenbi/' rel='bookmark' title='How do changing interest rates affect exchange rates? The example of the RMB'>How do changing interest rates affect exchange rates? The example of the RMB</a></li>
<li><a href='http://welkerswikinomics.com/blog/2011/11/16/lesson-plan-elasticity-exchange-rates-and-the-balance-of-payments-%e2%80%93-understanding-the-marshall-lerner-condition/' rel='bookmark' title='Lesson plan: Elasticity, exchange rates and the balance of payments – understanding the Marshall Lerner Condition'>Lesson plan: Elasticity, exchange rates and the balance of payments – understanding the Marshall Lerner Condition</a></li>
</ol></p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Tit, tat, tariff&#8230; China and America&#8217;s latest shoving match is underway</title>
		<link>http://welkerswikinomics.com/blog/2009/09/23/tit-tat-tariff-china-and-americas-latest-shoving-match-is-underway/</link>
		<comments>http://welkerswikinomics.com/blog/2009/09/23/tit-tat-tariff-china-and-americas-latest-shoving-match-is-underway/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Tue, 22 Sep 2009 20:42:54 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Jason Welker</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Barriers to trade]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[China]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Comparative advantage]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Free Trade]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Protection]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Tariffs]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Trade]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://welkerswikinomics.com/blog/?p=1147</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[America, a champion of free trade between the world&#8217;s nations&#8230; right? Actually, the United States places tariffs (taxes on import) on virtully every item it trades for with the rest of the world. Below is just one tiny section of the 75 page table of contents (!!) of the &#8220;Harmonized Tariff Schedule of the United [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<!-- Start Shareaholic LikeButtonSetTop Automatic --><!-- End Shareaholic LikeButtonSetTop Automatic --><p>America, a champion of <a class="glossaryLink" href="http://welkerswikinomics.com/blog/glossary/free-trade/" title="Glossary: Free Trade" onmouseover="tooltip.show('The exchange of goods and services between different countries undertaken without any government intervention.');" onmouseout="tooltip.hide();">free trade</a> between the world&#8217;s nations&#8230; right?</p>
<p>Actually, the United States places <a class="glossaryLink" href="http://welkerswikinomics.com/blog/glossary/tariff/" title="Glossary: Tariff" onmouseover="tooltip.show('Taxes placed on goods imported from other countries. Meant to protect domestic producers from foreign competition.');" onmouseout="tooltip.hide();">tariffs</a> (taxes on import) on virtully every item it trades for with the rest of the world. Below is just one tiny section of the <em>75 page t</em><em>able of contents (!!) </em>of the <a href="http://www.usitc.gov/tata/hts/bychapter/index.htm" target="_blank">&#8220;Harmonized Tariff Schedule of the United States&#8221;.</a></p>
<blockquote><p>JOGGING SUITS knitted or crocheted . . . . . . . . .. . . . . 6112.11-19<br />
JOINERY of wood, for builders . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4418<br />
JOINTS artificial . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. . . . . 9021.11<br />
JOJOBA OIL . . . . . . . .  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1515.90, 1516-1518<br />
JOKE ARTICLES . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9505.90<br />
JONGKONG . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  . . . . Ch. 44<br />
JOURNALS . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  . 49-3, 4902<br />
JUDO UNIFORMS of cotton . . . .  . . . . . . . . . . . . 6203.22, 6204.22<br />
JUICES fruit . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .20-US1-3<br />
fruit and vegetable . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 20-5, 2009.11-90<br />
meat, fish, or aquatic invertebrates . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .1603.00<br />
JUMPSUITS men&#8217;s or boys&#8217; . . .  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  6211.32-33<br />
women&#8217;s or girls&#8217; . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .6211.42-43<br />
JUNIPER seeds of . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . &#8230;0909.50</p></blockquote>
<p>Yes, folks. Even &#8220;Joke Articles&#8221; made overseas are taxed before ending up in the hands of American consumers (<em>by 70% as it turns out!</em>). But tariffs are no joke. The podcast below offers an excellent evaluation of the effects of America&#8217;s tariffs on various stakeholders, including American consumers, producers, and workers and on foreign producers, consumers and workers.</p>
<h3 style="outline-width: 0px; outline-style: initial; outline-color: initial; background-image: initial; background-repeat: initial; background-attachment: initial; -webkit-background-clip: initial; -webkit-background-origin: initial; background-color: transparent; display: block; font-size: 13px; font-weight: normal; line-height: 1; background-position: initial initial; padding: 3px; margin: 0px; border: 0px initial initial;">[podcast]http://welkerswikinomics.com/blog/wp-content/uploads/Tariffs.mp3[/podcast]</h3>
<p>After listening to the whole podcast, respond the the following questions in a comment.</p>
<p><strong>Discussion Questions:</strong></p>
<ol>
<li>How does a tariff on Chinese tires affect American tire manufacturers? Why are American firms that make tires actually <em>opposed</em> to the tariff on Chinese <a class="glossaryLink" href="http://welkerswikinomics.com/blog/glossary/imports/" title="Glossary: Imports" onmouseover="tooltip.show('Spending on goods and services produced in foreign nations. Counts as a leakage from a nation’s circular flow of income.');" onmouseout="tooltip.hide();">imports</a>?</li>
<li>Which group is the main proponent of higher tariffs on Chinese tires? Why does this group favor higher tariffs?</li>
<li>How have the Chinese responded to the American tire tariff? Why are American chicken farmers upset about the <a class="glossaryLink" href="http://welkerswikinomics.com/blog/glossary/taxes/" title="Glossary: Tax" onmouseover="tooltip.show('A payment made by an individual or a firm to the government, usually levied on income, property or the consumption of goods and services. Taxes are a leakage from the circular flow of income, but they provide government with the money they use to provide government services and public goods.');" onmouseout="tooltip.hide();">tax</a> on Chinese tires?</li>
<li>Why do &#8220;97% of economists say tariffs are a bad idea?&#8221; The commentator says economists hate them because &#8220;they are so inefficient&#8221;. Discuss the economic reasoning behind this statement.</li>
<li>Do you think it is likely that the 35% tariff on Chinese tires will save or create jobs for Americans? Why or why not? What are your conclusions regarding the economic wisdom of tariffs?</li>
</ol><div class="shr-publisher-1147"></div><!-- Start Shareaholic LikeButtonSetBottom Automatic --><!-- End Shareaholic LikeButtonSetBottom Automatic --><p>Related posts:<ol>
