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POLI 243 Lecture 8

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Lecture 8 - Feb. 4th, 2019
The Politics of Trade
James E. Alt and Michael Gilligan, “The Political Economy of Trading States” (1994); Helen V.
Milner, “The Political Economy of International Trade” (1999)

Reading Notes
Alt & Gilligan
- “Trading states” = states of trading societies
- What is required to understand the domestic consequences of a society’s “choosing to
trade”?
- “Can a state enhance aggregate welfare by intervening in a trading economy?”
- “What consequences would/should an increase in trade have for the design of state
institutions?
- Pareto: “A protectionist measure provides large benefits to a small number of people, and
causes a very great number of consumers a slight loss”
- Schattschneider (1930): “Benefits are concentrated while costs are distributed”
- ^^these are empirical observations, not general theoretical points
- Two problems of organizing/taking collective political action: “excludability”, and the
cost of organizing a group.
- Stolper-Samuelson​ or “mobile factors” approach
- Argued that a change (increase) in the price of the product “would ​more than
proportionally​ increase the return to the factor that is used intensively in the
production of that good.”
- Thus the real incomes of the owners “of that intensively-used factor will
unambiguously rise, giving them a stake in bringing about that change in prices.”
- If there are only 2 factors of production, the real incomes of owners of the less
used factor will fall.
- “Protection of an industry will raise the price of the good produced by that
industry.”
- The consequence is that “owners of the same factor have the same change to its
returns, ​regardless of whether it is actually employed in the protected industry​ or
in the unprotected industry” ← therefore the conflict is between the factors of
production
- Hecksher-Ohlin theorem: states that a country will export the good which
intensively uses whichever factor of production is relatively abundant in that
country.
- ^Combining this prediction with the Stolper-Samuelson theorem yields “the usual
conclusion that, other things being equal, in a relatively capital-abundant country

, labour​ will favour ​protection​ because it cannot be extensively used in exports,
while capital will favour relatively free trade.”
- Assumes that factors are mobile between sectors of the economy
- Ricardo-Viner​ or “specific factors” model
- Assumes that factors of production are “specific” to a particular industry, and
when that industry declines they “cannot move” to the rising industry.
- The effect on the real income of the mobile factor in the example is ambiguous;
depends on intensities of use and consumption patterns.

Lecture Notes

The Politics of Trade
- From International Relations to International Political Economy

The Logic Behind Trade
Why does trade take place?
- Classical notion of how markets work
Comparative Advantage
Definition​: “an actor’s ability to produce a good or service more efficiently than another actor’s
ability to do so”
- At least two actors are required in this concept
- Your ability to create the good depends on your efficiency during each step of the
production process.
- Comparative advantage + the ability to exchange = specialization. This creates more
goods for everyone to consume.
With exchange, the consequence is ​specialization

A Simple Example of Comparative Advantage

Ricardo​: imagine a set of 2 countries, each produces 2 goods.
In isolation, Country A can:
- If country A puts all their resources into the production of either textiles ​or​ wine, they
can:
Produce a maximum of either
Output of first good (​textiles​) 300 units
Output of second good (​wine​) 150 units

The price of goods in A prior to trade:
300​/​150​ or ​2​/​1​ (2 units of textiles = 1 unit of wine)
$5.49
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