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The Heckscher-Ohlin Model

The Heckscher-Ohlin Model. Udayan Roy http://myweb.liu.edu/~uroy/eco41. Basic assumptions. The Heckscher-Ohlin Assumptions—Basics. There are two countries, Home and Foreign two goods, Cloth and Food, and two resources, Labor and Capital these are used to produce Cloth and Food.

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The Heckscher-Ohlin Model

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  1. The Heckscher-Ohlin Model Udayan Roy http://myweb.liu.edu/~uroy/eco41

  2. Basic assumptions

  3. The Heckscher-Ohlin Assumptions—Basics • There are • two countries, Home and Foreign • two goods, Cloth and Food, and • two resources, Labor and Capital • these are used to produce Cloth and Food

  4. The Heckscher-Ohlin Assumptions—Preferences • The preferences of all consumers in the world are identical. • The preferences of any individual are such that the Marginal Rate of Substitution is independent of the scale of consumption. • The MRS of Wine for Cheese is the additional amount of Wine that would keep the individual's level of happiness unchanged even after the consumption of Cheese is reduced by one unit. Under this assumption, if the amounts of Cheese and Wine being consumed are, say, doubled, then the MRS remains unchanged. In other words, the MRS does not change if the ratio of the amounts of Cheese and Wine consumed, Cheese/ Wine, does not change.

  5. The Ricardian Assumptions—Preferences • The preferences of all consumers in the world are identical. • For any individual, the Marginal Rate of Substitution is independent of the scale of consumption. • An individual’s MRS of wine for cheese is the maximum amount of wine that he/she would be willing to pay for one unit of cheese. • Under this assumption, if the amounts of Cheese and Wine being consumed are, say, doubled, then the MRS remains unchanged. • In other words, the MRS does not change if the ratio of the amounts of Cheese and Wine consumed, Cheese/ Wine, does not change.

  6. Marginal Rate of Substitution

  7. The Heckscher-Ohlin Assumptions—Markets • All markets are perfectly competitive. • That is, no buyer or seller of a commodity has the power to affect the price of the commodity by himself. • More specifically, the market for a commodity is said to be perfectly competitive if: • There are many sellers • There are many buyers • All sellers sell the exact same product • Individuals make decisions so as to maximize happiness, whereas • Firms make decisions so as to maximize profits

  8. The Heckscher-Ohlin Assumptions—Governments • Governments do not interfere with the smooth functioning of markets • There are no taxes, subsidies, tariffs, quotas, etc. • However, although there is free trade in goods and services, there is no cross-border movement of resources, such as labor

  9. The Heckscher-Ohlin Assumptions—Technology • Technological knowledge is the same in both countries • Goods are produced (with capital and labor) using technologies that satisfy Constant Returns to Scale. • That is, if the producer of a commodity, say, doubles the amounts used of all resources, then the amount produced will have to double also.

  10. The Heckscher-Ohlin Assumptions—Factor Abundance • Home has a higher ratio of labor to capital than Foreign does. • That is, if KH, KF, LH, and LF denote the amounts of K (capital) and L (labor) that Home and Foreign are endowed with, then LH / KH> LF/ KF. • L/K may be informally interpreted as the number of workers per machine. • Home is said to be the “labor-abundant” country and Foreign is the “capital-abundant” country.

  11. The Heckscher-Ohlin Assumptions—Factor Intensities • The production of food is capital-intensive and the production of cloth is labor-intensive • That is, the number of workers per machine (L/K) is always higher in cloth production than in food production

  12. Prices of Goods • Let PC and PF denote the nominal prices of cloth and food. • Then, PC/PF is the relative price of cloth (in units of food) and • PF/PC is the relative price of food (in units of cloth) • See earlier lecture

  13. Prices of Factors • Let w be the nominal price (or, wage) of labor. • Let r be the nominal price (or, rent) of capital • Then w/r is the relative price of labor (in units of capital) and • r/w is the relative price of capital (in units of labor) • Example: If w = $10 per hour for one worker and r = $100 per hour for one machine, then the relative wage for one worker is 1/10 machines and the relative rent on a machine is 10 hours of labor.

  14. Nominal Prices • The nominal price of a commodity is simply the number of dollars (or any other relevant unit of account) that must be paid to buy one unit of the commodity • For example, the nominal price of labor—also called the nominal wage—may be $8 per hour

  15. Real Prices • The real price of commodity X, in units of commodity Y, is the amount of Y that costs the same as one unit of X • For example, if the nominal price of labor is $8 per hour and the nominal price of a cup of coffee is $2, then the real price of labor is 4 cups of coffee per hour • Real prices are also called relative prices

  16. Real and Nominal Prices • Real Price of X, in units of Y, is equal to Nominal Price of X / Nominal Price of Y • So, if w is the nominal wage and P is the nominal price of a cup of coffee, then the real wage is w / P. • For example, if w is $8 per hour and P is $2, then the real wage is w / P = 8/2 = 4 cups of coffee per hour, as in the previous slide.