<li><a href='http://welkerswikinomics.com/blog/2010/10/07/obamas-bad-decision/' rel='bookmark' title='US / China Trade War &#8211; Could this be the beginning?'>US / China Trade War &#8211; Could this be the beginning?</a></li>
<li><a href='http://welkerswikinomics.com/blog/2007/08/20/be-afraid-be-very-afraid-china-bashing-amps-up/' rel='bookmark' title='Red Storm Rising!! China bashing picks up steam&#8230;'>Red Storm Rising!! China bashing picks up steam&#8230;</a></li>
<li><a href='http://welkerswikinomics.com/blog/2007/09/19/in-the-meantime-retaliatory-regulations-contribute-to-chinas-inflation/' rel='bookmark' title='In the meantime, retaliatory regulations contribute to China&#8217;s inflation!'>In the meantime, retaliatory regulations contribute to China&#8217;s inflation!</a></li>
</ol></p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>Deteriorating terms of trade and the current account balance</title>
		<link>http://welkerswikinomics.com/blog/2009/05/12/deteriorating-terms-of-trade-and-the-current-account-balance/</link>
		<comments>http://welkerswikinomics.com/blog/2009/05/12/deteriorating-terms-of-trade-and-the-current-account-balance/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Tue, 12 May 2009 15:32:47 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Jason Welker</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Balance of Trade]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Barriers to trade]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[capital account]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Current account]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Protection]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Terms of trade]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://welkerswikinomics.com/blog/2009/05/12/deteriorating-terms-of-trade-and-the-current-account-balance/</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[U.S. Trade Gap Widens on Oil Imports &#8211; WSJ.com Terms of trade is a term that is often misunderstood by IB Economics students. Simply put, a nation&#8217;s terms of trade refers to the relative price of a country&#8217;s exports to its imports. When a country&#8217;s imports increase in price, while the value of its exports [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<!-- Start Shareaholic LikeButtonSetTop Automatic --><!-- End Shareaholic LikeButtonSetTop Automatic --><p><a href="http://online.wsj.com/article/SB124213096242510491.html#mod=rss_whats_news_us">U.S. Trade Gap Widens on Oil Imports &#8211; WSJ.com</a></p>
<p><a class="glossaryLink" href="http://welkerswikinomics.com/blog/glossary/terms-of-trade/" title="Glossary: Terms of Trade" onmouseover="tooltip.show('The ratio of an index of a nation's export prices to its import prices. An improvement in the terms of trade means export prices have risen relative to import prices. A worsening means import prices have risen relative to export prices.');" onmouseout="tooltip.hide();">Terms of trade</a> is a term that is often misunderstood by IB Economics students. Simply put, a nation&#8217;s terms of trade refers to the relative <a class="glossaryLink" href="http://welkerswikinomics.com/blog/glossary/price/" title="Glossary: Price" onmouseover="tooltip.show('This is the amount paid for a good determined by the supply and demand for the good in the market. Price rises and falls as demand and supply rise and fall.');" onmouseout="tooltip.hide();">price</a> of a country&#8217;s <a class="glossaryLink" href="http://welkerswikinomics.com/blog/glossary/exports/" title="Glossary: Exports" onmouseover="tooltip.show('The spending by foreigners on domestically produced goods and services. Counts as an injection into a nation’s circular flow of income.');" onmouseout="tooltip.hide();">exports</a> to its <a class="glossaryLink" href="http://welkerswikinomics.com/blog/glossary/imports/" title="Glossary: Imports" onmouseover="tooltip.show('Spending on goods and services produced in foreign nations. Counts as a leakage from a nation’s circular flow of income.');" onmouseout="tooltip.hide();">imports</a>. </p>
<p>When a country&#8217;s imports increase in price, while the value of its exports stays the same, the country&#8217;s terms of trade are said to deteriorate. As a nation experiences deteriorating terms of trade, it finds itself moving towards a deficit in its current account, meaning that expenditures on imports are growing more than <a class="glossaryLink" href="http://welkerswikinomics.com/blog/glossary/income/" title="Glossary: Income" onmouseover="tooltip.show('The money earned by households for providing their resources (land, labor and capital) to firms in the resource market. Incomes include wages, interest, rent and profit.');" onmouseout="tooltip.hide();">income</a> from exports, also called a <a class="glossaryLink" href="http://welkerswikinomics.com/blog/glossary/trade-deficit/" title="Glossary: Trade deficit" onmouseover="tooltip.show('When a country’s total spending on imported goods and services exceeds its total revenues from the sale of exports to the rest of the world. Another term for current account deficit in the balance of payments.');" onmouseout="tooltip.hide();">trade deficit</a>.</p>
<p>The United States has run trade deficits for most years since 1970. Since 2004 the US has annually spent over $600 billion MORE on imports than it earned from the sale of its exports. (<a target="_blank" href="http://www.census.gov/foreign-trade/statistics/historical/gands.pdf">Balance of trade data going back to 1960 can be found here</a>). </p>
<p>Usually, when a country enters a <a class="glossaryLink" href="http://welkerswikinomics.com/blog/glossary/recession/" title="Glossary: Recession" onmouseover="tooltip.show('A decrease in the total output of goods and services in a nation between two periods of time. Could be caused by a decrease in aggregate demand or in aggregate supply.');" onmouseout="tooltip.hide();">recession</a>, it would be expected that its balance of trade would improve, since households demand fewer imports and domestic <a class="glossaryLink" href="http://welkerswikinomics.com/blog/glossary/inflation/" title="Glossary: Inflation" onmouseover="tooltip.show('A rise in the average level of prices in the economy over time (percentage change in the CPI).');" onmouseout="tooltip.hide();">inflation</a> decreases making the country&#8217;s products more attractive to foreign households. In fact, in 2008, when the US entered its current recession, its trade deficit actually decreased. Recently, however, due to the weakness of many of its trading partners and a <a class="glossaryLink" href="http://welkerswikinomics.com/blog/glossary/deterioration-in-terms-of-trade/" title="Glossary: Deterioration in terms of trade" onmouseover="tooltip.show('Occurs when the price of a nation's exports decreases relative to the price of its imports. May lead to an improvement in the current account balance if demand for imports is elastic relative to export demand, or a worsening in the current account balance if import demand is relatively inelastic.');" onmouseout="tooltip.hide();">deterioration in terms of trade</a>, America&#8217;s recession is accompanied by a deepening trade deficit:<br />
<blockquote>The U.S. trade deficit widened for the first time in eight months during March, as the price and use of imported oil both climbed.
