Trade Basics
Comparative Advantage
Trade Policy
Tariffs and Welfare
Quotas & Finance
100

This term describes a nation's self-sufficiency — producing everything domestically with no international trade.

Autarky 

100

This type of advantage focuses on opportunity cost — producing a good at a lower opportunity cost than other nations.

Comparative Advantage 

100

tax on imported goods

tariff 

100

For a small importing country under free trade, if the world price is below the autarky price, the country becomes this.

importer 

100

For every import quota, there exists one of these that produces the exact same quantity and price outcome.

equivalent import tariff 

200

A nation has this when it can produce more of an item than other nations using the same resources.

Absolute advantage 

200

Nation A can make 400 cameras or 40 computers. Nation B can make 360 cameras or 10 computers. The opportunity cost of 1 computer for Nation A is this many cameras.

10 cameras 

200

A legal maximum on the quantity of a good that can be imported.

import quota 

200

When a small country imposes a tariff, this group gains while this group loses — and the net effect is a welfare loss.

domestic producers (gain) and domestic consumers (lose)

200

The key difference between a quota and a tariff: under a quota, this goes to importers as rents rather than to the government as revenue.

quota rents 

300

These are the three types of trade policy tools covered in this lecture.

import tariffs, import quotas, and export subsidies

300

Nation A can make 400 cameras or 40 computers. Nation B can make 360 cameras or 10 computers. What good does nation B have a comparative advantage in? 

B

300

This occurs when a government pays domestic firms to help them sell exports more cheaply abroad.

export subsidy 

300

The two deadweight loss triangles from a tariff represent these two types of loss.

production loss and consumption loss

300

This balance of payments account records exports and imports of goods and services, net interest paid abroad, and net transfers.

current account 

400

This is the ratio of a country's export prices divided by its import prices.

terms of trade

400

Even if a country has an absolute advantage in all goods, it can still benefit from trade because of this principle.

Comparative Advantage 

400

What is one key reason developing countries apply tariffs even though they cause welfare loss 

- they may have no other source of this.

government revenue 

400

For a large country that imposes a tariff, if the terms-of-trade gain exceeds the deadweight loss, this is the result for the importing country.

net welfare gain 

400

A country that borrows more from the rest of the world than it lends is called this.

net borrower 

500

International trade makes it possible to consume goods at a lower opportunity cost than producing them domestically because of this.

specialization and comparative advantage (trading for goods produced more cheaply abroad)

500

When Country A specializes in wheat and Country B in coal and both benefit from trade, what must be true? 

each country has a comparative advantage in its respective good (Country A in wheat, Country B in coal)

500

This is the political reason tariffs persist: the benefits to these groups are concentrated while the costs to consumers are spread nationwide.

domestic producers and their workers

500

The tariff imposed by a large country that extracts welfare from the foreign exporter is sometimes called this.

optimal

500

The current account balance equals net exports, which equals the sum of these two sector balances.

government sector balance (T − G) and the private sector balance (S − I)