intro to econ part.2

33
Chapter 2 Efficiency, Exchange, and Comparative Advantage

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Intro to Econ Part.2

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: Intro to Econ Part.2

Chapter 2Efficiency,

Exchange, and Comparative Advantage

Page 2: Intro to Econ Part.2

Copyright ©2014 Pearson Education, Inc. All rights reserved. 2-2

Outline

• Goods and Bads• The Myth of Material Wealth• Trade Creates Wealth• Is It Worth It? Efficiency and Values• Recognizing Trade-Offs: Comparing

Opportunity Costs of Production• The Gains from Specialization and Exchange

Page 3: Intro to Econ Part.2

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Outline - continued

• Why Specialize?• From Individual Trade to International

Trade, and Back Again• Transactions Costs• Incentives to Reduce Transactions

Costs: Middlemen• Markets as Discovery Processes• The Big Picture: First Thoughts on

Economic Growth

Page 4: Intro to Econ Part.2

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Introduction

• This chapter explores these questions:– Who profits from trading?– Is trade productive?– What are production possibilities?– What is wealth?– What is economic growth?

Page 5: Intro to Econ Part.2

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Good and Bads

• A commodity is a good if more of it is preferred to less

• A commodity is a bad if less of it is preferred to more

• A free good can be acquired without sacrifice

• A scarce good requires sacrifice

Page 6: Intro to Econ Part.2

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The Myth of Material Wealth

• Of what does wealth consist?

– wealth, in the economic way of thinking, is whatever people value

– value is in the eye of the chooser

Page 7: Intro to Econ Part.2

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Trade Creates Wealth

• The myth of material wealth: economic growth consists not in increasing output of things, but increasing the generation of wealth

• “wealth equals material things” is not a valid claim, as it omits key aspects of economic life like “specialization” and “exchange” in Adam Smith’s commercial society

Page 8: Intro to Econ Part.2

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Trade Creates Wealth

• Questions:– What do we gain from trading?– Is it accurate to say that the two goods

traded have equal value?– Does trade add value, wealth?– Is trading efficient?

Page 9: Intro to Econ Part.2

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Trade Creates Wealth

TradeInvolves exchange to gain more of what people value

Voluntary exchange

Involves exchangeof unequally valued goods

Page 10: Intro to Econ Part.2

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Trade Creates Wealth

example:does

exchange of a ball for a

glove, between two

people, affect wealth?

Page 11: Intro to Econ Part.2

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Trade Creates Wealth

• With trade each party trades a less valued good for a more valued good

every choice entails a trade-off

• The cost of obtaining a good is the value placed on whatever is sacrificed to buy it

referred to as the opportunity cost

Page 12: Intro to Econ Part.2

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Is It Worth It? Efficiency and Values

• Efficiency changes with valuations– efficiency compares the ratio of the value

of the output to the value of the input• Increased efficiency

leads to lower production costs

Page 13: Intro to Econ Part.2

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Is It Worth It? Efficiency and Values

Efficiency =value of output

value of input

The efficiency of any processcan change with changes

in valuation

Page 14: Intro to Econ Part.2

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Recognizing Trade-Offs: Comparing Opportunity Costs of Production

A Production Possibilities Frontier illustrates maximum combinations of products that can beproduced using a given set of resources and talent

A Production Possibilities Frontier illustrates maximum combinations of products that can beproduced using a given set of resources and talent

Jones:5 S = 10 L therefore1 S = cost 2 L and 1 L = ½ S

Jones:5 S = 10 L therefore1 S = cost 2 L and 1 L = ½ S

Brown:4 S = 3 L therefore1 S = cost ¾ L and 1 L = 4/3 S

Brown:4 S = 3 L therefore1 S = cost ¾ L and 1 L = 4/3 S

Page 15: Intro to Econ Part.2

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Recognizing Trade-Offs: Comparing Opportunity Costs of Production

5

10

Jones

stout

lager

Production possibilities before specialization and tradeProduction possibilities before specialization and trade

stout

lager

Brown

4

3

Page 16: Intro to Econ Part.2

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Recognizing Trade-Offs: Comparing Opportunity Costs of Production

• Who produces lager at a relatively lower cost?