<p>The U.S. deficit in international trade of <a class="glossaryLink" href="http://welkerswikinomics.com/blog/glossary/goods/" title="Glossary: Goods" onmouseover="tooltip.show('The physical output of a firm producing a product meant for sale and consumption in a product market. Contrast with services, which are non-physical products produced and sold by firms to consumers.');" onmouseout="tooltip.hide();">goods</a> and <a class="glossaryLink" href="http://welkerswikinomics.com/blog/glossary/services/" title="Glossary: Services" onmouseover="tooltip.show('The non-physical output of firms meant for consumption in a product market. Services are "non-tangible" goods, such as taxi rides, accounting, doctor visits, teaching, and other products that can be bought and sold, but not physically consumed.');" onmouseout="tooltip.hide();">services</a> increased to $27.58 billion from February&#8217;s revised $26.13 billion, the Commerce Department said Tuesday. Originally, the February deficit was estimated at $25.97 billion.</p>
<p>U.S. exports in March slipped by 2.4% to $123.62 billion from $126.63 billion as trading partners bought less consumer goods and cars from the U.S. U.S. imports fell at a lower rate, dropping 1.0% to $151.20 billion from February&#8217;s $152.76 billion</p></blockquote>
<p><b>Discussion Questions:<br /></b>
<ol>
<li>How did rising oil prices lead to an increase in America&#8217;s trade deficit?</li>
<li>What determines <a class="glossaryLink" href="http://welkerswikinomics.com/blog/glossary/demand/" title="Glossary: Demand" onmouseover="tooltip.show('A schedule or curve showing the quantities of a particular good demanded at a range of price in a particular period of time.');" onmouseout="tooltip.hide();">demand</a> for American exports in the rest of the world? Why is demand for American goods and services falling even as their prices decline due to <a class="glossaryLink" href="http://welkerswikinomics.com/blog/glossary/deflation/" title="Glossary: Deflation" onmouseover="tooltip.show('A decrease in the average price level of a nation’s output over time.');" onmouseout="tooltip.hide();">deflation</a> in the US?</li>
<li>Where does America get the <a class="glossaryLink" href="http://welkerswikinomics.com/blog/glossary/money/" title="Glossary: Money" onmouseover="tooltip.show('Any object that can be used to facilitate the exchange of goods and services in a market.');" onmouseout="tooltip.hide();">money</a> to buy hundreds of dollars more in imports than it sells in exports? What do foreigners do with all the US dollars they earn from their enormous trade <i><a class="glossaryLink" href="http://welkerswikinomics.com/blog/glossary/surplus/" title="Glossary: Surplus" onmouseover="tooltip.show('When the quantity supplied of a good is greater than the quantity demanded. Also called "excess supply". A surplus will occur if the price in a market is greater than the equilibrium price, for example, due to a government price floor.');" onmouseout="tooltip.hide();">surplus</a> </i>with the US?</li>
<li>Why doesn&#8217;t the US government simply place <a class="glossaryLink" href="http://welkerswikinomics.com/blog/glossary/tariff/" title="Glossary: Tariff" onmouseover="tooltip.show('Taxes placed on goods imported from other countries. Meant to protect domestic producers from foreign competition.');" onmouseout="tooltip.hide();">tariffs</a> or <a class="glossaryLink" href="http://welkerswikinomics.com/blog/glossary/quota/" title="Glossary: Quota" onmouseover="tooltip.show('A physical limit on the quantity of a good produced in a foreign country allowed to be imported. Meant to restrict imports, allowing domestic producers to sell a greater quantity on the domestic market.');" onmouseout="tooltip.hide();">quotas</a> on imports to try and achieve more balanced trade with the rest of the world? Is this an appropriate response to a trade deficit?</li>
</ol>
<div class="zemanta-pixie"><img class="zemanta-pixie-img" src="http://img.zemanta.com/pixy.gif?x-id=f587be02-b55e-8ac7-84af-5c2f2b61ea40" /></div><div class="shr-publisher-970"></div><!-- Start Shareaholic LikeButtonSetBottom Automatic --><!-- End Shareaholic LikeButtonSetBottom Automatic --><p>Related posts:<ol>
<li><a href='http://welkerswikinomics.com/blog/2011/10/31/trade-balances-around-the-world/' rel='bookmark' title='Trade balances around the world'>Trade balances around the world</a></li>
<li><a href='http://welkerswikinomics.com/blog/2010/11/23/exchange-rates-and-trade-a-delicate-balancing-act-currently-out-of-balance/' rel='bookmark' title='Exchange rates and trade: a delicate balancing act, currently out of balance!'>Exchange rates and trade: a delicate balancing act, currently out of balance!</a></li>
<li><a href='http://welkerswikinomics.com/blog/2008/12/12/the-marshall-lerner-condition-the-j-curve-and-the-us-trade-deficit/' rel='bookmark' title='The Marshall-Lerner Condition, the J-curve, and the US trade deficit'>The Marshall-Lerner Condition, the J-curve, and the US trade deficit</a></li>
</ol></p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<slash:comments>2</slash:comments>
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		<title>A call FOR protectionism!</title>
		<link>http://welkerswikinomics.com/blog/2008/11/17/a-call-for-protectionism/</link>
		<comments>http://welkerswikinomics.com/blog/2008/11/17/a-call-for-protectionism/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Sun, 16 Nov 2008 19:47:54 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Jason Welker</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Barriers to trade]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Comparative advantage]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Competition]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Free Trade]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Globalization]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Macroeconomics]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Politics]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Protection]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://welkerswikinomics.com/blog/2008/11/17/a-call-for-protectionism/</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[FT.com &#124; The Economists’ Forum &#124; The case for forward-looking protectionism in the US Free trade is an ideal. This is a theme of my IB Economics class which I emphasize repeatedly during year two of the course. Free trade, defined as the exchange of goods, services, resources, and financial assets based on the principle [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<!-- Start Shareaholic LikeButtonSetTop Automatic --><!-- End Shareaholic LikeButtonSetTop Automatic --><p><a href="http://blogs.ft.com/wolfforum/2008/11/the-case-for-forward-looking-protectionism-in-the-us/">FT.com | The Economists’ Forum | The case for forward-looking protectionism in the US</a></p>
<p>Free trade is an ideal. This is a theme of my IB Economics class which I emphasize repeatedly during year two of the course. Free trade, defined as the exchange of <a class="glossaryLink" href="http://welkerswikinomics.com/blog/glossary/goods/" title="Glossary: Goods" onmouseover="tooltip.show('The physical output of a firm producing a product meant for sale and consumption in a product market. Contrast with services, which are non-physical products produced and sold by firms to consumers.');" onmouseout="tooltip.hide();">goods</a>, <a class="glossaryLink" href="http://welkerswikinomics.com/blog/glossary/services/" title="Glossary: Services" onmouseover="tooltip.show('The non-physical output of firms meant for consumption in a product market. Services are "non-tangible" goods, such as taxi rides, accounting, doctor visits, teaching, and other products that can be bought and sold, but not physically consumed.');" onmouseout="tooltip.hide();">services</a>, resources, and financial assets based on the principle of comparative advantage, results in a more efficient allocation of the world&#8217;s resources, an increase in total world output and welfare, and increases the opportunity for growth and development for all countries that prescribe to its principles. This is the ideal, at least.</p>
