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1 ECON1101 Part 1 – Comparative Advantage and the Basis for Trade 1. Comparative Advantage and the Basis for Trade 1.1 Your First Model Model: A simplified representation of reality. Assumptions: o There are only 2 possible activities. o There are only 2 individuals. o When trading, there are § No transaction costs (negotiation/transportation costs), § No other barriers (import quotas, tariffs). 1.2 One Agent Economy Productivity is determined by the amount of resources used to perform productive activity. Resources are scarce. Often we operate in a constrained environment (i.e. financial constraints, time constraints). The Production Possibility Curve (PPC) captures all maximum output possibilities of two (or more) goods, given that the set of inputs (or resources, such as time) are used efficiently. Ø Drawing the PPC – connect the extreme points that lies on the axis. The Efficient Production Point represents a combination of goods for which currently available resources do not allow an increase in the production of one good without a reduction in the production of the other. o All points on the PPC are efficient. The Inefficient Production Point represents a combination of goods for which currently available resources allow an increase in the production of one good without a reduction in the production of others. o All points below and to the left of the PPC are inefficient. The Attainable Production Point represents any combination of goods that can be produced with the currently available resources. o All points on the PPC (efficient) or below and to the left (inefficient) of the PPC are attainable. The Unattainable Production Point represents any combination of goods that cannot be produced with the currently available resources. o All points outside of the PPC are unattainable. 1.3 Two Agents Economy Ø An agent (or an economy) has an Absolute Advantage in a productive activity when he/she can carry on this activity with fewer resources (i.e. less time) than another agent. Ø The Opportunity Cost of a given action is the value of the next best alternative to that particular action. Ø OC = gradient or slope of the PPC in absolute term. o Divide the rise by the run à OC of producing one unit of the good depicted on the x-axis. Ø E.g.: OC A = !"## !" ! !"#$ !" ! or OC R = !"## !" ! !"#$ !" ! An agent (or an economy) has a Comparative Advantage in a productive activity when he/she has a lower opportunity cost of carrying on that activity than another agent.

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ECON1101

Part1–ComparativeAdvantageandtheBasisforTrade

1. ComparativeAdvantageandtheBasisforTrade

1.1 YourFirstModel

• Model: A simplified representation of reality. • Assumptions:

o There are only 2 possible activities. o There are only 2 individuals. o When trading, there are

§ No transaction costs (negotiation/transportation costs), § No other barriers (import quotas, tariffs).

1.2 OneAgentEconomy

• Productivity is determined by the amount of resources used to perform productive activity. • Resources are scarce. Often we operate in a constrained

environment (i.e. financial constraints, time constraints). • The Production Possibility Curve (PPC) captures all maximum

output possibilities of two (or more) goods, given that the set of inputs (or resources, such as time) are used efficiently.

Ø Drawing the PPC – connect the extreme points that lies on the axis. • The Efficient Production Point represents a combination of goods

for which currently available resources do not allow an increase in the production of one good without a reduction in the production of the other. o All points on the PPC are efficient.

• The Inefficient Production Point represents a combination of goods for which currently available resources allow an increase in the production of one good without a reduction in the production of others. o All points below and to the left of the PPC are inefficient.

• The Attainable Production Point represents any combination of goods that can be produced with the currently available resources. o All points on the PPC (efficient) or below and to the left (inefficient) of the PPC are attainable.

• The Unattainable Production Point represents any combination of goods that cannot be produced with the currently available resources. o All points outside of the PPC are unattainable.

1.3 TwoAgentsEconomy

Ø An agent (or an economy) has an Absolute Advantage in a productive activity when he/she can carry on this activity with fewer resources (i.e. less time) than another agent.

Ø The Opportunity Cost of a given action is the value of the next best alternative to that particular action. Ø OC = gradient or slope of the PPC in absolute term.

o Divide the rise by the run à OC of producing one unit of the good depicted on the x-axis.

Ø E.g.: OCA = !"## !" !!"#$ !" !

or OCR = !"## !" !!"#$ !" !

• An agent (or an economy) has a Comparative Advantage in a productive activity when he/she has a lower opportunity cost of carrying on that activity than another agent.

