ECO100Y5 Chapter Notes - Chapter 33: Absolute Advantage, Comparative Advantage, Opportunity Cost

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ECO100Y5 Full Course Notes
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International trade is very important to canada. Exports and imports are roughly the same size; the volume of trade is much larger than the balance of trade (value of exports minus the value of imports) In most of the industry groupings, there are significant amounts of both imports and exports; intra industry trade. 33. 1 the gains from trade: open economy- an economy that engages in international trade, closed economy- an economy that has no foreign trade (autarky, causes and consequences are simply an extension of the principles governing trade between domestic firms and individuals. Absolute advantage- the situation that exists when one country can produce some commodity at lower absolute costs than another country; least amount of resources used to produce g/s; based on productivities. Example: some countries have access to cheap natural resources or better- trained workers or more sophisticated capital equipment, are low cost producers for a wide range of products: comparative advantage.

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