<p>In the real world, free trade is rarely practiced. <a class="glossaryLink" href="http://welkerswikinomics.com/blog/glossary/free-trade-agreement/" title="Glossary: Free Trade Agreement" onmouseover="tooltip.show('An agreement between two or more nations to reduce or eliminate barriers to trade across member states. Meant to achieve a more efficient allocation of resources between nations and a larger market for member nation's exports, as well as a larger variety of goods for domestic consumers to enjoy.');" onmouseout="tooltip.hide();"><a class="glossaryLink" href="http://welkerswikinomics.com/blog/glossary/free-trade/" title="Glossary: Free Trade" onmouseover="tooltip.show('The exchange of goods and services between different countries undertaken without any government intervention.');" onmouseout="tooltip.hide();">Free trade</a> agreements</a> between nations represent managed trade; the selected removal of protections such as <a class="glossaryLink" href="http://welkerswikinomics.com/blog/glossary/tariff/" title="Glossary: Tariff" onmouseover="tooltip.show('Taxes placed on goods imported from other countries. Meant to protect domestic producers from foreign competition.');" onmouseout="tooltip.hide();">tariffs</a>, <a class="glossaryLink" href="http://welkerswikinomics.com/blog/glossary/quota/" title="Glossary: Quota" onmouseover="tooltip.show('A physical limit on the quantity of a good produced in a foreign country allowed to be imported. Meant to restrict imports, allowing domestic producers to sell a greater quantity on the domestic market.');" onmouseout="tooltip.hide();">quotas</a> and subsidies on the exchange of particular goods does not represent free trade, rather <i>managed trade</i>. The problem with free trade in the real world is simply that it has never been truly practiced, therefore the adjustments that both developed and developing countries would have to undergo to adopt widespread free trade would be extremely disruptive both economically and socially. Entire industries would disappear from the developed countries as manufacturing resources were reallocated to low cost countries. Poor countries trying to build their manufacturing industries would lose any competitive advantage offered by <a class="glossaryLink" href="http://welkerswikinomics.com/blog/glossary/protectionism/" title="Glossary: Protectionism" onmouseover="tooltip.show('Protectionism: The use of tariffs, quotas or subsidies to give domestic producers a competitive advantage over foreign producers. Meant to protect domestic production and employment from foreign competition.');" onmouseout="tooltip.hide();">protectionism</a>, forcing their &#8220;infant industries&#8221; to wither and die in the face of global competition from countries that long ago achieved <a class="glossaryLink" href="http://welkerswikinomics.com/blog/glossary/economies-of-scale/" title="Glossary: Economies of Scale" onmouseover="tooltip.show('"The benefits of being big." As a firm increases its output in the long run, it adds more factories, acquires more capital and land and labor and sees its average total costs decrease as it grows. This arises due to factors such as increase efficiency, bulk-ordering, reduced shipping costs, increased bargaining power with resource suppliers and labor unions, more favorable interest rates from lenders, etc...');" onmouseout="tooltip.hide();">economies of scale</a> in manufacturing. Farmers used to heavy subsidies would see their livelihoods disappear as the world&#8217;s food would be sourced from the countries with true <a class="glossaryLink" href="http://welkerswikinomics.com/blog/glossary/comparative-advantage/" title="Glossary: Comparative advantage" onmouseover="tooltip.show('When an individual, a firm or a nation is able to produce a particular product at a lower opportunity cost than another individual, firm or nation. Forms the basis on which nations trade with one another.');" onmouseout="tooltip.hide();">comparative advantages</a> in agriculture. Simply stated, the social costs of the widespread adoption of free trade are not politically palatable, thus leaders have only hesitantly pursued this ideal on the world stage.</p>
<p>For decades, America has stood for the ideal of free trade, proselytizing its advantages and urging developing countries to reduce or remove their barriers to the free flow of resources and goods from nation to nation. Today, however, the United States faces the very fate free trade prophesized as its own automobile industries teeters on the edge of collapse. As many as <a href="http://money.cnn.com/2008/11/05/autos/auto_job_losses/index.htm">3 million American jobs</a> stand to be lost if the auto industry goes under. Today, America faces the ultimate test of its will to stand for and defend free trade in the world. Should America erect new barriers to trade, bail out its auto industry, and save this dying sector from collapse to avoid the political hardships its death would incur? Or should America stand for the ideal of <a class="glossaryLink" href="http://welkerswikinomics.com/blog/glossary/market/" title="Glossary: Market" onmouseover="tooltip.show('A place where buyers and sellers meat to engage in mutual trade. Prices are set by the interaction of demand and supply in a market.');" onmouseout="tooltip.hide();">market</a> liberalization and allow the auto industry to disolve as the principle of comparative advantage indicates it should?</p>
<p>The question is dire, and it&#8217;s one that Barack Obama will be forced to address early in his term as president. Cambridge economcis professor Ha-Joon Chang argues the case <i>for</i> protectionism by America in this time of economic turmoil:<br />
<blockquote>Mr Obama’s trade policy&#8230; is already causing controversy. He has vowed to protect American jobs and even argued for re-negotiating the NAFTA. There is already some hand wringing among free-trade economists, worrying that his protectionist policies may destroy the world trading system in the same way the infamous Smoot-Hawley Tariffs of 1930 did after the Great Depression. They counsel that the US should maintain its historical commitment to free trade.</p>
<p>However, contrary to what most people think, the US is the true home of protectionism. Between the 1830s and the 1940s, against superior European competition, the US developed its industries behind literally the highest tariff wall in the world, with the average industrial tariff rate ranging between 35% and 55%. Even the Smoot-Hawley Tariffs were not an aberration – the average US industrial tariff in 1931 was, at 48%, well within the historical range.</p>
<p>Moreover, the theory that justified such protectionism, namely, <font color="#ff0000"><b>the ‘<a class="glossaryLink" href="http://welkerswikinomics.com/blog/glossary/infant-industry/" title="Glossary: Infant Industry" onmouseover="tooltip.show('An industry that is emerging in a less developed country, but which has not achieved the economies of scale and other efficiencies that allow it to compete with larger producers in more developed countries. Sometimes used as a justification for protectionist policies.');" onmouseout="tooltip.hide();">infant industry</a>’ argument</b></font>, had been first developed by none other than the first Treasury Secretary of the US – Alexander Hamilton (that’s the guy you see on the $10 bill). Hamilton argued that producers in relatively backward economies needed to be protected and nurtured through tariffs, subsidies, and other government policies before they mature and can compete with producers from more economically developed countries.</p>
<p>Of course, the protectionism that Mr Obama is advocating is <font color="#ff0000"><b>protection to ease the adjustment of mature industries</b></font>, rather than to promote infant industries. The case for such protectionism is not as overwhelming as that of infant industry protection. However, well-designed and time-bound protection of mature industries can facilitate, rather than hinder, trade adjustment and industrial upgrading. Japan and some European countries in the aftermath of the 1970s Oil Shocks come to mind.</p>
<p><i>Mr Obama should use protectionism in a similarly forward-looking way</i>. Industries that can be revived through re-tooling of its factories and re-training of its workers should be given protection, but only if they fulfill certain conditions regarding <a class="glossaryLink" href="http://welkerswikinomics.com/blog/glossary/investment/" title="Glossary: Investment" onmouseover="tooltip.show('A component of aggregate demand, it includes all spending on capital equipment, inventories, and technology by firms. This does not include financial investment, which is the purchase of financial assets (stocks and bonds), not included in GDP because they are only purely financial investments.');" onmouseout="tooltip.hide();">investment</a> and training. <i>Industries that have no future should be given strictly temporary protection to ease phasing-out through orderly liquidation and redundancy</i>.</p>
