Professor Christina Romer. LECTURE 2 COMPARATIVE ADVANTAGE AND THE GAINS FROM SPECIALIZATION January 19, 2017

Similar documents
Professor Christina Romer. LECTURE 3 COMPARATIVE ADVANTAGE AND THE GAINS FROM SPECIALIZATION January 26, 2016

Professor Christina Romer. LECTURE 3 SUPPLY AND DEMAND FRAMEWORK January 24, 2017

Professor Christina Romer. LECTURE 1 SCARCITY AND CHOICE January 16, 2018

Professor Christina Romer LECTURE 7 FIRMS AND PROFIT MAXIMIZATION FEBRUARY 9, 2016

Professor Christina Romer. LECTURE 11 COMPARATIVE ADVANTAGE AND THE GAINS FROM INTERNATIONAL TRADE February 22, 2018

Professor Christina Romer. LECTURE 11 COMPARATIVE ADVANTAGE AND THE GAINS FROM INTERNATIONAL TRADE February 23, 2017

Professor Christina Romer. LECTURE 9 MONOPOLY February 13, 2018

Professor Christina Romer SUGGESTED ANSWERS TO PROBLEM SET 1

Professor Christina Romer LECTURE 6 FIRMS AND PROFIT MAXIMIZATION FEBRUARY 1, 2018

Professor Christina Romer. LECTURE 9 MONOPOLY February 19, 2019

The Foundations of Microeconomics

Unit 2 Economic Models: Trade-offs and Trade

Professor Christina Romer. LECTURE 9 MONOPOLY February 13, 2018

Professor Christina Romer. LECTURE 10 EXTERNALITIES February 15, 2018

Professor Christina Romer LECTURE 7 COMPETITIVE FIRMS IN THE LONG RUN FEBRUARY 6, 2018

Professor Christina Romer SUGGESTED ANSWERS TO PROBLEM SET 3

Professor Christina Romer. LECTURE 10 EXTERNALITIES February 21, 2019

Production Possibilities Curve

Professor Christina Romer. LECTURE 8 WELFARE ANALYSIS February 8, 2018

Professor Christina Romer LECTURE 7 COMPETITIVE FIRMS IN THE LONG RUN FEBRUARY 12, 2019

Professor Christina Romer. LECTURE 8 WELFARE ANALYSIS February 14, 2019

Problem Set 2 Solutions

Making choices in a world of scarcity means we must pass up some goods and services. Every decision we make is a trade-off:

Professor Christina Romer SUGGESTED ANSWERS TO PROBLEM SET 1

Professor Christina Romer. LECTURE 10 EXTERNALITIES February 15, 2018

Chapter 2 Lecture: Scarcity and the World of Trade-Offs

Chapter 02 Testbank. 1. To say that an individual possesses an absolute advantage in the production of software means that individual

Professor Christina Romer SUGGESTED ANSWERS TO PROBLEM SET 2

Module 4 Comparative Advantage and Trade

Introduction. Learning Objectives. Learning Objectives. Chapter 2. Scarcity and the World of Trade-Offs

GAINS FROM TRADE. how to apply the theory of comparative advantage to everyday life and national policy.

Professor Christina Romer. LECTURE 19 EMPLOYMENT AND UNEMPLOYMENT IN THE LONG RUN March 31, 2016

Answers to Text Questions and Problems

Individual Water Reduction in Accordance with California State Water Mandate. Becker, Jake Karabinos, Brian Smith, Kyle

Professor Christina Romer SUGGESTED ANSWERS TO PROBLEM SET 1

Economics 1 (EC107) LECTURE 1 INTRODUCTORY TOPIC. Importance of scarcity and trade in economics

We know that a line has the form y = mx + b, where m is the slope and b the y - intercept. With two points given, we can write:

Chapter. The Economic Problem CHAPTER IN PERSPECTIVE

Chapter 2: Scarcity, Choice and Economic Systems

Lecture 2: Opportunity costs

Professor Christina Romer. LECTURE 19 EMPLOYMENT AND UNEMPLOYMENT IN THE LONG RUN March 31, 2016

Production Possibilities, Opportunity Cost, and Economic Growth

ECON 1001 A. Come to the PASS workshop with your mock exam complete. During the workshop you can work with other students to review your work.

