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International Trade Law

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ALIGARH MUSLIM UNIVERSITY

ALIGARH
(2019-20)

GCT-I ASSIGNMENT ON INTERNATIONAL TRADE


LAW

“Absolute advantage theory:


paradigm of mercantilism”

Submitted To:- Submitted By:-


Dr. Gaurav Varshney Sir Abhay Jadaun
B.A.LL.B VIII Semester
16 BALLB 101
Enrol No.:- GJ6026
CONTENTS
➢ Absolute Advantage: Meaning & Theory
➢ Principle of Absolute Advantage
➢ Assumptions Underlying the Theory of Absolute Advantage
➢ Compilation & Limitation
➢ Conclusion
➢ Bibliography
Absolute Advantage: Meaning & Theory
A country is said to have an absolute advantage over another country in the production of a
good or service if it can produce that good or service (the ‘‘output’’) using fewer real resources
(like capital or labour, the ‘‘inputs’’). Equivalently, using the same inputs, the country can
produce more output. The concept of absolute advantage can also be applied to other economic
entities, such as regions, cities, or firms, but we will focus attention on countries, specifically
in relation to their production decisions and international trade flows. The fallacy of equating
absolute advantages with cost advantages is a never-ending source of confusion. Deviations
between the two are caused by the fact that real resources may receive different remunerations
in different countries.
In reaction to the mercantilist literature of the 17th century (which advocated state regulation
of trade to promote wealth and growth), a doctrine of free trade emerged at the end of the 18th
century, culminating in 1776 in Adam Smith’s masterpiece, An Inquiry into the Nature and
Causes of the Wealth of Nations. Drawing on the work of others, Smith was able to put many
different arguments and elements together in a coherent and systematic framework, organized
using a few general principles, and thus providing a new way of thinking about political
economy (Irwin 1996). Smith thus provided the first analysis of economic reasons for
advocating a policy of free trade and, according to Joseph A. Schumpeter (1954, 374), ‘‘seems
to have believed that under free trade all goods would be produced where their absolute costs
in terms of labour are lowest.’’
Smith’s arguments can be summarized as follows. First, he points out that regulations favouring
one industry draw away real resources from another industry, where they might have been more
advantageously employed (opportunity costs). Second, he applies the opportunity cost
principle to individuals in a society—for example, by pointing out that the tailor does not make
his own shoes (which would cost hima lot of time) but buys them from the shoemaker (who
can produce them more efficiently). Each individual is therefore specializing in the production
of those goods and services in which he or she has some advantage. Third, Smith applies the
same principles of opportunity costs and specialization to international commercial policy and
nations. It is better to import goods from abroad where they can be produced more efficiently,
because this allows the importing country to focus production on the goods it can itself produce
efficiently. The primary (classical) reason for international trade flows is therefore a difference
of technology between exporter and importer.1

Principle of Absolute Advantage


Principle of absolute advantage, suppose that there are two countries (the United States and
Japan) producing two goods (food and cars), using labour as the only input. Assume that goods
can be traded without costs and workers are immobile between the two countries, but mobile

1
Tim Josling, Absolute Advantage, available at: http://assets.press.princeton.edu/chapters/s8736.pdf (last
visited on May 05, 2020)
between the two sectors within a country. All workers in a country are equally productive.
Production technology in Japan differs from that in the United States. We assume that Japan
requires three units of labour to produce one unit of food, whereas the United States requires
only two units of labour. Similarly, Japan needs six units of labour to produce one car, whereas
the United States needs eight units of labour. Since Japan is more efficient in the production of
cars and the United States is more efficient in the production of food, Japan has an absolute
advantage in the production of cars and the United States has an absolute advantage in the
production of food.2
To show that specialization of production, coupled with international trade flows according to
absolute advantage, can be advantageous, in our example suppose that the United States
produces one car less. This frees up eight units of labour, which can now be used to produce
8/2¼4 units of food (opportunity cost of car production in the United States). The United States
has now produced one car less and four units of food more. Suppose that the United States
wants to consume the same number of cars as before. It must then import one car from Japan.
To produce this car Japan needs six units of labour. These laborers must come from the food
sector, where production therefore drops by 6/3¼2 units of food (opportunity costs of car
production in Japan). Now note that the total production of cars has been unchanged (one
carless in the United States and one car more in Japan), while the total production of food has
increased by two units (four units more in the United States and two units less in Japan). These
extra units of food reflect the potential gains from specialization if both countries concentrate
in the production of the good they produce most efficiently. In principle, both countries can
gain: for example, if they exchange three units of food for one car.3

Assumptions Underlying the Theory of Absolute


Advantage

Mobility of Factors of Production

Trade Barriers

Trade Balance

Constant Returns to Scale

2
http://internationalecon.com/Trade/Tch40/T40-0.php (last visited on May 05, 2020)
3
Project Gutentberg, "An Inquiry into the Nature and Causes of the Wealth of Nations.”, available at:
http://www.gutenberg.org/files/3300/3300-h/3300-h.htm#chap04 (last visited on May 05, 2020)
The idea of absolute advantage rests on a number of assumptions on the part of Adam Smith.
While influential and insightful, the theory of absolute advantage is not always entirely
accurate because many of these fundamental assumptions are in fact not true in practice. Here
are the most significant of these assumptions:4

1. Lack of Mobility for Factors of Production

Adam Smith assumes that factors of production cannot move between countries. This
assumption also implies that the Production Possibility Frontier of each country will not
change after the trade.

