Absolute & Comparative Advantage (HL IB Economics)

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Steve Vorster

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Economics & Business Subject Lead

Absolute & Comparative Advantage

  • International trade decreases prices and increases the variety of goods/services available to a nation

    • This results in a higher standard of living

  • Comparative advantage is the theory developed by David Ricardo in 1817 which states that a country should specialise in the goods/services that it can produce at the lowest opportunity cost

    • By specialising, the volume of production increases

    • Excess production can be exported

    • Goods/services which are not produced in the country can be imported

  • Absolute advantage occurs when a country is able to produce a product using fewer factors of production than another country

    • A country may well have absolute advantage but still not have comparative advantage

      • It should produce goods/services in which it has comparative advantage 

The Sources of Comparative Advantage

  • The sources of comparative advantage can vary from country to country, but some common factors include

SOurces of comparative advantage include access to cheap labour, abundant natural resources, government support etc

Common sources of comparative advantage
 

Natural Resources

  • Countries with abundant natural resources, such as minerals, energy sources, fertile land, or water bodies, may have a comparative advantage in industries that utilise these resources

    • E.g. The Ukraine has very fertile farm field and a climate conducive to growing grain
       

Labor Force

  • The quality, skills, and cost of labor can be a significant source of comparative advantage

    • Countries with a skilled workforce in specific industries, such as technology, engineering, or manufacturing, may have a competitive edge in those sectors

    • Countries with lower labor costs may have a comparative advantage in labor-intensive industries
       

Technology

  • Access to advanced technology, innovation, and research capabilities can create a comparative advantage
     

Capital and Infrastructure

  • The availability and quality of capital and infrastructure, such as transportation networks, communication systems, and reliable utilities, can contribute to a comparative advantage

    • Well-developed infrastructure facilitates efficient production, distribution, and connectivity, giving countries an edge in international trade
       

Economies of Scale

  • Companies or countries that can achieve economies of scale in production have a comparative advantage

    • Spreading fixed costs over a larger output, reduces per-unit costs and allows firms to offer competitive prices in the global market
       

Government Policies and Support

  • Government policies, such as trade agreements, subsidies, tax incentives, and intellectual property protections, can influence a country's comparative advantage

    • Strategic government support can help industries develop and compete in the global market

Using PPC to Illustrate the Gains from Trade

  • Production possibility frontiers can be used to illustrate these concepts and the gains from international trade
      

4-1-2-specialisation--trade

The production possibility frontiers for 2 countries who both produce t-shirts & computer chips

Diagram Analysis

  • Country A has an absolute advantage as it can produce more of both products

  • Country A can produce either 200,000 t-shirts or 100,000 computer chips

    • To produce 100,000 computer chips, it gives up production of 200,000 t-shirts

    • The opportunity cost of producing 1 computer chip is begin mathsize 14px style fraction numerator straight t minus shirts over denominator computer space chips end fraction space equals space fraction numerator 200 comma 000 over denominator 100 comma 000 end fraction space equals space end style2 t-shirts 

    • The opportunity cost of producing 1 t-shirt is begin mathsize 14px style fraction numerator computer space chips over denominator straight t minus shirts end fraction space equals space fraction numerator 100 comma 000 over denominator 200 comma 000 end fraction space equals space end style0.5 computer chip

  • Country B can produce either 80,000 t-shirts or 80,000 computer chips

    • To produce 80,000 computer chips it gives up production of 80,000 t-shirts

    • The opportunity cost of producing 1 computer chip is begin mathsize 14px style fraction numerator straight t minus shirts over denominator computer space chips end fraction space equals space fraction numerator 80 comma 000 over denominator 80 comma 000 end fraction space equals space end style1 t-shirts 

  • The opportunity cost of producing 1 t-shirt is fraction numerator computer space chips over denominator straight t minus shirts end fraction space equals space fraction numerator 80 comma 000 over denominator 80 comma 000 end fraction space equals space1 computer chip

  • To produce 1 computer chip Country A gives up 2 t-shirts and Country B gives up 1 t-shirt

    • Country B has a comparative advantage in producing computer chips as it is giving up fewer t-shirts and so it should specialise in computer chip production

  • To produce 1 t-shirt Country A gives up 0.5 computer chips and Country B gives up 1 computer chip

    • Country A has a comparative advantage in producing t-shirts as it is giving up fewer computer chips and so it should specialise in t-shirt production
       

The Gains from Trade

  • By specialising, the volume of production increases

  • Excess production can be exported (Country A exports T-shirts and Country B exports computer chips)