Production Possibilities, Opportunity Cost, and Economic Growth

WEEK 4: Economics: Foundations and Models

Answer Guide. Midterm 2, Fall 2018

ECONOMICS 103. Topic 2: Specialization & Trade

Part I: PPF, Opportunity Cost, Trading prices, Comparative and Absolute Advantage

Production Possibilities, Opportunity Cost, and Economic Growth

Full file at Production Possibilities, Opportunity Cost, and Economic Growth

Chapter 2 Scarcity and the World of Trade-Offs

ECON 1000 (Maymester 2018 Section 01) Exam #1A

Multiple Choice Questions (please green scantron) 25 questions, 3 points per question

Professor Christina Romer SUGGESTED ANSWERS TO PROBLEM SET 4

Production Possibilities, Opportunity Cost, Economic Growth

3. Definition of constant returns to scale: the property whereby long-run average total cost stays the same as the quantity of output changes.

Coupons. Tips! ODD-EVEN. What s inside. City of Lacey, Washington. for Free Water Saving Items. For keeping hazards out of your drinking water

SCARCITY AND CENTRAL PROBLEM OF AN ECONOMY

Opportunity Costs when production is in quantity per/hr =

Professor Christina Romer SUGGESTED ANSWERS TO PROBLEM SET 3

Professor Christina Romer SUGGESTED ANSWERS TO PROBLEM SET 2

ECON 112 L3 Week 2, T1, Fall Chapter 2 The Economic Problem

Full file at

Chapter 02 Comparative Advantage

Economics. Synopsis. 1. Economic Concepts, Issues and Tools. 2. An Overview of Economics. Sections. Learning Summary. Sections

ECON 1000 (Fall 2016 Section 03) Exam #1A

ECON 1000 (Fall 2016 Section 03) Exam #1B

Which term means making decisions based on what you believe to be the best combination of costs and benefits?

ECONOMICS RULES. example: IN 1 MINUTE. limited resources/unlimited n!ds HELP YOUR PARTNER REVEAL ALL 5 CONCEPTS ON THE BOARD

Chapter 3 EXPANDED GAINS FROM TRADE WITH RESOURCE MOVEMENTS

Unit I: Basic Economic Concepts

Chapter 6 TRADE AND LOCAL INCOME DISTRIBUTION: THE SPECIFIC FACTORS MODEL

Choice, Opportunity Costs, and Specialization

Full file at

The Economic Problem: Scarcity and Choice

The Economic Problem: Scarcity and Choice

Choose the single best answer for each question. Do all of your scratch-work in the side and bottom margins of pages.

Choose the single best answer for each question. Do all of your scratch-work in the side and bottom margins of pages.

Test Yourself: Basic Terminology. If all economists were laid end to end, they would still not reach a conclusion. GB Shaw

UNIVERSITY OF MASSACHUSETTS DARTMOUTH Charlton College of Business Department of Accounting and Finance Summer 2017

CHAPTER 2 Production Possibilities Frontier Framework

Chapter 2 Economic Tools and Economic Systems

WATER MARKET STRATEGY ALIGNMENT OF THE IRRIGATION INDUSTRY & THE ENVIRONMENT 13 MAY 2015 ALISTER WALSH - WATERFIND CEO

Economics for Business Decision Making

The last lecture discussed data, not how the economy works. This lecture begins with the task of developing a simple economic model.

TEN PRINCIPLES OF ECONOMICS. The word Economy... An individual economic agent faces many decisions: Intro Macroeconomic Theory Professor Minseong Kim

Chapter 11 Market-Clearing Models of the Business Cycle 108

How Do People and Nations Gain from Specialization and Trade? (EA)

Chapter 2 Economic Tools and Economics Systems

Lecture 21, Friday, Oct. 30. Lecture. 1. Wed: Stay home and participate in Tragedy of the Commons experiment

ECON1001: Introduction to Economics Fall 2006 University of Hong Kong. Mid-term exam #1. Saturday, October 14, :00a.m. 11:00a.m.

