Chapter 5
The Standard Trade Model
Copyright? 2003 Pearson Education,Inc,Slide 5-2
Chapter Organization
Introduction
A Standard Model of a Trading Economy
International Transfers of Income,Shifting the RD
Curve
Tariffs and Export Subsidies,Simultaneous Shifts in
RS and RD
Summary
Appendix,Representing International Equilibrium
with Offer Curves
Copyright? 2003 Pearson Education,Inc,Slide 5-3
Introduction
Previous trade theories have emphasized specific
sources of comparative advantage which give rise to
international trade:
Differences in labor productivity (Ricardian model)
Differences in resources (specific factors model and
Heckscher-Ohlin model)
The standard trade model is a general model of trade
that admits these models as special cases.
Copyright? 2003 Pearson Education,Inc,Slide 5-4
A Standard Model of a
Trading Economy
The standard trade model is built on four key
relationships:
Production possibility frontier and the relative supply
curve
Relative prices and relative demand
World relative supply and world relative demand
Terms of trade and national welfare
Copyright? 2003 Pearson Education,Inc,Slide 5-5
A Standard Model of a
Trading Economy
Production Possibilities and Relative Supply
Assumptions of the model:
– Each country produces two goods,food (F) and cloth (C)
– Each country’s production possibility frontier is a
smooth curve (TT)
The point on its production possibility frontier at
which an economy actually produces depends on the
price of cloth relative to food,PC/PF.
Isovalue lines
– Lines along which the market value of output is
constant
Copyright? 2003 Pearson Education,Inc,Slide 5-6
Figure 5-1,Relative Prices Determine the Economy’s Output
Q
Isovalue lines
TT
A Standard Model of a
Trading Economy
Cloth production,QC
Food production,QF
Copyright? 2003 Pearson Education,Inc,Slide 5-7
Figure 5-2,How an Increase in the Relative Price of Cloth Affects
Relative Supply
Q1
VV1(PC/PF)1Q2
VV2(PC/PF)2
A Standard Model of a
Trading Economy
TT
Cloth production,QC
Food production,QF
Copyright? 2003 Pearson Education,Inc,Slide 5-8
Relative Prices and Demand
The value of an economy's consumption equals the
value of its production:
PCQC + PFQF = PCDC + PFDF = V
The economy’s choice of a point on the isovalue line
depends on the tastes of its consumers,which can be
represented graphically by a series of indifference
curves.
A Standard Model of a
Trading Economy
Copyright? 2003 Pearson Education,Inc,Slide 5-9
Indifference curves
– Each traces a set of combinations of cloth (C) and food
(F) consumption that leave the individual equally well
off
– They have three properties:
– Downward sloping
– The farther up and to the right each lies,the higher the level of
welfare to which it corresponds
– Each gets flatter as we move to the right
A Standard Model of a
Trading Economy
Copyright? 2003 Pearson Education,Inc,Slide 5-10
TT
Figure 5-3,Production,Consumption,and Trade in the Standard Model
Cloth production,QC
Food production,QF
Q
D
Indifference curves
Food
imports
Cloth exports
A Standard Model of a
Trading Economy
Copyright? 2003 Pearson Education,Inc,Slide 5-11
If the relative price of cloth,PC/PF,increases,the
economy’s consumption choice shifts from D1 to D2.
– The move from D1 to D2 reflects two effects:
– Income effect
– Substitution effect
– It is possible that the income effect will be so strong that
when PC/PF rises,consumption of both goods actually
rises,while the ratio of cloth consumption to food
consumption falls.
A Standard Model of a
Trading Economy
Copyright? 2003 Pearson Education,Inc,Slide 5-12
TT
Figure 5-4,Effects of a Rise in the Relative Price of Cloth
Q1
VV1(PC/PF)1
Q2
VV2(PC/PF)2
D2
D1
A Standard Model of a
Trading Economy
Cloth production,QC
Food production,QF
Copyright? 2003 Pearson Education,Inc,Slide 5-13
The Welfare Effect of Changes in the Terms of Trade
Terms of trade
– The price of the good a country initially exports divided
by the price of the good it initially imports.
– A rise in the terms of trade increases a country’s welfare,
while a decline in the terms of trade reduces its welfare.