<p>&#8230;Keeping its market open is not enough for the US to play a genuinely positive role in the world trading system. The US should also stop pushing for trade liberalization in developing countries and give them the chance to use (intelligently-designed, of course) infant industry protection, which it invented and benefited so much from. Mr Obama should take a lead in creating a world trading system that allows asymmetric protectionism between the rich countries and the poor countries, with the latter protecting their markets more and gradually opening up in line with their economic <a class="glossaryLink" href="http://welkerswikinomics.com/blog/glossary/development/" title="Glossary: Development" onmouseover="tooltip.show('Improvements in standards of living of a nation measured by income, education and health');" onmouseout="tooltip.hide();">development</a>.</p>
<p>All these call for a much more activist role for the US government than it has been the norm. Providing protectionism to facilitate structural changes, and not just to protect existing jobs, would require a much closer coordination between trade policy and those policies to upgrade American industries, such as R&amp;D support and worker training. Redesigning the welfare state as a vehicle to promote skills upgrading and <a class="glossaryLink" href="http://welkerswikinomics.com/blog/glossary/labor/" title="Glossary: Labor" onmouseover="tooltip.show('The work undertaken by humans towards the production of goods and services');" onmouseout="tooltip.hide();">labor</a> mobility would push the US government into an uncharted territory.</p>
<p>These are big challenges. However, the US cannot continue its peculiar mixture of free-trade mythology and uncoordinated, ‘reactive’ protectionism that has served ordinary Americans and the developing nations so poorly.</p>
<p>Mr Obama has turned a new chapter in US history by becoming the country’s first Afro-American president. He will turn a new chapter in world history if he can come up with a forward-looking protectionist strategy that that both protects American jobs better in the long run and help developing countries develop faster.</p></blockquote>
<p><b>Discussion Questions:<br /></b>
<ol>
<li>What is the difference between the protectionism America needs today and the protectionism it used in the late 19th and early 20th centuries?</li>
<li>How could protectionism be used responsibly by developing countries to promote <a class="glossaryLink" href="http://welkerswikinomics.com/blog/glossary/economic-growth/" title="Glossary: Economic growth" onmouseover="tooltip.show('An increase in the output of goods and services in a nation between two periods of time.');" onmouseout="tooltip.hide();">economic growth</a> and development?</li>
<li>Professor Chang argues that responsible protectionism should allow industries with no future to be phased out &#8220;<i>through orderly liquidation and redundancy&#8221;. </i>What does he mean by this and why is such a policy so hard to accomplish politically?</li>
</ol><div class="shr-publisher-618"></div><!-- Start Shareaholic LikeButtonSetBottom Automatic --><!-- End Shareaholic LikeButtonSetBottom Automatic --><p>Related posts:<ol>
<li><a href='http://welkerswikinomics.com/blog/2011/09/29/protectionisms-many-weaknesses/' rel='bookmark' title='Protectionism&#8217;s many weaknesses'>Protectionism&#8217;s many weaknesses</a></li>
<li><a href='http://welkerswikinomics.com/blog/2008/04/15/the-politics-of-free-trade-vs-protection/' rel='bookmark' title='The politics of free trade vs. protectionism'>The politics of free trade vs. protectionism</a></li>
<li><a href='http://welkerswikinomics.com/blog/2007/08/19/ib-us-protectionism-threatens-trade-liberalization-and-a-little-irony-to-stir-things-up/' rel='bookmark' title='IB: US protectionism threatens trade liberalization &#8211; and a little irony to stir things up'>IB: US protectionism threatens trade liberalization &#8211; and a little irony to stir things up</a></li>
</ol></p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>McCain vs. Obama on the costs and benefits of free trade</title>
		<link>http://welkerswikinomics.com/blog/2008/10/22/mccain-vs-obama-on-the-costs-and-benefits-of-free-trade/</link>
		<comments>http://welkerswikinomics.com/blog/2008/10/22/mccain-vs-obama-on-the-costs-and-benefits-of-free-trade/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 22 Oct 2008 13:42:26 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Jason Welker</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Barriers to trade]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Free Trade]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Protection]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Trade]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://welkerswikinomics.com/blog/2008/10/22/mccain-vs-obama-on-the-costs-and-benefits-of-free-trade/</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[YouTube &#8211; Obama / McCain 3rd Debate, Part 10 &#8211; Free Trade Below is a clip from the third and final presidential debate, in which the candidates discuss the benefits of free trade. Both candidates support the principles of free trade, one more enthusiastically and with fewer conditions than the other. Only Obama speaks of [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<!-- Start Shareaholic LikeButtonSetTop Automatic --><!-- End Shareaholic LikeButtonSetTop Automatic --><p><a href="http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ThD6n_ImKKI">YouTube &#8211; Obama / McCain 3rd Debate, Part 10 &#8211; Free Trade</a></p>
<p>Below is a clip from the third and final presidential debate, in which the candidates discuss the benefits of free trade. </p>
<p>Both candidates support the principles of free trade, one more enthusiastically and with fewer conditions than the other. Only Obama speaks of &#8220;fair trade&#8221;, which he seems to think means trade that does not encourage the violation of human rights abroad. </p>
<p>Notice how towards the end of the discussion of free trade, McCain attempts to wrap up the conversation when he claims: <i><br /></i><br />
<blockquote><i>&#8220;I don&#8217;t think there is any doubt that Senator Obama wants to restrict trade and to raise taxes; and the last president of the United States who tried that was Herbert Hoover, and we went from a deep <a class="glossaryLink" href="http://welkerswikinomics.com/blog/glossary/recession/" title="Glossary: Recession" onmouseover="tooltip.show('A decrease in the total output of goods and services in a nation between two periods of time. Could be caused by a decrease in aggregate demand or in aggregate supply.');" onmouseout="tooltip.hide();">recession</a> into a depression&#8230;&#8221;</i></p></blockquote>
<p>Hoover, of course, was the US president at the time of the Great Depression, when the government&#8217;s response to a financial crisis on Wall Street worsened the economic meltdown, throwing the US into its deepest and longest slowdown in history.</p>
<div class="youtube-video"><object width="425" height="355"><param name="movie" value="http://www.youtube.com/v/uOLQ8iFom6E"></param><param name="wmode" value="transparent"></param><embed src="http://www.youtube.com/v/uOLQ8iFom6E" type="application/x-shockwave-flash" wmode="transparent" width="425" height="355"></embed></object></div>
<p><b>Discussion questions:<br /></b>
<ol>
<li>How would a <a class="glossaryLink" href="http://welkerswikinomics.com/blog/glossary/free-trade-agreement/" title="Glossary: Free Trade Agreement" onmouseover="tooltip.show('An agreement between two or more nations to reduce or eliminate barriers to trade across member states. Meant to achieve a more efficient allocation of resources between nations and a larger market for member nation's exports, as well as a larger variety of goods for domestic consumers to enjoy.');" onmouseout="tooltip.hide();"><a class="glossaryLink" href="http://welkerswikinomics.com/blog/glossary/free-trade/" title="Glossary: Free Trade" onmouseover="tooltip.show('The exchange of goods and services between different countries undertaken without any government intervention.');" onmouseout="tooltip.hide();">free trade</a> agreement</a> with Columbia help &#8220;create jobs in America&#8221;? What are the &#8220;billion dollars or more that (America) has already paid&#8221; through its trade with Columbia?</li>
<li>What is the source of Obama&#8217;s lack of enthusiasm for the Columbia Free Trade Agreement? Do you agree with his position on the importance of limiting free trade in order to stand for human rights? Why or why not? Is his view a protectionist one?</li>
<li>One of Obama&#8217;s highest priorities is to hold auto makers responsible for improving the fuel efficiency of American-made automobiles. How does he plan to create &#8220;five million new jobs all across America, including in the heartland&#8221;? Does Obama&#8217;s plan to invest in a clean energy economy sounds remotely protectionist? Why or why not?</li>
</ol>
<blockquote></blockquote>
<p></p><div class="shr-publisher-593"></div><!-- Start Shareaholic LikeButtonSetBottom Automatic --><!-- End Shareaholic LikeButtonSetBottom Automatic --><p>Related posts:<ol>