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Ø Principle of Comparative Advantage: Everyone is better off if each agent (or each country) specialises in the activities for which they have a comparative advantage. The gains from specialisation grow larger as the difference in opportunity cost increases. o In the international market, the key requirement is for the international price of the commodity to be

different to the opportunity cost of production for a given country. o I.e. if there are two countries trading with each other, they need to have different OC of production.

• The PPC is based on the following assumptions: o Only two productive activities can be carried out (i.e. only two goods are produced). o There is a limited amount of time per day. o Productivities are constant – they don’t vary with the quantity produced.

1.4 TradinginaTwo-AgentEconomy

• Specialisation à increase production. Trade à allows consumption target to be reached. • Trade can only occur at an allowable price, where it is mutually beneficial. • E.g.: Alberto specialises in bananas and Leo specialises in rabbits.

Therefore, Alberto will sell bananas to Leo when: Pricebananas ≥ Alberto’s cost of collecting bananas OR Pricebananas ≥ Alberto’s OCbananas (=0.5kg rabbit) If pricebananas < Alberto’s OCbananas, he is better getting the 0.5kg of rabbit himself. Leo will sell rabbits to Alberto when: Pricebananas ≤ Leo’s cost of collecting bananas himself OR Pricebananas ≤ Leo’s OCbananas (=1kg rabbit) If pricebannas > Leo’s OCbananas, Leo is better off getting the bananas himself. 0.5kg rabbit ≤ Pricebananas ≤ 1kg rabbit

1.5 Economy-widePPCinaTwo-AgentEconomy

• Specialising correctly would produce more g/s à curve bows out. • If the curve bows in, the principles of comparative advantage is not followed à less g/s are produced.

Deriving the economy-wide PPC in a two-agent economy:

• The slope of the PPC curve is increasing as we increase the quantity of goods on the x-axis à the OC of

collecting additional good on the x-axis is increasing. • Principles of Increasing Opportunity Cost (Low Hanging Fruit): in the process of increasing the production

of any good, first employ those resources with the lowest OC and only once these are exhausted turn to resources with higher cost. o Increasing the production of any good requires resources (e.g.: capital, labour and technology).

• Main factors driving eco growth (i.e. push the economy PPC out and to the right) are: o Increase in infrastructure – factories, equipment à When the quantity of resources shift, both goods

can be produced without having to give up some of the other good.

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2. 2.SupplyinaPerfectlyCompetitiveMarket

2.1 SupplyCurveforanIndividual

• Productivity can be tabulated as below:

• The Marginal Benefit of producing a certain unit of a given good is the extra benefit accrued by producing

that unit. • The Marginal Cost of producing a certain unit of a given good is the extra cost of producing that unit.

o Note that the relevant cost is the OC, not the absolute cost of producing the good. • Thinking at the margin: comparing the marginal benefit with the marginal cost. This is used to make one

decision after another. • The marginal time indicate the extra time required to produce an extra unit of the good. • The Cost-Benefit Principle states that an action should be taken if the marginal benefit is greater than the

marginal cost. o Marginal benefit ≥ Marginal cost à Take the action. o Marginal benefit < Marginal cost à Don’t take the action.

• The Economic Surplus of a certain action is the difference between the marginal benefit and the marginal cost of taking that action.

• The Quantity Supplied by a supplier represents the quantity of a given g/s that maximises the profit of the supplier.

• The Supply Curve represents the relationship between the price of a g/s and the quantity supplied of that g/s. o Vary the price of the good to see how its supply would change.

• Law of Supply: The tendency for a producer to offer more of a certain g/s when the price of that g/s

increases. • Two different ways of interpreting the supply curve:

o Horizontal interpretation: start from a certain price and find the associated quantity on the supply curve. The quantity indicates how many units the producer is willing to supply at that price.

o Vertical interpretation: start from a certain quantity and find the associated price on the supply curve. The price indicates the minimum amount of money the producer is willing to accept to offer the marginal unit = Producer Reservation Price.

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• Producer Reservation Price denotes the minimum amount of money the producer is willing to accept to offer a certain g/s. o E.g.: the producer reservation price for 2 apples is $1.50

2.2 HowtoDerivetheSupplyCurveforaFirm

• A Sunk Cost is a cost that once paid cannot be recovered. E.g.: if a loan is initiated for machinery, the entrepreneur has to repay the borrowing over time.