A Standard Model of a
Trading Economy
Copyright? 2003 Pearson Education,Inc,Slide 5-14
Determining Relative Prices
Suppose that the world economy consists of two countries:
– Home (which exports cloth)
– Its terms of trade are measured by PC/PF
– Its quantities of cloth and food produced are QC and QF
– Foreign (which exports food)
– Its terms of trade are measured by PF/PC
– Its quantities of cloth and food produced are Q*C and Q*F
A Standard Model of a
Trading Economy
Copyright? 2003 Pearson Education,Inc,Slide 5-15
To determine PC/PF,one must find the intersection of
world relative supply of cloth and world relative
demand.
– The world relative supply curve (RS) is upward sloping
because an increase in PC/PF leads both countries to
produce more cloth and less food.
– The world relative demand curve (RD) is downward
sloping because an increase in PC/PF leads both
countries to shift their consumption mix away from
cloth toward food.
A Standard Model of a
Trading Economy
Copyright? 2003 Pearson Education,Inc,Slide 5-16
Figure 5-5,World Relative Supply and Demand
RS
RD
Relative price
of cloth,PC/PF
Relative quantity
of cloth,QC + Q*C
QF + Q*F
A Standard Model of a
Trading Economy
(PC/PF)1
1
Copyright? 2003 Pearson Education,Inc,Slide 5-17
Economic Growth,A Shift of the RS Curve
Is economic growth in other countries good or bad for
our nation?
– It may be good for our nation because it means larger
markets for our exports,
– It may mean increased competition for our exporters.
Is growth in a country more or less valuable when that
nation is part of a closely integrated world economy?
– It should be more valuable when a country can sell
some of its increased production to the world market,
– It is less valuable when the benefits of growth are
passed on to foreigners rather than retained at home.
A Standard Model of a
Trading Economy
Copyright? 2003 Pearson Education,Inc,Slide 5-18
Growth and the Production Possibility Frontier
Economic growth implies an outward shift of a
country’s production possibility frontier (TT).
Biased growth
– Takes place when TT shifts out more in one direction
than in the other
– Can occur for two reasons:
– Technological progress in one sector of the economy
– Increase in a country’s supply of a factor of production
A Standard Model of a
Trading Economy
Copyright? 2003 Pearson Education,Inc,Slide 5-19
Figure 5-6,Biased Growth
TT1 TT1TT2 TT2
A Standard Model of a
Trading Economy
Cloth production,QC
Food
production,QF
(a) Growth biased toward cloth
Cloth production,QC
Food
production,QF
(b) Growth biased toward food
Copyright? 2003 Pearson Education,Inc,Slide 5-20
Relative Supply and the Terms of Trade
Export-biased growth
– Disproportionately expands a country’s production
possibilities in the direction of the good it exports
– Worsens a growing country’s terms of trade,to the
benefit of the rest of the world
Import-biased growth
– Disproportionately expands a country’s production
possibilities in the direction of the good it imports
– Improves a growing country’s terms of trade at the rest
of the word’s expense
A Standard Model of a
Trading Economy
Copyright? 2003 Pearson Education,Inc,Slide 5-21
Figure 5-7,Growth and Relative Supply
Relative price
of cloth,PC/PF
Relative quantity
of cloth,QC + Q*C
QF + Q*F
RS1
RD
1
(PC/PF)1
RS2
(PC/PF)2
2
Relative price
of cloth,PC/PF
Relative quantity
of cloth,QC + Q*C
QF + Q*F
RS2
RD
2
(PC/PF)2
RS1
(PC/PF)1
1
(a) Cloth-biased growth (b) Food-biased growth
A Standard Model of a
Trading Economy
Copyright? 2003 Pearson Education,Inc,Slide 5-22
International Effects of Growth
Export-biased growth in the rest of the world improves
our terms of trade,while import-biased growth abroad
worsens our terms of trade.
Export-biased growth in our country worsens our
terms of trade,reducing the direct benefits of growth,
while import-biased growth leads to an improvement
of our terms of trade.
A Standard Model of a
Trading Economy
Copyright? 2003 Pearson Education,Inc,Slide 5-23
Immiserizing growth
– A situation where export-biased growth by poor nations
can worsen their terms of trade so much that they would
be worse off than if they had not grown at all
– It can occur under extreme conditions,Strongly export-
biased growth must be combined with very steep RS and
RD curves.
– It is regarded by most economists as more a theoretical
point than a real-world issue.