ECON1001: Introduction to Economics Fall 2006 University of Hong Kong. Mid-term exam #1. Saturday, October 14, :00a.m. 11:00a.m.

a) What is the opportunity cost of producing the first 5 coconuts? b) What is the opportunity cost of producing the first 2 fish?

Chapter 2--Economic Tools and Economics Systems

DEPARTMENT OF ECONOMICS ECONOMICS 114 MODULE OUTLINE 2018

Eastern Mediterranean University Faculty of Business and Economics Department of Economics Spring Semester

CH 1: Economics and Economic Reasoning

ECO201: PRINCIPLES OF MICROECONOMICS FIRST MIDTERM EXAMINATION

ECO201: PRINCIPLES OF MICROECONOMICS FIRST MIDTERM EXAMINATION

Economics 101 Fall 2013 Answers to Homework #6 Due Tuesday, Dec 10, 2013

Transcription:

Economics 2 Spring 2017 Professor Christina Romer Professor David Romer LECTURE 2 COMPARATIVE ADVANTAGE AND THE GAINS FROM SPECIALIZATION January 19, 2017 I. OVERVIEW II. THE KEY ROLE OF DIFFERENCES IN RELATIVE ABILITY A. Intuition B. Example: Specialization within a household C. Reciprocal absolute advantage 1. Definition of absolute advantage 2. Comparing outcomes without and with specialization D. Comparative advantage 1. Definition of comparative advantage 2. Comparing outcomes without and with specialization 3. Reciprocal absolute advantage is just a special case of comparative advantage III. OPPORTUNITY COST AND COMPARATIVE ADVANTAGE A. Comparative advantage means that a producer has a lower opportunity cost B. There are gains from specialization when opportunity cost differs C. Comparative advantage is a relative concept IV. SPECIALIZATION AND THE CURVATURE OF THE PRODUCTION POSSIBILITIES CURVE A. Example: Specialization in a two-person economy B. Individual PPCs in a two-person economy C. PPC of two people combined without specialization D. PPC of two people combined with specialization E. What do we learn from this example? F. Will both parties gain from specialization? V. REAL-WORLD EXAMPLE: SHOULD CALIFORNIA GROW RICE? A. Facts about California agriculture and water use B. Relative opportunity cost of growing rice in California and Arkansas C. Are we specializing along the lines of comparative advantage?

Economics 2 Spring 2017 Christina Romer David Romer LECTURE 2 Comparative Advantage and the Gains from Specialization January 19, 2017

Announcements It is essential that you attend section this week. Some hints on taking notes and reading the textbook. Reminder: please put away all electronic devices.

I. OVERVIEW

Two Fundamental Building Blocks Scarcity, choice, and opportunity cost. Comparative advantage and the gains from specialization.

II. THE KEY ROLE OF DIFFERENCES IN RELATIVE ABILITY

Example: Specialization within a Household Two activities: dishwashing and painting. There are 3 walls that need painting (and many dirty dishes).

Reciprocal Absolute Advantage Walls Dishes Abilities (per hour) C. 4 12 D. 2 20 No Specialization (Each paints ½ hr. and washes ½ hr.) C. 2 6 D. 1 10 3 16 Specialization (C. paints ¾ hr. and washes ¼ hr.; D. washes 1 hr.) C. 3 3 D. 0 20 3 23

Absolute Advantage Someone or something can produce more with a given amount of resources.

Comparative Advantage Walls Dishes Abilities (per hour) C. 4 24 D. 2 20 No Specialization (Each paints ½ hr. and washes ½ hr.) C. 2 12 D. 1 10 3 22 Specialization (C. paints ¾ hr. and washes ¼ hr.; D. washes 1 hr.) C. 3 6 D. 0 20 3 26

Comparative Advantage Someone or something is relatively more productive at one activity than at another.