<li><a href='http://welkerswikinomics.com/blog/2008/09/16/you-make-the-call-mccain-vs-obama-on-free-trade/' rel='bookmark' title='You Make The Video Call: McCain vs. Obama on Free Trade'>You Make The Video Call: McCain vs. Obama on Free Trade</a></li>
<li><a href='http://welkerswikinomics.com/blog/2008/04/15/the-politics-of-free-trade-vs-protection/' rel='bookmark' title='The politics of free trade vs. protectionism'>The politics of free trade vs. protectionism</a></li>
<li><a href='http://welkerswikinomics.com/blog/2010/09/30/free-trade-debate-to-what-extent-has-globalization-based-on-free-trade-contributed-to-global-economic-growth-and-development/' rel='bookmark' title='Free Trade Debate: to what extent has globalization based on free trade contributed to global economic growth and development?'>Free Trade Debate: to what extent has globalization based on free trade contributed to global economic growth and development?</a></li>
</ol></p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<slash:comments>6</slash:comments>
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		<title>Fair trade vs. free trade: the problem with &#8220;dumping&#8221;</title>
		<link>http://welkerswikinomics.com/blog/2008/10/21/fair-trade-vs-free-trade-the-problem-with-dumping/</link>
		<comments>http://welkerswikinomics.com/blog/2008/10/21/fair-trade-vs-free-trade-the-problem-with-dumping/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Tue, 21 Oct 2008 14:22:39 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Jason Welker</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Barriers to trade]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Dumping]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Fair trade]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Free Trade]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[IB Economics]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Protection]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Trade]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://welkerswikinomics.com/blog/2008/10/21/fair-trade-vs-free-trade-the-problem-with-dumping/</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[FT.com / World &#8211; Anti-dumping investigations soar Free trade is good, right? This sentiment is one that economists typically agree with wholeheartedly. The mutual gains from free trade among nations that specialize in the goods for which they have the comparative advantage results in increased global output and consumption among trading nations. That, at least, [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<!-- Start Shareaholic LikeButtonSetTop Automatic --><!-- End Shareaholic LikeButtonSetTop Automatic --><p><a href="http://www.ft.com/cms/s/0/c90e6e02-9ebc-11dd-98bd-000077b07658.html">FT.com / World &#8211; Anti-dumping investigations soar</a></p>
<p><a class="glossaryLink" href="http://welkerswikinomics.com/blog/glossary/free-trade/" title="Glossary: Free Trade" onmouseover="tooltip.show('The exchange of goods and services between different countries undertaken without any government intervention.');" onmouseout="tooltip.hide();">Free trade</a> is good, right? This sentiment is one that economists typically agree with wholeheartedly. The mutual gains from free trade among nations that specialize in the <a class="glossaryLink" href="http://welkerswikinomics.com/blog/glossary/goods/" title="Glossary: Goods" onmouseover="tooltip.show('The physical output of a firm producing a product meant for sale and consumption in a product market. Contrast with services, which are non-physical products produced and sold by firms to consumers.');" onmouseout="tooltip.hide();">goods</a> for which they have the <a class="glossaryLink" href="http://welkerswikinomics.com/blog/glossary/comparative-advantage/" title="Glossary: Comparative advantage" onmouseover="tooltip.show('When an individual, a firm or a nation is able to produce a particular product at a lower opportunity cost than another individual, firm or nation. Forms the basis on which nations trade with one another.');" onmouseout="tooltip.hide();">comparative advantage</a> results in increased global output and <a class="glossaryLink" href="http://welkerswikinomics.com/blog/glossary/consumption/" title="Glossary: Consumption" onmouseover="tooltip.show('A component of a nation’s aggregate demand, measures the total spending by domestic households on domestically produced goods and services.');" onmouseout="tooltip.hide();">consumption</a> among trading nations. That, at least, is the basic premise of free trade.</p>
<p>But is there such a thing as unfair free trade? The World Trade Organization, whose mission is the removal of barriers to trade among all the world&#8217;s nations, thinks there is such a thing as unfair trade. Under certain circumstances, the WTO allows member nations to place protective <a class="glossaryLink" href="http://welkerswikinomics.com/blog/glossary/tariff/" title="Glossary: Tariff" onmouseover="tooltip.show('Taxes placed on goods imported from other countries. Meant to protect domestic producers from foreign competition.');" onmouseout="tooltip.hide();">tariffs</a> on particular <a class="glossaryLink" href="http://welkerswikinomics.com/blog/glossary/imports/" title="Glossary: Imports" onmouseover="tooltip.show('Spending on goods and services produced in foreign nations. Counts as a leakage from a nation’s circular flow of income.');" onmouseout="tooltip.hide();">imports</a>, and recently, more and more nations have taken action to protect their domestic <a class="glossaryLink" href="http://welkerswikinomics.com/blog/glossary/market/" title="Glossary: Market" onmouseover="tooltip.show('A place where buyers and sellers meat to engage in mutual trade. Prices are set by the interaction of demand and supply in a market.');" onmouseout="tooltip.hide();">markets</a> from unfair trade practices of their trading partners:<br />
<blockquote>The number of new anti-<a class="glossaryLink" href="http://welkerswikinomics.com/blog/glossary/dumping/" title="Glossary: Dumping" onmouseover="tooltip.show('The practice of producers in one nation selling their output at a price lower than their costs of production in another nation. Considered a justification for protectionism by the World Trade Organization.');" onmouseout="tooltip.hide();">dumping</a> investigations soared by nearly 40 per cent in the first six months of this year, the World Trade Organisation said on Monday, reflecting increased trade tensions as the credit crunch began to take its toll on the global economy.</p>
<p>Between January and June 16 WTO members started 85 new investigations compared with 61 in the first six months of 2007. China was the target of nearly half the probes, a jump of 75 per cent over the same period last year.</p>
<p>Under WTO rules, countries can put duties on unfairly priced imports that are sold in export markets more cheaply than at home. But until this year dumping actions had seemed to be on a downward trend, with 164 investigations in the whole of last year compared with over 200 in 2006.</p>
<p>Anti-dumping actions, once mainly taken by rich countries against poor ones, have become a tool increasingly used by developing nations while industrialised countries have increasingly become targets&#8230;</p>
<p>The EU was the third-ranking target in the first half of the year, after China and Thailand. Canada, the US, New Zealand and Norway also had investigations opened against their <a class="glossaryLink" href="http://welkerswikinomics.com/blog/glossary/exports/" title="Glossary: Exports" onmouseover="tooltip.show('The spending by foreigners on domestically produced goods and services. Counts as an injection into a nation’s circular flow of income.');" onmouseout="tooltip.hide();">exports</a>.</p>
<p>The WTO said the main products affected were base metals (21 investigations), textiles (20) and chemicals (10).</p>
<p>The number of new measures taken as a result of anti-dumping probes also rose in the first six months of 2008, with 54 measures against 51 measures in the same period in 2007. India applied duties in 16 cases, with the EU some way behind in second place.</p>
<p>China was again the main target followed by Taiwan, the EU, South Korea, Russia and the US.</p></blockquote>
<p><b>Discussion Questions:<br /></b>
<ol>
<li>Why would a country want to keep cheap imports out of its domestic markets? Don&#8217;t cheap goods make consumers happy?</li>
<li>Does dumping refer to the sale of a country&#8217;s goods below the importing country&#8217;s costs of production or the costs of production in the country where the good is made? Why does this distinction matter?</li>
<li>When a nation protects its domestic market from dumping, is the principle of comparative advantage being undermined? Discuss.</li>
