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International Economics By Robert J. Carbaugh 9th Edition

International Economics By Robert J. Carbaugh 9th Edition. Chapter 1: The International Economy. Economic interdependence. Elements of interdependence. Trade: goods, services, raw materials, energy Finance: foreign debt, foreign investment, exchange rates

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International Economics By Robert J. Carbaugh 9th Edition

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  1. International EconomicsBy Robert J. Carbaugh9th Edition Chapter 1: The International Economy

  2. Economic interdependence Elements of interdependence • Trade: goods, services, raw materials, energy • Finance: foreign debt, foreign investment, exchange rates • Business: multinational corporations, global production Carbaugh, Chap. 1

  3. Economic interdependence Forces driving globalization • Technological change: • Production • Communication & information • Transport • Liberalization of trade & investment: • Tariff, non-tariff barrier reductions • Liberalized financial transactions • International financial markets Carbaugh, Chap. 1

  4. Economic interdependence Waves of Globalization • 1st wave: 1870-1914 • Falling tariff barriers • improved transportation • 2nd wave: 1945-1980 • Agreements to lower barriers again • Rich country trade specialization • Poor nations left behind • 3rd wave: 1980-present • Growth of emerging markets • international capital movements regain importance Carbaugh, Chap. 1

  5. Economic interdependence Exports of goods and services as percent of Gross Domestic Product, 2001 Country Exports (% of GDP) Imports (% of GDP) Netherlands 68% 62% Norway 48 30 South Korea 46 41 Canada 45 39 Germany 35 34 France 29 27 United Kingdom 28 30 Mexico 28 30 United States 11 14 Japan 11 10 Carbaugh, Chap. 1

  6. Economic interdependence Leading trading partners of the United States, 2000 Value of US Value of US Country exports ($ bill.) imports ($ bill.) Canada $202.4 $250.1 Mexico 125.2 147.9 Japan 98.4 165.3 Germany 45.2 74.3 France 30.6 40.6 Italy 16.4 31.0 Netherlands 28.9 15.0 Belgium/Luxembourg 17.9 12.8 Venezuela 9.0 19.2 Australia 17.9 9.7 Carbaugh, Chap. 1

  7. Economic interdependence Interdependence: Impact • Overall standard of living is higher • Access to raw materials & energy not available at home • Access to goods & components made less expensively elsewhere • Access to financing and investment not available at home • International competition encourages efficiency Carbaugh, Chap. 1

  8. Economic interdependence Interdependence: Impact (cont’d) • Other impacts - good & bad • Curtails inflationary pressures at home • Limits domestic wage increases • Makes economy vulnerable to external disturbances • Limits impact of domestic fiscal policy on economy Carbaugh, Chap. 1

  9. Comparative advantage Comparative advantage means: • If the relative cost of making two items is different in two countries, each can gain by specializing in the one it makes most cheaply - each has a comparative advantage in that product • Even countries that make nothing cheaply can benefit from specialization Carbaugh, Chap. 1

  10. Economic interdependence Common fallacies of international trade • "Trade is zero-sum" - trade can bring benefits to both partners • "Imports bad, exports good" - if you buy nothing from other countries, they have no income to buy from you • "Tariffs and quotas save jobs" - cutting imports makes it harder to export, so other jobs are lost Carbaugh, Chap. 1

  11. Comparative advantage Competitiveness & trade • Main objective of any nation is to generate high and rising standard of living • No nation can efficiently make everything itself • International trade allows countries to focus on producing what they make efficiently • Inefficient sectors will be squeezed out • Sectors open to competition become more efficient and productive Carbaugh, Chap. 1

  12. Economic interdependence: globalization Ups and downs of globalization • Advantages • Productivity increases faster when countries produce according to comparative advantage • Global competition and cheap imports keep prices low and inflation at bay • An open economy encourages technological development and innovation with ideas from abroad • Jobs in export industries pay more than those in import-competing industries • Free movement of capital gives the US access to foreign investment and keeps interest rates low Carbaugh, Chap. 1

  13. Economic interdependence: globalization Ups and downs of globalization • Disadvantages • Millions of US jobs lost to imports or production abroad; those displaced find lower-paying jobs • Millions of other Americans fear getting laid off • Workers face pressure for wage concessions under threat of having the jobs move abroad • Service and white-collar jobs are joining blue-collar ones in being vulnerable to moving overseas • US workers can lose their competitiveness when firms build state-of-the-art factories in low-wage countries, making them as productive as plants in the US Carbaugh, Chap. 1

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