• If a factor of production is fixed, then its cost does not vary with the quantity produced. o A Fixed Cost is a cost associated with a fixed factor of production – cost is still incurred even when

the firm shuts down. • If a factor of production is variable, then its cost tends to vary with the quantity produced.

o A Variable Cost is a cost associated with a variable factor of production. E.g. Labor. • The Short Run is a period of time which at least one factor of production is fixed. • The Long Run is a period of time during which all factors of production are variable, i.e. producers can

change factor of production as they please.

• From the table above, note that the fixed cost (FC) is a sunk cost, because the producer still needs to pay

$100 even when the quantity produced is zero.

• To maximise profit, the entrepreneur must think at the margin and figure out the optimal number of

employees. Ø Profit represents the difference between total revenues (TR) and the total cost (TC)

𝜋!"#$%&'(#) = 𝑇𝑅 − 𝑇𝐶

• Total revenue = price x quantity • Total cost = fixed cost + variable cost

Should the entrepreneur hire the first worker? Quantity produced (1st worker): 40 cans ($1.20 per can) Fixed cost: $100 (loan) Variable cost: $12 (wage of 1st worker)

Marginal cost (MC) : ∆ !"#$% !"#$∆ !"#$%&%'

= 12/40 = 0.30 ($/unit)

Marginal benefit (MB): Price = 1.20 ($/unit) Because marginal revenue > marginal cost, the first worker should be hired. Continuing this decision-making process concludes that optimal number of employees is four.

Quantity produced (4 workers): 130 cans ($1.20/can) Fixed cost: $100 (loan) Variable cost $48 (wage of 4 workers) Total revenue (4 workers) = Price x Quantity = 130 x 1.20 = $156 Total cost: Fixed Cost + Variable Cost = $100 + $48 = $148

𝜋!"#$%&'!"# = 𝑇𝑅 − 𝑇𝐶= 156 – 148 = $8

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Ø Shut Down Condition (Short Run): In the short run, the entrepreneur should shut down production if 𝜋!"#$%&'(#) < FC. Otherwise, she should hire the optimal number of workers and continue operations.

Ø Shut Down Condition (Long Run): In the long run, the entrepreneur should exit the industry if

𝜋!"#$%&'(#) < 0. Otherwise, she should hire the optimal number of workers and continue operations.

• In the long run, by exiting the industry the entrepreneur gains and loses nothing because there is no fixed cost (𝜋!"#$ = 0). o This means that entrepreneurs should produce only if the largest profit achievable by doing so is

positive. • If 𝜋!"#$%&'(#) = 0 the entrepreneur is indifferent between exiting and continuing operations.

2.3 FromaDiscretetoaContinuousModel

A representation of the production costs in a discrete model. Here, entrepreneur could only hire workers in whole numbers – there was a limited set of soda cans that could be produced.

A representation of the production costs in a continuous model Here, the labour supply were much more flexible and employees were hired for as many hours (or even min/sec!) the employer wants.

Ø Shut down condition: o Short run: Price line below minimum Average Variable Cost (AVC). o Long run: Price line below minimum Average Total Cost (ATC).

Total revenue (4 workers) = Price x Quantity = 130 x 1.20 = $156 Total cost: Fixed Cost + Variable Cost = $100 + $48 = $148

𝜋!"#$%&'(#) = 𝑇𝑅 − 𝑇𝐶= 156 – 148 = $8

𝜋!!!"!!"#$ = 𝐹𝐶 = −$100 𝜋!"#$%&'(#) > 𝜋!!!"!!"#$ à Continue production.

If price decreases to $0.40/can, should the firm continue production or shut down? Total revenue (3 workers) = Price x Quantity = $0.40 x 120 = $48 Total cost: Fixed Cost + Variable Cost = $100 + $36 = $136

𝜋!"#$%&'(#) = 𝑇𝑅 − 𝑇𝐶= 136 – 48 = −$88

𝜋!!!"!!"#$ = 𝐹𝐶 = −$100

𝜋!"#$%&'(#) > 𝜋!!!"!!"#$ à Continue production even when running a loss!

𝜋!"#$%&'(#) > 𝜋!!!"!!"#$ à Continue production.