ECO100Y1 Lecture 21: 21-3

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Observations: john has comparative advantage in production of cloth (he can produce cloth at a lower opportunity cost, 0. 2 corn versus 0. 5 corn) Jane has comparative advantage in production of corn. Jane has absolute advantage in production of both cloth and corn. Assume trade ratio is 3 cloths for 1 corn, with this trade ratio, john and jane can have consumption bundles that exceed their ppf without trade. With trade, a country can consume outside its ppf by specializing in the production of goods in which it has a comparative advantage. "law of one price: internationally traded goods with low transportation costs must sell at the same price in all countries, this is "the world price. " Domestic price < world price: opportunity cost [domestic resources] of producing good is low. Domestic price > world price: opportunity cost [domestic resources] of producing good is high. If trade exists, look at which goods the country is importing and exporting.

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