ECON 2020 Lecture Notes - Lecture 3: Absolute Advantage, Autarky, Comparative Advantage

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5 Feb 2017
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Labor hours / amount of good = start/end point on ppf. Gains from trade example: two countries u. s. and japan, two goods wheat and computers, one resource labor hours, u. s. 1 ton of wheat = 10 hours: japan. 1 ton of wheat = 25 hours: consumption from trade. Where do gains come from: absolute advantage: ability to produce a good using fewer inputs than another producer. Two countries can gain from trade when each specializes in the good it produces at lowest cost. Absolute advantage measures the cost of good in terms of inputs required to produce it. Another measure of cost = opportunity cost: computers per tons of wheat, opportunity cost for computer 1200/250 = 5 tons of wheat, comparative advantage: ability to produce a good at a lower opportunity cost than another producer. 5000/500 = 10 tons of wheat per computer. Absolute advantage is not necessary for comparative advantage. Argentina and brazil each have 10,000 labor hours.

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