2. Trade Barriers

There are no barriers to trade for the exchange of goods. Governments implement trade barriers
to restrict or discourage the importation or exportation of a particular good.

3. Trade Balance

Smith assumes that exports must be equal to imports. This assumption means that we cannot
have trade imbalances, trade deficits, or surpluses. A trade imbalance occurs when exports are
higher than imports or vice versa.

4. Constant Returns to Scale

Adam Smith assumes that we will get constant returns as production scales, meaning there are
no economies of scale. For example, if it takes 2 hours to make one loaf of bread in country A,
then it should take 4 hours to produce two loaves of bread. Consequently, it would take 8 hours
to produce four loaves of bread.
However, if there were economies of scale, then it would become cheaper for countries to keep
producing the same good as it produced more of the same good.

Complications and Limitations


There are several caveats to the foregoing analysis, some of which we discuss now.
Absence of absolute advantage: The example discusses a situation where one country has an
absolute advantage in the production of one good and the other country in the production of
another good. It is frequently argued that developing countries may lack the technology to gain
an absolute advantage in the production of any good, such that they cannot possibly compete
on the global market and benefit from free trade(in table 1, for example, if the United States
needs four laborers to produce one unit of food). This conclusion is wrong, however, according

4
https://www.intelligenteconomist.com/absolute-advantage/ (last visited on May 05, 2020)
to David Ricardo’s model of comparative advantage (which emphasizes labour as the primary
production factor and attributes the costs and benefits of trade to the differences in opportunity
costs among countries), since technologically disadvantaged countries can compete on the
global market by paying lower wages. It turns out that absolute advantage is neither a necessary
nor a sufficient condition for exporting a certain good and gaining from international trade.5
More factors of production: In reality, goods are produced using several factors of production
simultaneously, such as capital, land, and various types of labour. Usually, goods then cannot
be ranked according to absolute advantage as their production in one country requires more of
one input and simultaneously less of another input than in another country. These issues are
analysed in the Heckscher Ohlin (factor abundance) theory of international trade.
Intra- versus interindustry trade: The example discusses interindustry trade, which is the
exchange of one type of good (cars) for another type of good (food). Many countries engage in
intra industry trade, the exchange of similar types of goods (e.g., simultaneously exporting and
importing car parts). This type of trade is becoming ever more important. It can be based on
market power and economies of scale, as analysed in New Trade Theory.6

Conclusion
A country has an absolute advantage in producing a good over another country if it uses fewer
resources to produce that good. Absolute advantage can be the result of a country’s natural
endowment. For example, extracting oil in Saudi Arabia is pretty much just a matter of “drilling
a hole.” Producing oil in other countries can require considerable exploration and costly
technologies for drilling and extraction—if indeed they have any oil at all. The United States
has some of the richest farmland in the world, making it easier to grow corn and wheat than in
many other countries. Guatemala and Colombia have climates especially suited for growing
coffee. Chile and Zambia have some of the world’s richest copper mines. As some have argued,
“geography is destiny.” Chile will provide copper and Guatemala will produce coffee, and they
will trade. When each country has a product others need and it can be produced with fewer
resources in one country over another, then it is easy to imagine all parties benefitting from
trade. However, thinking about trade just in terms of geography and absolute advantage is
incomplete. Trade really occurs because of comparative advantage. A country has an absolute
advantage in those products in which it has a productivity edge over other countries; it takes
fewer resources to produce a product. A country has a comparative advantage when a good can
be produced at a lower cost in terms of other goods. Countries that specialize based on
comparative advantage gain from trade.

5
David Ricardo, "On the Principles of Political Economy, and Taxation”, available at:
https://www.google.com/books/edition/On_the_Principles_of_Political_Economy_a/wjBjAAAAMAAJ?hl=en&
gbpv=0 (last visited on May 05, 2020)
6
https://www.investopedia.com/ask/answers/033115/what-difference-between-comparative-advantage-and-
absolute-advantage.asp (last visited on May 05, 2020)
Bibliography
• Articles:-
“Absolute Advantage” by Tim Josling
"An Inquiry into the Nature and Causes of the Wealth of Nations” by Project
Gutenberg
"On the Principles of Political Economy, and Taxation” by David Ricardo

• Websites:-
http://assets.press.princeton.edu
http://internationalecon.com
www.gutenberg.org
www.intelligenteconomist.com
www.investopedia.com
https://opentextbc.ca/

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