EC120 Chapter Notes - Chapter 9: General Agreement On Tariffs And Trade, Invisible Hand, Market Failure

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EC120 Full Course Notes
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Isolandian textile market is isolated from rest of the world nobody is allowed to import/export textiles. No international trade = market for textiles in isoland consists solely of. Domestic price adjusts to balance the quantity supplied by domestic sellers and quantity demanded by domestic buyers. Figure shows consumers and producer surplus in equilibrium without trade. Sum of consumer and producer surplus measures total benefits that buyers and sellers receive from participating in the textile market. In an election upset, isoland elects new president who campaigned a platform of change and promised voters new ideas first act is to evaluate trade policy: World price: price of good that prevails in world market for that good. If world price is lower than domestic price, country would become importer of textiles: foreign sellers offer better price, so consumers would quickly start buying textiles from other countries. Comparing world price and domestic price before trade indicates whether isoland has comparative advantage in producing textiles.

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