A Standard Model of a
Trading Economy
Copyright? 2003 Pearson Education,Inc,Slide 5-24
Table 5-1,Average Annual Percent Changes in Terms of Trade
A Standard Model of a
Trading Economy
Copyright? 2003 Pearson Education,Inc,Slide 5-25
International Transfers of Income,
Shifting the RD Curve
International transfers of income,such as war
reparations and foreign aid,may affect a country’s
terms of trade by shifting the world relative demand
curve.
Relative world demand for goods may shift because
of:
Changes in tastes
Changes in technology
International transfers of income
The Transfer Problem
How international transfers affect the terms of trade
Copyright? 2003 Pearson Education,Inc,Slide 5-26
Effects of a Transfer on the Terms of Trade
When both countries allocate their change in spending
in the same proportions (Ohlin’s point):
– The RD curve will not shift,and there will be no terms
of trade effect.
When the two countries do not allocate their change in
spending in the same proportions (Keynes’s point):
– The RD curve will shift and there will be a terms of
trade effect.
– The direction of the effect on terms of trade will depend on the
difference in Home and Foreign spending patterns.
International Transfers of Income,
Shifting the RD Curve
Copyright? 2003 Pearson Education,Inc,Slide 5-27
Figure 5-8,Effects of a Transfer on the Terms of Trade
Relative price
of cloth,PC/PF
Relative quantity
of cloth,QC + Q*C
QF + Q*F
RS
RD2
RD1
(PC/PF)2
2
1
(PC/PF)1
International Transfers of Income,
Shifting the RD Curve
Copyright? 2003 Pearson Education,Inc,Slide 5-28
Presumptions about the Terms of Trade Effects of
Transfers
A transfer will worsen the donor’s terms of trade if the
donor has a higher marginal propensity to spend on its
export good than the recipient.
In practice,most countries spend a much higher share
of their income on domestically produced goods than
foreigners do.
– This is not necessarily due to differences in taste but
rather to barriers to trade,natural and artificial.
International Transfers of Income,
Shifting the RD Curve
Copyright? 2003 Pearson Education,Inc,Slide 5-29
Import tariffs and export subsidies affect both
relative supply and relative demand.
Relative Demand and Supply Effects of a Tariff
Tariffs drive a wedge between the prices at which
goods are traded internationally (external prices) and
the prices at which they are traded within a country
(internal prices).
The terms of trade correspond to external,not internal,
prices.
Tariffs and Export Subsidies,
Simultaneous Shifts in RS and RD
Copyright? 2003 Pearson Education,Inc,Slide 5-30
Tariffs and Export Subsidies,
Simultaneous Shifts in RS and RD
Figure 5-9,Effects of a Tariff on the Terms of Trade
Relative price
of cloth,PC/PF
Relative quantity
of cloth,QC + Q*C
QF + Q*F
RS1
RD1
RD2
RS2
(PC/PF)1
1
(PC/PF)2
2
Copyright? 2003 Pearson Education,Inc,Slide 5-31
Effects of an Export Subsidy
Tariffs and export subsidies are often treated as similar
policies but they have opposite effects on the terms of
trade.
– Example,Suppose that Home offers 20% subsidy on the
value of cloth exported:
– This will raise Home’s internal price of cloth relative to food by
20%.
– This will lead Home producers to produce more cloth and less
food.
– A Home export subsidy worsens Home’s terms of trade
and improves Foreign’s.
Tariffs and Export Subsidies,
Simultaneous Shifts in RS and RD
Copyright? 2003 Pearson Education,Inc,Slide 5-32
Tariffs and Export Subsidies,
Simultaneous Shifts in RS and RD
Figure 5-10,Effects of a Subsidy on the Terms of Trade
Relative price
of cloth,PC/PF
Relative quantity
of cloth,QC + Q*C
QF + Q*F
RS1
RD1
RD2
RS2
(PC/PF)1
1
(PC/PF)2
2
Copyright? 2003 Pearson Education,Inc,Slide 5-33
Implications of Terms of Trade Effects,Who Gains
and Who Loses?
The International Distribution of Income
– If Home (a large country) imposes a tariff,its welfare
increases as long as the tariff is not too large,while
Foreign’s welfare decreases.
– If Home offers an export subsidy,its welfare
deteriorates,while Foreign’s welfare increases.
The Distribution of Income Within Countries
– A tariff (subsidy) has the direct effect of raising the
internal relative price of the imported (exported) good.
– Tariffs and export subsidies might have perverse effects
on internal prices (Metzler paradox).