– if Jones produces only lager he can make 10 gallons but sacrifices the opportunity to make 5 gallons of stout … if he makes only stout he sacrifices the opportunity to make 10 gallons of lager

Page 17: Intro to Econ Part.2

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Recognizing Trade-Offs: Comparing Opportunity Costs of Production

– if Brown produces only stout she can make 4 gallons but gives up the opportunity to make 3 gallons of lager … for every gallon of stout she sacrifices ¾ gallons of lager

• Note that Jones can produce more of both stout (S) and lager(L)

Page 18: Intro to Econ Part.2

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Table 2–1

Page 19: Intro to Econ Part.2

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Recognizing tradeoffs: comparing opportunity costs of production

The tables show that Jones has a lower relative costproducing lager, he only sacrifices ½ S for each gallon of L, while Brown must forego 4/3 S for eachgallon of L.

The tables show that Jones has a lower relative costproducing lager, he only sacrifices ½ S for each gallon of L, while Brown must forego 4/3 S for eachgallon of L.

Jones:5 S= 10 L therefore1 S = cost 2 L and 1 L = ½ S

Jones:5 S= 10 L therefore1 S = cost 2 L and 1 L = ½ S

Brown:4 S= 3 L therefore1 S = cost ¾ L and 1 L = 4/3 S

Brown:4 S= 3 L therefore1 S = cost ¾ L and 1 L = 4/3 S

ueusdal
Stephanie: set table 2-1 on this slide, and then set the text below as three bullet points (they don't need to keep the formatting below with red background, etc)
Page 20: Intro to Econ Part.2

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Recognizing Trade-Offs: Comparing Opportunity Costs of Production

• Who produces lager at a relatively lower cost?– The least cost producer of a product has a

comparative advantage over other producers, due to lower opportunity cost

– The tables show that Jones has a comparative advantage in L, while Brown has a comparative advantage in S

Page 21: Intro to Econ Part.2

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The Gains from Specialization and Exchange

If Brown and Jonesagree to trade one for one

in the product of theircomparative advantage:

Jones can enjoy 7 lager and 3

stout …Brown can enjoy

3 lager and 1 stout

Page 22: Intro to Econ Part.2

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The Gains from Specialization and Trade

• At full production: Jones produces 10 Lager and Brown produces 4 Stout

• They trade 1 for 1: 3 Lagers for 3 Stouts • Jones now has 7L & 3S Brown has 1S & 3L

Both have more from specializing and trading

Page 23: Intro to Econ Part.2

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The Gains from Specialization and Exchange

Both can now consumemore than they could

individually produce

Wealth has been increasedfor both through

specializationand trade

Page 24: Intro to Econ Part.2

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Gains from specialization and exchangeProduction possibilities after specialization and tradeProduction possibilities after specialization and trade

Figure 2–1 Simple production possibilities frontiers

Page 25: Intro to Econ Part.2

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Why Specialize?

• Specialization is a synonym for “following one’s comparative advantage”– Producers specialize so that they can expand

their possibilities (wealth) by trading for something that is more costly to produce on their own

– This is referred to as the “Law of Comparative Advantage”

Page 26: Intro to Econ Part.2

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From Individual to International Trade, and Back Again

• Specialization and exchange occur between cities, regions and across political borders

• Each group pay for its imports with their exports

• The same idea applies at an individual level

Page 27: Intro to Econ Part.2

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Transaction Costs

• Transaction costs are costs of arranging contracts and agreements – trades in general among interested parties

Page 28: Intro to Econ Part.2

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Incentives to Reduce Transaction Costs: Middlemen

• Middlemen help interested parties find one another

e.g., stockbrokers, wholesalers, job placement agencies, realtors

• Middlemen’s comparative advantage is to generate quality information at a low cost

• They lower the hurdles that can impede exchange

Page 29: Intro to Econ Part.2

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Markets as Discovery Processes

• To enhance wealth, people pursue their comparative advantage

• Comparative advantage is discovered through market exchanges of property rights

• In doing so, people continuously coordinate the processes of cooperative interaction that comprise the economy

Page 30: Intro to Econ Part.2

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Explaining Economic Growth

• Adam Smith determined that wealth came from huge increases in production which resulted in the division of labor

• Economic growth is a consequence of the evolution of commercial society– Everyone specializes – Everyone exchanges

Page 31: Intro to Econ Part.2

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Encouraging Specialization and Exchange

• Market specialization / Division of labor– creates the conditions for economic

growth• Rule of law / Private property rights

– allows freedom of exchange– provides incentives to specialize in

activities of comparative advantage

Page 32: Intro to Econ Part.2

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Once Over Lightly

• exchange of property rights• a good – more preferred to less• free goods versus scarce goods• opportunity cost• wealth = whatever people value• comparative advantage

Page 33: Intro to Econ Part.2

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Once Over Lightly

• Middlemen• comparative advantage• market specialization• division of labor• trade between nations