</ol><div class="shr-publisher-591"></div><!-- Start Shareaholic LikeButtonSetBottom Automatic --><!-- End Shareaholic LikeButtonSetBottom Automatic --><p>Related posts:<ol>
<li><a href='http://welkerswikinomics.com/blog/2012/01/26/fair-trad/' rel='bookmark' title='Fair versus Free Trade as means to promote Economic Development'>Fair versus Free Trade as means to promote Economic Development</a></li>
<li><a href='http://welkerswikinomics.com/blog/2010/09/30/free-trade-debate-to-what-extent-has-globalization-based-on-free-trade-contributed-to-global-economic-growth-and-development/' rel='bookmark' title='Free Trade Debate: to what extent has globalization based on free trade contributed to global economic growth and development?'>Free Trade Debate: to what extent has globalization based on free trade contributed to global economic growth and development?</a></li>
<li><a href='http://welkerswikinomics.com/blog/2008/03/18/mankiw-on-free-trade-in-politics/' rel='bookmark' title='Mankiw on free trade in politics'>Mankiw on free trade in politics</a></li>
</ol></p>]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>What&#8217;s Korea&#8217;s &#8220;beef&#8221; with the US on free trade?</title>
		<link>http://welkerswikinomics.com/blog/2008/09/25/whats-koreas-beef-with-the-us-on-trade/</link>
		<comments>http://welkerswikinomics.com/blog/2008/09/25/whats-koreas-beef-with-the-us-on-trade/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Thu, 25 Sep 2008 07:46:17 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Jason Welker</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Balance of Trade]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Barriers to trade]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Efficiency]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Exports]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Free Trade]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Macroeconomics]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Trade]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://welkerswikinomics.com/blog/2008/04/20/whats-koreas-beef-with-the-us-on-trade/</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[&#8220;This post was originally published in April, 2008. It has been re-published today for the benefit of my year 2 IB Econ students, who are currently studying barriers to free trade. Bloomberg.com: Economy &#8211; Korea Beef Deal Won&#8217;t Yield Trade Vote Free trade: everyone either loves it or loves to hate it. South Korea and [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<!-- Start Shareaholic LikeButtonSetTop Automatic --><!-- End Shareaholic LikeButtonSetTop Automatic --><p><em>&#8220;This post was originally published in April, 2008. It has been re-published today for the benefit of my year 2 IB Econ students, who are currently studying barriers to free trade.</em></p>
<p><a href="http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=20601068&amp;sid=aVSG6OYg8UCs&amp;refer=home">Bloomberg.com: Economy &#8211; Korea Beef Deal Won&#8217;t Yield Trade Vote</a><br />
<em><br />
<strong>Free trade: everyone either loves it or loves to hate it.</strong></em> South Korea and the US have been in negotiations for a landmark <a class="glossaryLink" href="http://welkerswikinomics.com/blog/glossary/free-trade-agreement/" title="Glossary: Free Trade Agreement" onmouseover="tooltip.show('An agreement between two or more nations to reduce or eliminate barriers to trade across member states. Meant to achieve a more efficient allocation of resources between nations and a larger market for member nation's exports, as well as a larger variety of goods for domestic consumers to enjoy.');" onmouseout="tooltip.hide();"><a class="glossaryLink" href="http://welkerswikinomics.com/blog/glossary/free-trade/" title="Glossary: Free Trade" onmouseover="tooltip.show('The exchange of goods and services between different countries undertaken without any government intervention.');" onmouseout="tooltip.hide();">free trade</a> agreement</a> for years. Korea, however, has had a &#8220;beef&#8221; with US beef <a class="glossaryLink" href="http://welkerswikinomics.com/blog/glossary/imports/" title="Glossary: Imports" onmouseover="tooltip.show('Spending on goods and services produced in foreign nations. Counts as a leakage from a nation’s circular flow of income.');" onmouseout="tooltip.hide();">imports</a> since 2003, when a case of Mad Cow Disease gave Korean officials the jitters and all imports were halted.</p>
<p>Even though Mad Cow has disappeared from American beef, the ban has remained, making it difficult for negotiators to come to any major agreements on the reduction of <a class="glossaryLink" href="http://welkerswikinomics.com/blog/glossary/tariff/" title="Glossary: Tariff" onmouseover="tooltip.show('Taxes placed on goods imported from other countries. Meant to protect domestic producers from foreign competition.');" onmouseout="tooltip.hide();">tariffs</a> and other barriers to trade in other <a class="glossaryLink" href="http://welkerswikinomics.com/blog/glossary/market/" title="Glossary: Market" onmouseover="tooltip.show('A place where buyers and sellers meat to engage in mutual trade. Prices are set by the interaction of demand and supply in a market.');" onmouseout="tooltip.hide();">markets</a> in which the US and Korea trade. Just last week, South Korea removed the beef ban, giving some analysts hope that a free trade deal may soon be agreed upon.</p>
<p>President Bush signed the agreement last year but has hesitated to pass it on to Congress; where certain Democratic politicians have refused to approve the agreement until S Korea removed the beef ban. Now that the ban has been lifted, however, it appears that the issues keeping an agreement from being reached may run deeper than the simple beef ban:</p>
<blockquote><p>In addition, Ford Motor Co., unions and Democrats, including both Hillary Clinton and Barack Obama, all say the accord must be reworked to address what they call South Korea&#8217;s barriers to U.S. manufactured <a class="glossaryLink" href="http://welkerswikinomics.com/blog/glossary/goods/" title="Glossary: Goods" onmouseover="tooltip.show('The physical output of a firm producing a product meant for sale and consumption in a product market. Contrast with services, which are non-physical products produced and sold by firms to consumers.');" onmouseout="tooltip.hide();">goods</a>.</p>
<p>&#8220;I understand there are foreign policy considerations, but this is too important for us,&#8221; Stephen Biegun, vice president for government affairs at Ford said in an interview earlier this month. &#8220;We don&#8217;t see any sign that they are ready to change.&#8221;</p>
<p>Levin, who represents autoworkers in suburban Detroit, said the accord will need to be changed to address what he calls South Korea&#8217;s <em><strong>non-tariff barriers </strong></em>to U.S. manufactured goods, especially autos.</p>
<p>Clinton, in a response to questions from the Pennsylvania <a class="glossaryLink" href="http://welkerswikinomics.com/blog/glossary/fair-trade/" title="Glossary: Fair Trade" onmouseover="tooltip.show('A trade scheme which promotes better working and living conditions among the producers of primary commodities such as bananas and coffee in less developed countries. Attempts to assure that a larger percentage of the final sale price of such commodities makes it back to those who produced them.');" onmouseout="tooltip.hide();">Fair Trade</a> Coalition, said the agreement with South Korea &#8220;will cost America jobs.&#8221;</p></blockquote>
<p>The S Korea / US Free Trade Agreement should bring a boost in trade between the two countries:</p>
<blockquote><p>The U.S. is South Korea&#8217;s second-largest export market behind China, with shipments totaling $45.8 billion in 2007. Imports from the U.S. last year reached $37.2 billion. The trade agreement would eliminate or reduce tariffs on a wide range of goods including automobiles, vegetables and electronics.</p></blockquote>
<p><em><strong>Through free trade there are winners and losers.</strong></em> This is a theme we&#8217;ve explored in some depth already during our <a href="http://welkerswikinomics.wetpaint.com/page/Macroeconomics+Unit+VI+-+Open+Economy%2C+International+Trade+and+Finance">International Economics unit</a>. The winners, in the case of the S Korea/US FTA will likely be manufacturers in S Korea and service industries in the US. Judging by Ford Motor Company&#8217;s response to the FTA, we can assume that American manufacturers will be losers from the accord.</p>
