dale r. deboer university of colorado, colorado springs 7 - 1 an introduction to international...
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![Page 1: Dale R. DeBoer University of Colorado, Colorado Springs 7 - 1 An Introduction to International Economics Chapter 7: Economic Integration Dominick Salvatore](https://reader036.vdocument.in/reader036/viewer/2022062321/56649ed95503460f94be74ac/html5/thumbnails/1.jpg)
Dale R. DeBoerUniversity of Colorado, Colorado Springs
7 - 1
An Introduction to International Economics
Chapter 7: Economic Integration
Dominick Salvatore
John Wiley & Sons, Inc.
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7 - 2Dale R. DeBoerUniversity of Colorado, Colorado Springs
Economic integration
• Economic integration refers the commercial policy of discriminately reducing or eliminating barriers to trade between a select group of countries.
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7 - 3Dale R. DeBoerUniversity of Colorado, Colorado Springs
Forms of economic integration
• Preferential trade arrangements– Provides lower barriers to trade among
participating nations than on trade with non-participating nations.
– The loosest form of economic integration.
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7 - 4Dale R. DeBoerUniversity of Colorado, Colorado Springs
Forms of economic integration
• Preferential trade arrangements
• Free trade areas– Removes all barriers to trade among members,
but each nation retains its own barriers on trade with non-members.
– The North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA) is a free trade area.
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7 - 5Dale R. DeBoerUniversity of Colorado, Colorado Springs
Forms of economic integration
• Preferential trade arrangements
• Free trade areas
• Customs union– Removes all barriers to trade among members
and harmonizes trade policies toward the rest of the world.
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7 - 6Dale R. DeBoerUniversity of Colorado, Colorado Springs
Forms of economic integration
• Preferential trade arrangements
• Free trade areas
• Customs union
• Common market– Removes all barriers to trade among members,
harmonizes trade policies toward the rest of the world, and allows free movement of labor and capital among member nations.
– The European Union (EU) is an example of a common market.
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7 - 7Dale R. DeBoerUniversity of Colorado, Colorado Springs
Forms of economic integration
• Preferential trade arrangements
• Free trade areas
• Customs union
• Common market
• Economic union– Removes all barriers to trade among members,
harmonizes trade policies towards the rest of the world, allows free movement of labor and capital among member nations, and unifies monetary, fiscal, and tax policies of members.
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7 - 8Dale R. DeBoerUniversity of Colorado, Colorado Springs
Forms of economic integration
• Preferential trade arrangements
• Free trade areas
• Customs union
• Common market
• Economic union
• Duty free zones– Areas established to attract foreign investments
by allowing raw materials and intermediate products in duty free.
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7 - 9Dale R. DeBoerUniversity of Colorado, Colorado Springs
Trade creation and diversion
• Prior to entering a customs union a country faces the following trade options.– Purchase from Mexico at
a higher price or from Japan at a lower price
– Clearly the prefered choice is to purchase goods from Japan as the price is lower
P
Q
D
S
PJapan w/ tariff
PMexico w/ tariff
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7 - 10Dale R. DeBoerUniversity of Colorado, Colorado Springs
Trade creation and diversion
• If the country enters a customs union with Mexico, commodities from Mexico no longer pay the tariff.– This lowers the price of
goods from Mexico to potentially below the price of goods from Japan.
– This change makes Mexico the preferred provider of the commodity.
P
Q
D
S
PJapan w/ tariff
PMexico w/ tariff
PMexico w/o tariff
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7 - 11Dale R. DeBoerUniversity of Colorado, Colorado Springs
Trade creation and diversion
• By Mexico becoming the preferred provider trade is created by the customs union.– Imports were initially
quantity A. – After the customs union
comes into effect, trade expands to quantity B.
• In this way, a customs union may create international trade.
P
Q
D
S
PJapan w/ tariff
PMexico w/o tariff
A
B
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7 - 12Dale R. DeBoerUniversity of Colorado, Colorado Springs
Trade creation and diversion
• The movement to increased international trade comes at the expense of Japan.– Its former exports of
quantity A fall to zero.– Hence, the customs
union diverts trade from the low cost provider of the good (Japan) to a higher cost provider (Mexico) that happens to part of the customs union.
P
Q
D
S
PJapan w/ tariff
PMexico w/o tariff
A
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7 - 13Dale R. DeBoerUniversity of Colorado, Colorado Springs
Trade deflection
• Free trade areas offer no barriers to flows of commodities internally but allow differential barriers to non-members.