  • Goods/services which are not produced in the country can be imported (Country A imports computer chips and Country B imports T-shirts)

Worked Example

Using information from the table below, explain which country should specialise in producing T-shirts and which country should specialise in producing computer chips [2]

 

T-Shirts

Computer Chips

Country A

200,000

100,000

Country B

80,000

80,000


Answer:

Method A

Step1: Cross Multiply and identify highest output

80,000 x 100,000 = 8,000,000

200,000 x 80,000 = 16,000,000 [1 mark]
 

Step 2: Using highest output, state who has comparative advantage

Country A should specialise in producing T-shirts (200,000)

Country B should specialise in producing computer chips (80,000)

Worked Example

Using information from the table below, calculate which country should specialise in producing T-shirts and which country should specialise in producing computer chips [3]

 

T-Shirts

Computer Chips

Country A

200,000

100,000

Country B

80,000

80,000


Answer:

Method B

Step 1: Calculate the opportunity costs for Country A

  • The opportunity cost of producing 1 computer chip is begin mathsize 14px style fraction numerator straight t minus shirts over denominator computer space chips end fraction space equals space fraction numerator 200 comma 000 over denominator 100 comma 000 end fraction space equals space end style2 t-shirts 
     

  • The opportunity cost of producing 1 t-shirt is begin mathsize 14px style fraction numerator computer space chips over denominator straight t minus shirts end fraction space equals space fraction numerator 100 comma 000 over denominator 200 comma 000 end fraction space equals space end style0.5 computer chip 
     

Step 2: Calculate the opportunity costs for Country B

  • The opportunity cost of producing 1 computer chip is begin mathsize 14px style fraction numerator straight t minus shirts over denominator computer space chips end fraction space equals space fraction numerator 80 comma 000 over denominator 80 comma 000 end fraction space equals space end style1 t-shirts  

  • The opportunity cost of producing 1 t-shirt is fraction numerator computer space chips over denominator straight t minus shirts end fraction space equals space fraction numerator 80 comma 000 over denominator 80 comma 000 end fraction space equals space1 computer chip

     

Step 3: State who has comparative advantage in each product

  • Country B has a comparative advantage in producing computer chips as it is giving up fewer t-shirts (1 as opposed to 2) and so it should specialise in computer chip production

  • Country A has a comparative advantage in producing t-shirts as it is giving up fewer computer chips (0.5 as opposed to 1) and so it should specialise in t-shirt production

[2 marks for any correct working and 1 mark for the correct answer] 

Limitations to the Theory of Comparative Advantage

  • Comparative advantage does drives a nation's manufacturing in a global economy, but the theory has several limitations

The Limitations of Comparative Advantage Theory


Limitation


Explanation

Over-dependence

  • Specialisation creates a dependence on other countries which generates vulnerability e.g. receiving gas supplies from Russia works well when relations are good but has proven otherwise in an unexpected time of war. There has been an over-dependence on Russian gas

Environmental Damage

  • The impact of negative externalities of production is not considered by the theory & these can significantly worsen the quality of life in towns, cities & countries

Distribution of Income

  • The GDP/capita is likely to increase, however the distribution of the extra income is likely to be uneven with the wealthier sections of the population gaining more

Structural Unemployment

  • Although there should be a net increase in employment, as countries specialise certain industries are likely to shut down resulting in unemployment for some workers. These workers may not be able to move into other occupations & if so the number of long-term unemployed will rise

Flawed Assumptions

  •  As with any economic model, there are underlying assumptions to the theory of comparative advantage

  1. Transport costs are zero: it does not account for moving the goods/services between countries. Depending on a nation's location this is more or less of a problem

  2. There is perfect knowledge: each country knows what it has a comparative advantage in and also the comparative advantages of other countries - this is not always true

  3. Factor substitution is easily achieved: economies can quickly adjust to changing global market conditions by switching from capital to labour - and vice versa. This is idealistic

  4. Constant costs of production: the theory does not take into account the economies of scale that can be achieved with an increase in output

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Steve Vorster

Author: Steve Vorster

Steve has taught A Level, GCSE, IGCSE Business and Economics - as well as IBDP Economics and Business Management. He is an IBDP Examiner and IGCSE textbook author. His students regularly achieve 90-100% in their final exams. Steve has been the Assistant Head of Sixth Form for a school in Devon, and Head of Economics at the world's largest International school in Singapore. He loves to create resources which speed up student learning and are easily accessible by all.