<p>Does this make it bad, however? According to macroeconomic theory, <em>no</em>. The removal of tariffs on imports from S Korea will force American manufacturers to become more competitive and achieve greater efficiency, both which will result in a more efficient allocation of resources in both S Korea and the US. If Ford, for example, sells fewer cars because of in influx of high quality, affordable Korean automobiles, then Ford may be forced to shut down some of its plants in the US. This will lead to the loss of American jobs, just as Hillary Clinton claims it will.</p>
<p>But in the long-run, America as a whole should be better off for it. Manufacturers in the US will focus more on <a class="glossaryLink" href="http://welkerswikinomics.com/blog/glossary/capital/" title="Glossary: Capital" onmouseover="tooltip.show('Human-made resources (machinery and equipment) used to produce goods and services; goods which do not directly satisfy human wants.');" onmouseout="tooltip.hide();">capital</a> intensive goods such as industrial equipment, the manufacture of which requires highly skilled <a class="glossaryLink" href="http://welkerswikinomics.com/blog/glossary/labor/" title="Glossary: Labor" onmouseover="tooltip.show('The work undertaken by humans towards the production of goods and services');" onmouseout="tooltip.hide();">labor</a>, which America has in abundance. In addition to industrial equipment and other high skilled manufactured goods, the US service sector should benefit from freer trade with S Korea.</p>
<blockquote><p>With beef being resolved, the U.S. banks, insurance companies and other <a class="glossaryLink" href="http://welkerswikinomics.com/blog/glossary/services/" title="Glossary: Services" onmouseover="tooltip.show('The non-physical output of firms meant for consumption in a product market. Services are "non-tangible" goods, such as taxi rides, accounting, doctor visits, teaching, and other products that can be bought and sold, but not physically consumed.');" onmouseout="tooltip.hide();">services</a> companies that stand to gain the most from this accord are gearing up their lobbying efforts.</p>
<p>Beef &#8220;has been our biggest obstacle in having a meaningful dialogue on the benefits of this agreement,&#8221; said Matt Niemeyer, vice president for the business insurer ACE Ltd. and a former U.S. trade official. &#8220;It&#8217;s now time to work with Congress to find a way to move this important agreement this year.&#8221;</p></blockquote>
<p>As any student of economics knows by now, <em>politics and economics don&#8217;t always mix well</em>. The opposition to the S Korea/US FTA among Congressional Democrats is more political than it is economic. Jobs will be lost, that&#8217;s true, but overall trade between two technologically advanced, developed countries like the US and S Korea should do more for improvements in efficiency and in resource allocation than it will in harm for a handful of American workers who may find themselves out of work due to greater <a class="glossaryLink" href="http://welkerswikinomics.com/blog/glossary/demand/" title="Glossary: Demand" onmouseover="tooltip.show('A schedule or curve showing the quantities of a particular good demanded at a range of price in a particular period of time.');" onmouseout="tooltip.hide();">demand</a> for imported automobiles.</p>
<p><img style="max-width: 800px;" src="http://welkerswikinomics.com/blog/wp-content/uploads/2008/04/tariff-graph-1.jpeg" alt="" /><br />
<strong>*A tariff on Korean automobiles results in the following outcomes:<br />
</strong></p>
<ul>
<li>The <a class="glossaryLink" href="http://welkerswikinomics.com/blog/glossary/quantity/" title="Glossary: Quantity" onmouseover="tooltip.show('This is the amount of output produced and consumed in a market determined by the supply and demand. As supply and demand change, the quantity in the market changes as well.');" onmouseout="tooltip.hide();">quantity</a> demanded of automobiles is less than it would be without a tariff (Q<small>4 <big>rather than Q<small>3</small>)</big></small></li>
<li><small><big>The quantity supplied by American auto manufacturers is greater than it would be without the tariff (Q<small>2</small> rather than Q<small>1</small>)</big></small></li>
<li><small><big>The difference between </big></small><small><big>Q<small>2</small> and Q<small>1</small></big></small><small><big> represents an overallocation of resources in America towards automobile manufacturing.</big></small></li>
<li><small><big>The domestic quantity demanded exceeds the domestic quantity supplied. The difference (Q<small>4 </small>- Q<small>2</small>) is made up for by imports from S Korea.<br />
</big></small></li>
<li><small><big>The government earns revenue equal to the area of the yellow rectangle (amount of tariff x number of cars imported)</big></small></li>
<li><small><big>Society experiences a loss of efficiency (<a class="glossaryLink" href="http://welkerswikinomics.com/blog/glossary/deadweight-loss/" title="Glossary: Deadweight loss" onmouseover="tooltip.show('(Welfare loss): The loss of total societal welfare (consumer and produce surplus) that occurs when a market is producing at a level of output that is not socially optimal (where MSB=MSC). May arise from a market failure or from a government intervention in an already efficient market.');" onmouseout="tooltip.hide();">deadweight loss</a>) equal to the combined areas of the green triangles Y and X. This is consumer <a class="glossaryLink" href="http://welkerswikinomics.com/blog/glossary/surplus/" title="Glossary: Surplus" onmouseover="tooltip.show('When the quantity supplied of a good is greater than the quantity demanded. Also called "excess supply". A surplus will occur if the price in a market is greater than the equilibrium price, for example, due to a government price floor.');" onmouseout="tooltip.hide();">surplus</a> lost, accounted for by the higher <a class="glossaryLink" href="http://welkerswikinomics.com/blog/glossary/price/" title="Glossary: Price" onmouseover="tooltip.show('This is the amount paid for a good determined by the supply and demand for the good in the market. Price rises and falls as demand and supply rise and fall.');" onmouseout="tooltip.hide();">price</a> paid by American consumers imposed by the tariff.</big></small></li>
</ul>
<p>In the model above, the removal of a tariff on Korean automobiles will result in a decrease in output by American firms from Q<small>2 </small>to Q<small>1</small>, an increase in imports from Q<small>4</small> &#8211; Q<small>2</small> to Q<small>3</small> &#8211; Q<small>1</small>, and an increase in <a class="glossaryLink" href="http://welkerswikinomics.com/blog/glossary/consumer-surplus/" title="Glossary: Consumer Surplus" onmouseover="tooltip.show('The additional benefit enjoyed by consumers who are willing to pay more for a product than the market price. Graphically it is the area of the triangle below the demand curve and above the equilibrium price, out to the equilibrium quantity.');" onmouseout="tooltip.hide();">consumer surplus</a>, efficiency, and better overall allocation of resources in America.</p>
<p><strong>Discussion questions:<br />
</strong></p>
<ol>
<li>How does the graph illustrate the concept of <em>&#8220;winners and losers from free trade&#8221;</em>?</li>
<li>Who gains and who loses from free trade with the US <strong><em>within Korea</em></strong>?</li>
<li>Is it possible that a free trade agreement with Korea would actually <strong><em>create jobs</em></strong> in America? Explain&#8230;</li>
<li>Why do politicians oppose free trade deals that would result in such improvements in efficiency, allocation of resources, and even in the employment opportunities for American workers?</li>
</ol><div class="shr-publisher-417"></div><!-- Start Shareaholic LikeButtonSetBottom Automatic --><!-- End Shareaholic LikeButtonSetBottom Automatic --><p>Related posts:<ol>
<li><a href='http://welkerswikinomics.com/blog/2008/10/22/mccain-vs-obama-on-the-costs-and-benefits-of-free-trade/' rel='bookmark' title='McCain vs. Obama on the costs and benefits of free trade'>McCain vs. Obama on the costs and benefits of free trade</a></li>
<li><a href='http://welkerswikinomics.com/blog/2010/09/30/free-trade-debate-to-what-extent-has-globalization-based-on-free-trade-contributed-to-global-economic-growth-and-development/' rel='bookmark' title='Free Trade Debate: to what extent has globalization based on free trade contributed to global economic growth and development?'>Free Trade Debate: to what extent has globalization based on free trade contributed to global economic growth and development?</a></li>
<li><a href='http://welkerswikinomics.com/blog/2008/10/21/fair-trade-vs-free-trade-the-problem-with-dumping/' rel='bookmark' title='Fair trade vs. free trade: the problem with &#8220;dumping&#8221;'>Fair trade vs. free trade: the problem with &#8220;dumping&#8221;</a></li>
</ol></p>]]></content:encoded>
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