Tariffs and Export Subsidies,
Simultaneous Shifts in RS and RD
Copyright? 2003 Pearson Education,Inc,Slide 5-34
Summary
The standard trade model provides a framework that
can be used to address a wide range of international
issues and admits previous trade models as special
cases.
A country’s terms of trade are determined by the
intersection of the world relative supply and demand
curves.
Economic growth is usually biased,Growth that is
export-biased (import-biased) worsens (improves) the
terms of trade.
Copyright? 2003 Pearson Education,Inc,Slide 5-35
International transfers of income may affect a
country’s terms of trade,depending if they shift the
world relative demand curve.
Import tariffs and export subsidies affect both relative
supply and demand.
The terms of trade effects of an export subsidy hurt
the exporting country and benefit the rest of the world,
while those of a tariff do the reverse.
Both trade instruments have strong income distribution
effects within countries.
Summary
Copyright? 2003 Pearson Education,Inc,Slide 5-36
Figure 5A-1,Home’s Desired Trade at a Given Relative Price
TDesiredimports
of food
Desired
exports
of cloth
Home’s
imports,DF - QF
Home’s
exports,QC - DC
O
PC/PF
Appendix,Representing International
Equilibrium with Offer Curves
Copyright? 2003 Pearson Education,Inc,Slide 5-37
Figure 5A-2,Home’s Offer Curve
C
T2
T1
Appendix,Representing International
Equilibrium with Offer Curves
Home’s
imports,DF - QF
Home’s
exports,QC - DC
O
Copyright? 2003 Pearson Education,Inc,Slide 5-38
Figure 5A-3,Foreign’s Offer Curve
F
Appendix,Representing International
Equilibrium with Offer Curves
Foreign’s
exports,Q*F – D*F
Foreign’s
imports,D*C – Q*C
O
Copyright? 2003 Pearson Education,Inc,Slide 5-39
Appendix,Representing International
Equilibrium with Offer Curves
Figure 5A-4,Offer Curve Equilibrium
C
F
X
Y
E
Home’s exports of cloth,QC – DC
Foreign’s imports of cloth,D*C – Q*C
O
Home’s imports of food,DF– QF
Foreign’s exports of cloth,Q*F – D*F
The Standard Trade Model
Copyright? 2003 Pearson Education,Inc,Slide 5-2
Chapter Organization
Introduction
A Standard Model of a Trading Economy
International Transfers of Income,Shifting the RD
Curve
Tariffs and Export Subsidies,Simultaneous Shifts in
RS and RD
Summary
Appendix,Representing International Equilibrium
with Offer Curves
Copyright? 2003 Pearson Education,Inc,Slide 5-3
Introduction
Previous trade theories have emphasized specific
sources of comparative advantage which give rise to
international trade:
Differences in labor productivity (Ricardian model)
Differences in resources (specific factors model and
Heckscher-Ohlin model)
The standard trade model is a general model of trade
that admits these models as special cases.
Copyright? 2003 Pearson Education,Inc,Slide 5-4
A Standard Model of a
Trading Economy
The standard trade model is built on four key
relationships:
Production possibility frontier and the relative supply
curve
Relative prices and relative demand
World relative supply and world relative demand
Terms of trade and national welfare
Copyright? 2003 Pearson Education,Inc,Slide 5-5
A Standard Model of a
Trading Economy
Production Possibilities and Relative Supply
Assumptions of the model:
– Each country produces two goods,food (F) and cloth (C)
– Each country’s production possibility frontier is a
smooth curve (TT)
The point on its production possibility frontier at
which an economy actually produces depends on the
price of cloth relative to food,PC/PF.
Isovalue lines
– Lines along which the market value of output is
constant
Copyright? 2003 Pearson Education,Inc,Slide 5-6
Figure 5-1,Relative Prices Determine the Economy’s Output
Q
Isovalue lines
TT
A Standard Model of a
Trading Economy
Cloth production,QC
Food production,QF
Copyright? 2003 Pearson Education,Inc,Slide 5-7
Figure 5-2,How an Increase in the Relative Price of Cloth Affects
Relative Supply
Q1
VV1(PC/PF)1Q2
VV2(PC/PF)2
A Standard Model of a
Trading Economy
TT
Cloth production,QC
Food production,QF
Copyright? 2003 Pearson Education,Inc,Slide 5-8
Relative Prices and Demand
The value of an economy's consumption equals the
value of its production:
PCQC + PFQF = PCDC + PFDF = V
The economy’s choice of a point on the isovalue line
depends on the tastes of its consumers,which can be
represented graphically by a series of indifference
curves.
