Economics HL
Economics HL
4
Chapters
117
Notes
Unit 1 - Intro To Econ & Core Concepts
Unit 1 - Intro To Econ & Core Concepts
Unit 2 - Microeconomics
Unit 2 - Microeconomics
Unit 3 - Macroeconomics
Unit 3 - Macroeconomics
Unit 4 - The Global Economy
Unit 4 - The Global Economy
IB Resources
Unit 4 - The Global Economy
Economics HL
Economics HL

Unit 4 - The Global Economy

Unlocking Trade Secrets: Absolute vs. Comparative Advantage

Word Count Emoji
563 words
Reading Time Emoji
3 mins read
Updated at Emoji
Last edited onย 5th Nov 2024

Table of content

Absolute & comparative advantage

๐ŸŽ๐ŸŒ Meet Red and Green! Two countries, each making two goods, apples and bananas. But how do they decide who makes what?

 

Absolute Advantage: "I'm The Best At This!"

 

Absolute Advantage is the superhero power that allows a country to produce more of a good with the same resources, or using fewer resources to make the same amount. Like a baker who can whip up 30 pies in the time it takes another to bake 10!

  • Red's Superpower: They can make 30 apples but only 10 bananas.
  • Green's Superpower: They can make 10 apples but 20 bananas.

๐ŸŽ‰ Trading Time! Red specializes in apples, Green in bananas, and they trade! Red's apples go to Green's fruit salad, Green's bananas go to Red's smoothie bar.

But wait! What if Green is the superhero in both? According to Adam Smith, no trade is needed. That's like Usain Bolt racing himself - no competition!

Comparative Advantage: "I'm Relatively Better At This!"

 

Comparative Advantage says, "Hold on, we can still trade even if one is the superhero in both!" It's all about the opportunity cost - what you give up to make something.

  • Red's Opportunity Cost: Sacrifices 1 apple to make 1 banana, so they'll sell bananas if they get more than 1 apple.
  • Green's Opportunity Cost: Sacrifices 2/3 of an apple to make 1 banana, so they'll sell bananas if they get more than 2/3 of an apple.

Sweet Deal! They agree to trade 1 apple for 1 banana. They now consume more and enjoy tasty combinations, living outside their Production Possibility Curves (PPCs). High five! ๐Ÿ™Œ

Sources of comparative advantage

These advantages come from

  • Factor Endowments: Natural, human, physical capital differences (like a tropical island having more sunshine for growing pineapples).
  • Technology: Innovations leading to higher productivity.
  • Exchange Rate & Inflation: Currency strength and price changes affecting trade.
  • Export Subsidies & Non-Price Factors: Governments supporting industries or good reputation abroad.

Limitations of the model

Like trying to put a square peg in a round hole, these models don't fit all situations

  • Goods aren't always identical: German cars vs Italian scooters - different!
  • Opportunity Costs aren't constant: Producing more might reduce costs.
  • Factors aren't always mobile: A coal miner can't instantly become a software engineer.
  • Transportation Costs & Trade Barriers exist: Shipping isn't always free, and governments may limit trade

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IB Resources
Unit 4 - The Global Economy
Economics HL
Economics HL

Unit 4 - The Global Economy

Unlocking Trade Secrets: Absolute vs. Comparative Advantage

Word Count Emoji
563 words
Reading Time Emoji
3 mins read
Updated at Emoji
Last edited onย 5th Nov 2024

Table of content

Absolute & comparative advantage

๐ŸŽ๐ŸŒ Meet Red and Green! Two countries, each making two goods, apples and bananas. But how do they decide who makes what?

 

Absolute Advantage: "I'm The Best At This!"

 

Absolute Advantage is the superhero power that allows a country to produce more of a good with the same resources, or using fewer resources to make the same amount. Like a baker who can whip up 30 pies in the time it takes another to bake 10!

  • Red's Superpower: They can make 30 apples but only 10 bananas.
  • Green's Superpower: They can make 10 apples but 20 bananas.

๐ŸŽ‰ Trading Time! Red specializes in apples, Green in bananas, and they trade! Red's apples go to Green's fruit salad, Green's bananas go to Red's smoothie bar.

But wait! What if Green is the superhero in both? According to Adam Smith, no trade is needed. That's like Usain Bolt racing himself - no competition!

Comparative Advantage: "I'm Relatively Better At This!"

 

Comparative Advantage says, "Hold on, we can still trade even if one is the superhero in both!" It's all about the opportunity cost - what you give up to make something.

  • Red's Opportunity Cost: Sacrifices 1 apple to make 1 banana, so they'll sell bananas if they get more than 1 apple.
  • Green's Opportunity Cost: Sacrifices 2/3 of an apple to make 1 banana, so they'll sell bananas if they get more than 2/3 of an apple.

Sweet Deal! They agree to trade 1 apple for 1 banana. They now consume more and enjoy tasty combinations, living outside their Production Possibility Curves (PPCs). High five! ๐Ÿ™Œ

Sources of comparative advantage

These advantages come from

  • Factor Endowments: Natural, human, physical capital differences (like a tropical island having more sunshine for growing pineapples).
  • Technology: Innovations leading to higher productivity.
  • Exchange Rate & Inflation: Currency strength and price changes affecting trade.
  • Export Subsidies & Non-Price Factors: Governments supporting industries or good reputation abroad.

Limitations of the model

Like trying to put a square peg in a round hole, these models don't fit all situations

  • Goods aren't always identical: German cars vs Italian scooters - different!
  • Opportunity Costs aren't constant: Producing more might reduce costs.
  • Factors aren't always mobile: A coal miner can't instantly become a software engineer.
  • Transportation Costs & Trade Barriers exist: Shipping isn't always free, and governments may limit trade

Unlock the Full Content! File Is Locked Emoji

Dive deeper and gain exclusive access to premium files of Economics HL. Subscribe now and get closer to that 45 ๐ŸŒŸ