• This may bias patterns of international trade as exporters will target their goods to the low-protection member of the free trade area to gain entry to the entire free trade area.
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7 - 14Dale R. DeBoerUniversity of Colorado, Colorado Springs
Dynamic benefits from customs unions
• Increased competition– Competitive pressures tend to spur more rapid
innovation and growth– External competition limits the ability of a
domestic producer to exercise its monopoly power
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7 - 15Dale R. DeBoerUniversity of Colorado, Colorado Springs
Dynamic benefits from customs unions
• Increased competition
• Economies of scale in production– By being a member of a customs union, producers
have access to larger markets that allow them produce on a larger scale and exploit any available economies of scale.
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7 - 16Dale R. DeBoerUniversity of Colorado, Colorado Springs
Dynamic benefits from customs unions
• Increased competition
• Economies of scale in production
• Stimulus to investment– Production within a customs union may be sold
within the customs union without tariffs. – This advantage may induce investors outside the
customs union to invest in production facilities within the customs union.
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7 - 17Dale R. DeBoerUniversity of Colorado, Colorado Springs
The European Union (EU)
• The EU developed from the European Economic Community that was initially established in 1958.
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7 - 18Dale R. DeBoerUniversity of Colorado, Colorado Springs
The European Union (EU)
• The EU developed from the European Economic Community that was initially established in 1958.
• The EU formally can into existence with passage of the Treaty of Maastricht in 1992.– The Treaty of Maastricht also laid the foundation
for the introduction of a unified European currency: the euro.
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7 - 19Dale R. DeBoerUniversity of Colorado, Colorado Springs
The European Union (EU)
• The EU developed from the European Economic Community that was initially established in 1958.
• The EU formally can into existence with passage of the Treaty of Maastricht in 1992.
• Currently the EU has 25 member nations with an approximate aggregate population of 450 million.– WWW link to a map of the EU
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7 - 20Dale R. DeBoerUniversity of Colorado, Colorado Springs
The European Union (EU)
• The EU formally can into existence with passage of the Treaty of Maastricht in 1992.
• Currently the EU has 25 member nations with an approximate aggregate population of 450 million.
• Institutions of the EU– European Parliament
• EU legislative body
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7 - 21Dale R. DeBoerUniversity of Colorado, Colorado Springs
The European Union (EU)
• The EU formally can into existence with passage of the Treaty of Maastricht in 1992.
• Currently the EU has 25 member nations with an approximate aggregate population of 450 million.
• Institutions of the EU– European Parliament– Council of the European Union
• Represents the governments of the member states to the EU government
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7 - 22Dale R. DeBoerUniversity of Colorado, Colorado Springs
The European Union (EU)
• The EU formally can into existence with passage of the Treaty of Maastricht in 1992.
• Currently the EU has 25 member nations with an approximate aggregate population of 450 million.
• Institutions of the EU– European Parliament– Council of the European Union– European Commission
• The executive branch of EU government
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7 - 23Dale R. DeBoerUniversity of Colorado, Colorado Springs
The European Union (EU)
• Currently the EU has 25 member nations with an approximate aggregate population of 450 million.
• Institutions of the EU– European Parliament– Council of the European Union– European Commission– Court of Justice
• Judicial branch of EU government
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7 - 24Dale R. DeBoerUniversity of Colorado, Colorado Springs
The European Union (EU)
• Currently the EU has 25 member nations with an approximate aggregate population of 450 million.
• Institutions of the EU– European Parliament– Council of the European Union– European Commission– Court of Justice– Court of Auditors
• Budgeting authority of EU government
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7 - 25Dale R. DeBoerUniversity of Colorado, Colorado Springs
The European Union (EU)
• Institutions of the EU– European Parliament– Council of the European Union– European Commission– Court of Justice– Court of Auditors– European Economic and Social Committee
• Consultative body of labor, social, and environmental issues that comments on the implications of legislative actions.
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7 - 26Dale R. DeBoerUniversity of Colorado, Colorado Springs
The European Union (EU)
• Institutions of the EU– Council of the European Union– European Commission– Court of Justice– Court of Auditors– European Economic and Social Committee– Committee of the Regions– European Central Bank
• Central bank of the EU
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7 - 27Dale R. DeBoerUniversity of Colorado, Colorado Springs
The European Union (EU)
• Institutions of the EU– European Commission– Court of Justice– Court of Auditors– European Economic and Social Committee– Committee of the Regions– European Central Bank– European Ombudsman
• Responsible for addressing citizen complaints about maladministration by any EU body
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7 - 28Dale R. DeBoerUniversity of Colorado, Colorado Springs
The European Union (EU)
• Institutions of the EU
• Steps towards economic unification– Internal tariffs and duties have been removed.