A Standard Model of a
Trading Economy
Copyright? 2003 Pearson Education,Inc,Slide 5-9
Indifference curves
– Each traces a set of combinations of cloth (C) and food
(F) consumption that leave the individual equally well
off
– They have three properties:
– Downward sloping
– The farther up and to the right each lies,the higher the level of
welfare to which it corresponds
– Each gets flatter as we move to the right
A Standard Model of a
Trading Economy
Copyright? 2003 Pearson Education,Inc,Slide 5-10
TT
Figure 5-3,Production,Consumption,and Trade in the Standard Model
Cloth production,QC
Food production,QF
Q
D
Indifference curves
Food
imports
Cloth exports
A Standard Model of a
Trading Economy
Copyright? 2003 Pearson Education,Inc,Slide 5-11
If the relative price of cloth,PC/PF,increases,the
economy’s consumption choice shifts from D1 to D2.
– The move from D1 to D2 reflects two effects:
– Income effect
– Substitution effect
– It is possible that the income effect will be so strong that
when PC/PF rises,consumption of both goods actually
rises,while the ratio of cloth consumption to food
consumption falls.
A Standard Model of a
Trading Economy
Copyright? 2003 Pearson Education,Inc,Slide 5-12
TT
Figure 5-4,Effects of a Rise in the Relative Price of Cloth
Q1
VV1(PC/PF)1
Q2
VV2(PC/PF)2
D2
D1
A Standard Model of a
Trading Economy
Cloth production,QC
Food production,QF
Copyright? 2003 Pearson Education,Inc,Slide 5-13
The Welfare Effect of Changes in the Terms of Trade
Terms of trade
– The price of the good a country initially exports divided
by the price of the good it initially imports.
– A rise in the terms of trade increases a country’s welfare,
while a decline in the terms of trade reduces its welfare.
A Standard Model of a
Trading Economy
Copyright? 2003 Pearson Education,Inc,Slide 5-14
Determining Relative Prices
Suppose that the world economy consists of two countries:
– Home (which exports cloth)
– Its terms of trade are measured by PC/PF
– Its quantities of cloth and food produced are QC and QF
– Foreign (which exports food)
– Its terms of trade are measured by PF/PC
– Its quantities of cloth and food produced are Q*C and Q*F
A Standard Model of a
Trading Economy
Copyright? 2003 Pearson Education,Inc,Slide 5-15
To determine PC/PF,one must find the intersection of
world relative supply of cloth and world relative
demand.
– The world relative supply curve (RS) is upward sloping
because an increase in PC/PF leads both countries to
produce more cloth and less food.
– The world relative demand curve (RD) is downward
sloping because an increase in PC/PF leads both
countries to shift their consumption mix away from
cloth toward food.
A Standard Model of a
Trading Economy
Copyright? 2003 Pearson Education,Inc,Slide 5-16
Figure 5-5,World Relative Supply and Demand
RS
RD
Relative price
of cloth,PC/PF
Relative quantity
of cloth,QC + Q*C
QF + Q*F
A Standard Model of a
Trading Economy
(PC/PF)1
1
Copyright? 2003 Pearson Education,Inc,Slide 5-17
Economic Growth,A Shift of the RS Curve
Is economic growth in other countries good or bad for
our nation?
– It may be good for our nation because it means larger
markets for our exports,
– It may mean increased competition for our exporters.
Is growth in a country more or less valuable when that
nation is part of a closely integrated world economy?
– It should be more valuable when a country can sell
some of its increased production to the world market,
– It is less valuable when the benefits of growth are
passed on to foreigners rather than retained at home.
A Standard Model of a
Trading Economy
Copyright? 2003 Pearson Education,Inc,Slide 5-18
Growth and the Production Possibility Frontier
Economic growth implies an outward shift of a
country’s production possibility frontier (TT).
