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Comparative Advantage and Absolute Advantage ______________________________________________________________________________________________ absolute advantage: A country, individual, or firm has an absolute advantage in producing a good if production of the good absorbs fewer resources (or less time, in the case of an individual) than are required in other countries or by other individuals or firms. comparative advantage: A comparative advantage in producing or selling a good is possessed by an individual or country if they experience the lowest opportunity cost in producing the good. ______________________________________________________________________________________________ Comparative AdvantageThe division of labor facilitates production of a given good, but how do individuals or groups determine which specific goods or services to produce? The maximum potential gains from trade tend to be realized if you specialize in that activity which you can do at the lowest cost relative to other people’s costs. In 1817, David Ricardo, an influential early economist, focused on international trade when he generalized this idea into an economic law. The law of comparative advantage: Mutually beneficial exchange is possible whenever relative production costs differ prior to trade. This law applies to all exchanges, whether between individuals or nations. Suppose
Brazilians can grow coffee more easily than they can catch salmon, while
Alaskans find it relatively easier to catch salmon than to grow coffee.
Alaskans have a comparative advantage in salmon fishing, and Brazilians, in
coffee production. Trading Alaskan salmon for Brazilian coffee clearly
benefits both groups. The table below shows how both parties to a trade can
gain whenever their opportunity costs differ. If Alaskans and Brazilians each
specialize in their areas of comparative advantage, and if 1 pound of salmon
trades for, say, 1 pound of coffee, then Alaskans can consume an extra 4
pounds of coffee daily while Brazilians can consume an additional 4 pounds of
salmon. Note that the Alaskan opportunity cost of producing 1 pound of coffee
is 5 pounds of salmon before trade, while each pound of coffee costs
Brazilians only 1/5 of a pound of salmon. |
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Before
Specialization |
Hours
Worked |
Production
and Consumption |
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Alaskan |
4 4 |
5 pounds of salmon 1 pound of coffee |
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Brazilian |
4 4 |
1 pound of salmon 5 pounds of coffee |
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After
Specialization |
Hours
Worked |
Production |
Consumption |
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Alaskan |
8 |
10 pounds of salmon |
5
pounds of salmon 5
pounds of coffee |
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Brazilian |
8 |
10 pounds of coffee |
5
pounds of coffee 5
pounds of salmon |
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Trade enables each Alaskan to consume an
additional 4 pounds of coffee per day, and each Brazilian to consume an extra
4 pounds of fish per day. Each group specializes in the form of production in
which it enjoys a comparative advantage, and Alaskans and Brazilians both
gain from trade. |
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A party has an absolute advantage if producing a good absorbs fewer resources than another party would require to produce the good. But what if Alaskans had
absolute advantages in everything–if they could do every task faster and
easier than Brazilians? You might think that Alaskans must lose if Brazilians
gain from trade but, surprisingly, both sides can gain. Suppose,
for example, that a lawyer whose fees run $250 an hour types twice as fast as
her secretary, whose wage is $12 hourly. She still gains by hiring the
secretary. Despite her absolute advantage in typing, the lawyer’s comparative
advantage lies in practicing law. Similarly, many professional athletes
probably have absolute advantages in lifting and carrying compared to most
furniture movers. Nevertheless, few pro athletes move their furniture when
traded between teams. Athletes and movers both gain by concentrating in their
own areas of comparative advantage. It is important to notice that,
in these last two examples, absolute advantages do not translate into
comparative advantages. Indeed, the lawyer’s absolute advantage in typing
still yields a comparative disadvantage in secretarial work, and,
although furniture movers have absolute disadvantages at both
athletics and furniture moving, their absolute disadvantage is relatively the
least in moving furniture, so this is an area of comparative advantage for
them. Roots of Comparative Advantage
Relative resource abundance
is often cited as driving comparative advantage. It seems natural for fertile
soil to yield advantages in agriculture, for vast oil reserves to give the The key to such riddles is that how
resources are combined is as crucial as the mix of resources available.
Comparative advantage is also molded by: (a) climate and location, (b)
institutional and cultural factors, (c) government policies, (d)
the skills and education of the populace, (e) the vigor of internal
competition and size of domestic markets, and (f) the ability of
domestic entrepreneurs to innovate and cultivate global markets. Comparative advantage is only
one of several potential sources of gains from trade. If you would like to
find out more about the ways trade can be beneficial, open this link to the
gains from trade. |
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________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Author: Ralph Byrns |
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Economics
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