Messages Comparative advantage is necessary for there to be gains from specialization. Reciprocal absolute advantage is just a special case of comparative advantage.

III. OPPORTUNITY COST AND COMPARATIVE ADVANTAGE

Opportunity Cost and Comparative Advantage Abilities (per hour) C. 4 walls or 24 dishes D. 2 walls or 20 dishes Opportunity Cost of 1 Wall C. 24/4 = 6 dishes D. 20/2 = 10 dishes Opportunity Cost of 1 Dish C. 4/24 = 1/6 wall D. 2/20 = 1/10 wall Lower opportunity cost implies comparative advantage.

Some Observations There are gains from specialization when opportunity cost differs. How much we want to specialize depends on how many of the two activities need to be done. Comparative advantage is inherently a relative concept.

IV. SPECIALIZATION AND THE CURVATURE OF THE PRODUCTION POSSIBILITIES CURVE

Example: Specialization in a Two-Person Economy Two goods: fish and coconuts. Abilities: In an hour, Robinson can catch 1 fish or gather 1 coconut. (So Robinson s opportunity cost of 1 coconut is 1 fish.) In an hour, Friday can catch 8 fish or gather 2 coconuts. (So Friday s opportunity cost of 1 coconut is 4 fish.) Each of them works 6 hours a day.

Robinson s Production Possibilities Curve Fish Slope is 1, because the opportunity cost for Robinson of gathering 1 coconut is 1 fish. 6 PPC 0 0 6 Coconuts

Friday s Production Possibilities Curve Fish 48 Slope is 4, because the opportunity cost for Friday of gathering 1 coconut is 1 fish. PPC 0 0 12 Coconuts

Opportunity Cost When Robinson and Friday Allocate Their Time the Same Way (No Specialization) In an hour, they could catch 9 fish (1 from Robinson and 8 from Friday). Or they could gather 3 coconuts (1 from Robinson and 2 from Friday). So, they trade off 9 fish for 3 coconuts. The opportunity cost of 1 coconut is 3 fish.

Combined PPC without Specialization Fish 54 Slope is 3, because the opportunity cost of gathering 1 coconut for the two combined without specialization is 3 fish. PPC 0 0 18 Coconuts

Opportunity Costs with Specialization In an hour, Robinson could catch 1 fish or gather 1 coconut. So, the opportunity cost of having Robinson gather 1 coconut is 1 fish. In an hour, Friday could catch 8 fish or gather 2 coconut. So, the opportunity cost of having Friday gather 1 coconut is 4 fish. Robinson is the low opportunity cost provider of coconuts.

Combined PPC with Specialization Fish 54 48 Slope = 1 PPC Slope = 4 0 0 6 18 Coconuts

What Do We Learn from This Example? There are gains from specialization when opportunity differs across producers and production is organized according to comparative advantage. This explains why the PPC for a country is likely to be bowed out. One determinant of the size of the gains from specialization is the difference in opportunity cost.

Gains from Specialization Fish 54 48 PPC with Specialization PPC without specialization 0 0 6 18 Coconuts

Will Both Robinson and Friday Benefit from Specialization? Simple Answer: As long as there is no coercion, if two parties choose to specialize and trade, both must be benefitting. More complicated answer: In a market system, prices will tend to adjust to ensure that both parties gain from specialization and trade.

V. REAL-WORLD EXAMPLE: SHOULD CALIFORNIA GROW RICE?

Source, Congressional Research Service, California Agricultural Production and Irrigated Water Use, 2015.

Source, Congressional Research Service, California Agricultural Production and Irrigated Water Use, 2015.

Is California the Low-Opportunity-Cost Rice Producer in the U.S.? What does California give up to grow rice? What do other rice-compatible states (such as Arkansas) give up to grow rice?

Source, Congressional Research Service, California Agricultural Production and Irrigated Water Use, 2015.