Biased growth
– Takes place when TT shifts out more in one direction
than in the other
– Can occur for two reasons:
– Technological progress in one sector of the economy
– Increase in a country’s supply of a factor of production
A Standard Model of a
Trading Economy
Copyright? 2003 Pearson Education,Inc,Slide 5-19
Figure 5-6,Biased Growth
TT1 TT1TT2 TT2
A Standard Model of a
Trading Economy
Cloth production,QC
Food
production,QF
(a) Growth biased toward cloth
Cloth production,QC
Food
production,QF
(b) Growth biased toward food
Copyright? 2003 Pearson Education,Inc,Slide 5-20
Relative Supply and the Terms of Trade
Export-biased growth
– Disproportionately expands a country’s production
possibilities in the direction of the good it exports
– Worsens a growing country’s terms of trade,to the
benefit of the rest of the world
Import-biased growth
– Disproportionately expands a country’s production
possibilities in the direction of the good it imports
– Improves a growing country’s terms of trade at the rest
of the word’s expense
A Standard Model of a
Trading Economy
Copyright? 2003 Pearson Education,Inc,Slide 5-21
Figure 5-7,Growth and Relative Supply
Relative price
of cloth,PC/PF
Relative quantity
of cloth,QC + Q*C
QF + Q*F
RS1
RD
1
(PC/PF)1
RS2
(PC/PF)2
2
Relative price
of cloth,PC/PF
Relative quantity
of cloth,QC + Q*C
QF + Q*F
RS2
RD
2
(PC/PF)2
RS1
(PC/PF)1
1
(a) Cloth-biased growth (b) Food-biased growth
A Standard Model of a
Trading Economy
Copyright? 2003 Pearson Education,Inc,Slide 5-22
International Effects of Growth
Export-biased growth in the rest of the world improves
our terms of trade,while import-biased growth abroad
worsens our terms of trade.
Export-biased growth in our country worsens our
terms of trade,reducing the direct benefits of growth,
while import-biased growth leads to an improvement
of our terms of trade.
A Standard Model of a
Trading Economy
Copyright? 2003 Pearson Education,Inc,Slide 5-23
Immiserizing growth
– A situation where export-biased growth by poor nations
can worsen their terms of trade so much that they would
be worse off than if they had not grown at all
– It can occur under extreme conditions,Strongly export-
biased growth must be combined with very steep RS and
RD curves.
– It is regarded by most economists as more a theoretical
point than a real-world issue.
A Standard Model of a
Trading Economy
Copyright? 2003 Pearson Education,Inc,Slide 5-24
Table 5-1,Average Annual Percent Changes in Terms of Trade
A Standard Model of a
Trading Economy
Copyright? 2003 Pearson Education,Inc,Slide 5-25
International Transfers of Income,
Shifting the RD Curve
International transfers of income,such as war
reparations and foreign aid,may affect a country’s
terms of trade by shifting the world relative demand
curve.
Relative world demand for goods may shift because
of:
Changes in tastes
Changes in technology
International transfers of income
The Transfer Problem
How international transfers affect the terms of trade
Copyright? 2003 Pearson Education,Inc,Slide 5-26
Effects of a Transfer on the Terms of Trade
When both countries allocate their change in spending
in the same proportions (Ohlin’s point):
– The RD curve will not shift,and there will be no terms
of trade effect.
When the two countries do not allocate their change in
spending in the same proportions (Keynes’s point):
– The RD curve will shift and there will be a terms of
trade effect.
– The direction of the effect on terms of trade will depend on the
difference in Home and Foreign spending patterns.
International Transfers of Income,
Shifting the RD Curve
Copyright? 2003 Pearson Education,Inc,Slide 5-27
Figure 5-8,Effects of a Transfer on the Terms of Trade
Relative price
of cloth,PC/PF
Relative quantity
of cloth,QC + Q*C
QF + Q*F
RS
RD2
RD1
(PC/PF)2
2
1
(PC/PF)1
International Transfers of Income,
Shifting the RD Curve
Copyright? 2003 Pearson Education,Inc,Slide 5-28
Presumptions about the Terms of Trade Effects of
Transfers
A transfer will worsen the donor’s terms of trade if the
donor has a higher marginal propensity to spend on its
export good than the recipient.
In practice,most countries spend a much higher share
of their income on domestically produced goods than
foreigners do.
– This is not necessarily due to differences in taste but
rather to barriers to trade,natural and artificial.
International Transfers of Income,
Shifting the RD Curve
Copyright? 2003 Pearson Education,Inc,Slide 5-29
Import tariffs and export subsidies affect both
relative supply and relative demand.
Relative Demand and Supply Effects of a Tariff
Tariffs drive a wedge between the prices at which
goods are traded internationally (external prices) and
the prices at which they are traded within a country
(internal prices).