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7 - 29Dale R. DeBoerUniversity of Colorado, Colorado Springs
The European Union (EU)
• Institutions of the EU
• Steps towards economic unification– Internal tariffs and duties have been removed.– Impediments to the free movement of labor and
capital have been removed.
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7 - 30Dale R. DeBoerUniversity of Colorado, Colorado Springs
The European Union (EU)
• Institutions of the EU
• Steps towards economic unification– Internal tariffs and duties have been removed– Impediments to the free movement of labor and
capital have been removed.– Corporate law practices have been harmonized.
![Page 31: Dale R. DeBoer University of Colorado, Colorado Springs 7 - 1 An Introduction to International Economics Chapter 7: Economic Integration Dominick Salvatore](https://reader036.vdocument.in/reader036/viewer/2022062321/56649ed95503460f94be74ac/html5/thumbnails/31.jpg)
7 - 31Dale R. DeBoerUniversity of Colorado, Colorado Springs
The European Union (EU)
• Institutions of the EU
• Steps towards economic unification– Internal tariffs and duties have been removed– Impediments to the free movement of labor and
capital have been removed.– Corporate law practices have been harmonized.– Environmental regulations have been harmonized.
![Page 32: Dale R. DeBoer University of Colorado, Colorado Springs 7 - 1 An Introduction to International Economics Chapter 7: Economic Integration Dominick Salvatore](https://reader036.vdocument.in/reader036/viewer/2022062321/56649ed95503460f94be74ac/html5/thumbnails/32.jpg)
7 - 32Dale R. DeBoerUniversity of Colorado, Colorado Springs
The European Union (EU)
• Institutions of the EU
• Steps towards economic unification– Internal tariffs and duties have been removed– Impediments to the free movement of labor and
capital have been removed.– Corporate law practices have been harmonized.– Environmental regulations have been harmonized.– Labor standards have been harmonized.
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7 - 33Dale R. DeBoerUniversity of Colorado, Colorado Springs
The European Union (EU)
• Institutions of the EU
• Steps towards economic unification
• Further information on the EU– EUROPA is in the Internet portal for the EU
government• WWW link
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7 - 34Dale R. DeBoerUniversity of Colorado, Colorado Springs
The NAFTA
• The North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA) came into force in 1994.
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7 - 35Dale R. DeBoerUniversity of Colorado, Colorado Springs
The NAFTA
• The North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA) came into force in 1994.
• Objectives of the NAFTA– Eliminate barriers to trade between the US,
Mexico, and Canada.
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7 - 36Dale R. DeBoerUniversity of Colorado, Colorado Springs
The NAFTA
• The North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA) came into force in 1994.
• Objectives of the NAFTA– Eliminate barriers to trade between the US, Mexico,
and Canada.– Improve intellectual property rights protections
between the member nations.
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7 - 37Dale R. DeBoerUniversity of Colorado, Colorado Springs
The NAFTA
• The North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA) came into force in 1994.
• Objectives of the NAFTA– Eliminate barriers to trade between the US, Mexico,
and Canada.– Improve intellectual property rights protections
between the member nations.– Provide a dispute resolution mechanism for trade
disputes under this agreement.
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7 - 38Dale R. DeBoerUniversity of Colorado, Colorado Springs
The NAFTA
• The North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA) came into force in 1994.
• Objectives of the NAFTA
• An extension of the NAFTA?– The proposed Free Trade Area of the Americas
(FTAA) if broadly modeled on the NAFTA.– The FTAA is designed to generate a free trade
area throughout the western hemisphere (excluding Cuba).
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7 - 39Dale R. DeBoerUniversity of Colorado, Colorado Springs
The NAFTA
• The North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA) came into force in 1994.
• Objectives of the NAFTA
• An extension of the NAFTA?
• Further information– NAFTA Secretariat
• WWW link
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7 - 40Dale R. DeBoerUniversity of Colorado, Colorado Springs
The NAFTA
• The North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA) came into force in 1994.
• Objectives of the NAFTA
• An extension of the NAFTA?
• Further information– NAFTA Secretariat– Official Site of the Free Trade Area of the
Americas• WWW link
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7 - 41Dale R. DeBoerUniversity of Colorado, Colorado Springs
A further resource
• The Pros and Cons of Pursuing Free-Trade Agreements– Congressional Budget Office (July 31, 2003)
• WWW link