Comparative Advantage
Even if a person or
country is not best at making anything, they can still produce and prosper.
…
First watch this video, Comparative Advantage and the
Tragedy of Tasmania. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cwx9fZOL81c
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Suppose LeBron James can mow his lawn
faster than anyone else.
Should he
mow his own lawn?
James can mow his lawn in 2 hours.
In that same 2 hours, he could film a
television commercial for Nike and earn $50,000.
…
Dave, the boy next door, can mow James'
lawn in 4 hours.
In that same 4 hours, Dave could work
at McDonald's and earn $40.
James has an absolute advantage over Dave
in mowing lawns because he can do the work with a lower input of time.
But Dave has a comparative advantage in
lawn mowing, because
· James' opportunity cost of mowing the
lawn is $50,000, not making the Nike commercial
· Dave’s opportunity cost of mowing the
lawn is $40, not working at McDonalds
Rather than mowing his own lawn, James
should make the commercial and hire Dave to mow the lawn.
As long as James pays Dave more than $40
and less than $50,000, both of them are better off.
…
Just as individuals can benefit from
specialization and trade with one another so can different countries.
Imagine a world with just two
countries, the United States and Japan, and two goods, food and cars.
Per Figure 1:
The two countries produce cars equally
well
· a U.S. worker can produce 1 car per
month (his input fraction to the process per day x 30)
· a Japanese worker can also produce 1
car per month
Because the U.S. has more farm land, it
is better at producing food
· a U.S. worker can produce 3 tons of
food per month
· a Japanese worker can produce only 1
ton of food per month
…
The principle of comparative advantage says
· each good should be produced by the
country
· having the smaller opportunity cost
of producing that good
Japan has a comparative advantage in
producing cars
· the opportunity cost of making 1 car
is 3 tons of food in the U.S.
· the opportunity cost of making 1 car
is 1 ton of food in Japan
…
Therefore, Japan should
· produce more cars than it wants for
its own use
· export more cars to the U.S.
· import more food from the U.S.
The United States should
· produce more food than it wants for
its own consumption
· export more food to Japan
· import more cars from Japan
…
By not making any cars the U.S. can
produce 3 more tons of food for a total of 6 tons.
By not producing any food Japan can
make one more car for a total of 2 cars.
In this example, with specialization
based on comparative advantage total production increases:
· from 2 cars and 4 tons of food
· to 2 cars and 6 tons of food
Then the surplus of food and cars can
be traded between the U.S. and Japan.
…
Through specialization and trade both the
U.S. and Japan can have more food and more cars.
The key point in all trade, from between
individuals to global:
· most important is comparative
advantage, being able to do one thing better than another thing
· not absolute advantage, being able to
do everything better
…
International trade can make some
individuals worse off, even as it makes the country as a whole better off.
When the U.S. exports food and imports cars
· American farmers gain employment
· American autoworkers lose employment
Overall, total production increases and
job creation is greater than job destruction.
In the long run both trade between
individuals and trade between countries allow all people and countries to
increase total production and wealth and achieve greater prosperity.
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