The terms of trade correspond to external,not internal,
prices.
Tariffs and Export Subsidies,
Simultaneous Shifts in RS and RD
Copyright? 2003 Pearson Education,Inc,Slide 5-30
Tariffs and Export Subsidies,
Simultaneous Shifts in RS and RD
Figure 5-9,Effects of a Tariff on the Terms of Trade
Relative price
of cloth,PC/PF
Relative quantity
of cloth,QC + Q*C
QF + Q*F
RS1
RD1
RD2
RS2
(PC/PF)1
1
(PC/PF)2
2
Copyright? 2003 Pearson Education,Inc,Slide 5-31
Effects of an Export Subsidy
Tariffs and export subsidies are often treated as similar
policies but they have opposite effects on the terms of
trade.
– Example,Suppose that Home offers 20% subsidy on the
value of cloth exported:
– This will raise Home’s internal price of cloth relative to food by
20%.
– This will lead Home producers to produce more cloth and less
food.
– A Home export subsidy worsens Home’s terms of trade
and improves Foreign’s.
Tariffs and Export Subsidies,
Simultaneous Shifts in RS and RD
Copyright? 2003 Pearson Education,Inc,Slide 5-32
Tariffs and Export Subsidies,
Simultaneous Shifts in RS and RD
Figure 5-10,Effects of a Subsidy on the Terms of Trade
Relative price
of cloth,PC/PF
Relative quantity
of cloth,QC + Q*C
QF + Q*F
RS1
RD1
RD2
RS2
(PC/PF)1
1
(PC/PF)2
2
Copyright? 2003 Pearson Education,Inc,Slide 5-33
Implications of Terms of Trade Effects,Who Gains
and Who Loses?
The International Distribution of Income
– If Home (a large country) imposes a tariff,its welfare
increases as long as the tariff is not too large,while
Foreign’s welfare decreases.
– If Home offers an export subsidy,its welfare
deteriorates,while Foreign’s welfare increases.
The Distribution of Income Within Countries
– A tariff (subsidy) has the direct effect of raising the
internal relative price of the imported (exported) good.
– Tariffs and export subsidies might have perverse effects
on internal prices (Metzler paradox).
Tariffs and Export Subsidies,
Simultaneous Shifts in RS and RD
Copyright? 2003 Pearson Education,Inc,Slide 5-34
Summary
The standard trade model provides a framework that
can be used to address a wide range of international
issues and admits previous trade models as special
cases.
A country’s terms of trade are determined by the
intersection of the world relative supply and demand
curves.
Economic growth is usually biased,Growth that is
export-biased (import-biased) worsens (improves) the
terms of trade.
Copyright? 2003 Pearson Education,Inc,Slide 5-35
International transfers of income may affect a
country’s terms of trade,depending if they shift the
world relative demand curve.
Import tariffs and export subsidies affect both relative
supply and demand.
The terms of trade effects of an export subsidy hurt
the exporting country and benefit the rest of the world,
while those of a tariff do the reverse.
Both trade instruments have strong income distribution
effects within countries.
Summary
Copyright? 2003 Pearson Education,Inc,Slide 5-36
Figure 5A-1,Home’s Desired Trade at a Given Relative Price
TDesiredimports
of food
Desired
exports
of cloth
Home’s
imports,DF - QF
Home’s
exports,QC - DC
O
PC/PF
Appendix,Representing International
Equilibrium with Offer Curves
Copyright? 2003 Pearson Education,Inc,Slide 5-37
Figure 5A-2,Home’s Offer Curve
C
T2
T1
Appendix,Representing International
Equilibrium with Offer Curves
Home’s
imports,DF - QF
Home’s
exports,QC - DC
O
Copyright? 2003 Pearson Education,Inc,Slide 5-38
Figure 5A-3,Foreign’s Offer Curve
F
Appendix,Representing International
Equilibrium with Offer Curves
Foreign’s
exports,Q*F – D*F
Foreign’s
imports,D*C – Q*C
O
Copyright? 2003 Pearson Education,Inc,Slide 5-39
Appendix,Representing International
Equilibrium with Offer Curves
Figure 5A-4,Offer Curve Equilibrium
C
F
X
Y
E
Home’s exports of cloth,QC – DC
Foreign’s imports of cloth,D*C – Q*C
O
Home’s imports of food,DF– QF
Foreign’s exports of cloth,Q*F – D*F