  17. Relative price of cloth, PC/PF FPGP 17 Wage-rent ratio, w/r 5 Figure 5-6: Factor Prices and Goods Prices As labor becomes more expensive relative to capital, cloth, which is labor-intensive in production, finds itself at a disadvantage and becomes relatively more expensive compared to food As both Home and Foreign use the same technologies, the same FPGP curve is applicable in both countries

  18. Relative price of cloth, PC/PF FPGP 17 Wage-rent ratio, w/r 5 Figure 5-6: Factor Prices and Goods Prices Under free trade, the relative price of cloth will be the same in both countries Therefore, the wage-rent ratio will also be the same in the two countries

  19. Cloth production Wage-rent ratio, w/r Food production 5 Machines per worker, K/L 4 12 Figure 5-5: Factor Prices and Input Choices As labor becomes relatively more expensive, relatively more capitalis used in production… … of both food and cloth But the number of machines per worker is always higher in food production, reflecting the assumption that food production is capital intensive

  20. Cloth production Wage-rent ratio, w/r Food production 5 4 Machines per worker, K/L 12 Figure 5-5: Factor Prices and Input Choices As both Home and Foreign use the same technologies, these two curves must be true in both countries. As free trade equalizes the wage-rent ratio worldwide, machines per worker in cloth production must be the same worldwide. Same must be true for food production. Therefore, Foreign, which has more machines per worker than Home, must produce relatively more food …

  21. RSFOREIGN Relative price of cloth, PC/PF RSHOME 17 Yards of cloth produced per calorie of food produced, QC/QF Figure 5-9: Relative Supplies In Figure 5-5, we saw that at w/r = 5, Foreign must produce relatively more food and Home must produce relatively more cloth. In Figure 5-6 we saw that w/r =5 corresponds to PC/PF = 17. Therefore, Home must produce relatively more cloth at PC/PF = 17, or indeed at any other relative price. As cloth becomes more expensive relative to food, the output of cloth will increase relative to food. Therefore, the relative supply curves slope upward.

  22. Relative price of cloth, PC/PF 17 3 Yards of cloth consumed per calorie of food consumed, QC/QF Figure 5-9: Relative Demand The H-O assumptions about preferences imply that that consumer behavior can be summarized by this Relative Demand curve and that the same curve is true in both Home and Foreign In this figure, when the price of a yard of cloth is 17 times the price of a calorie of food, the number of yards of cloth consumed is 3 times the number of calories of food consumed, for every individual worldwide. Why isn’t the latter ratio different for different people?

  23. Relative Demands • Let’s say that Alex consumes 3 times as many yards of cloth as calories of food (relative demand is QC/QF = 3) when a yard of cloth is 17 times as expensive as a calorie of food (relative price PC/PF = 17) • If Alex’s income changes, his relative demand should not change because MRS is independent of the scale of consumption

  24. Relative Demands • Since identical preferences have been assumed, if the relative price of cloth is PC/PF = 17, then Betty’s relative demand must also be QC/QF = 3 irrespective of Betty’s income • Therefore, the same relative demand curve represents everybody • Therefore, the same relative demand curve represents both Home and Foreign

  25. RSFOREIGN Relative price of cloth, PC/PF RSHOME Foreign Home RD Yards of cloth produced per calorie of food produced, QC/QF Figure 5-9: Relative Supplies and Demands • The relative supplies and demands can be combined to find the autarky relative prices in Home and Foreign • Clearly, they are different • Therefore, trade will occur if it is allowed • Since Home and Foreign differ only in their relative factor endowments, that difference must be the reason why trade occurs

  26. Who will export what? PC/PF • In autarky, the labor-intensive good is relatively cheaper in the labor-abundant country • Therefore, under free trade, the labor-intensive good is exported by the labor-abundant country… • … and the capital-intensive good is exported by the capital-abundant country Foreign autarky Free Trade Home Foreign : capital abundant, labor scarceHome: capital scarce, labor abundant Cloth: labor intensive productionFood: capital intensive production

  27. The Heckscher-Ohlin Theorem • To repeat, when trade occurs, the labor-abundant country (Home) exports the labor-intensive good (cloth) and • The capital-abundant country (Foreign) exports the capital-intensive good (food) • In general, each country exports the good that makes intensive use of the resource that is abundant in that country • This is called the Heckscher-Ohlin Theorem • See the section “Relative Prices and the Pattern of Trade” in Chapter 5 of the textbook

  28. Goods Prices: from autarky to free trade PC/PF • In autarky, the labor-intensive good is relatively cheaper in the labor-abundant country • Free trade makes relative prices equal everywhere • Therefore, the labor-intensive good becomes more expensive in the labor-abundant country, and less expensive in the labor-scarce country. Foreign autarky Free Trade Home Foreign : capital abundant, labor scarceHome: capital scarce, labor abundant Cloth: labor intensive productionFood: capital intensive production

  29. Relative price of cloth, PC/PF FPGP Foreign Free Trade Home Wage-rent ratio, w/r Home Foreign Free Trade Figure 5-6: Factor Prices and Goods Prices Fig. 5-9 showed that, in autarky, the relative price of cloth is higher in Foreign Therefore, in autarky, the wage-rent ratio must also be higher in Foreign Free trade makes the wage-rent ratio the same in the two countries

  30. Factor Prices: from autarky to free trade w/r PC/PF • In autarky, the wage-rent ratio is higher in the labor-scarce country and lower in the labor-abundant country • When autarky ends and free trade begins, the wage-rent ratio falls in the labor-scarce country and rises in the labor abundant country Foreign autarky Free Trade Home Foreign : capital abundant, labor scarceHome: capital scarce, labor abundant Cloth: labor intensive productionFood: capital intensive production

  31. Who gains and who loses from globalization?

  32. Real Wage and Real Rent

  33. Marginal Product of a Resource • The Marginal Product(MP) of labor in cloth production is the additional amount of cloth that would be produced if an additional unit of labor is employed • We can similarly define • Marginal Product of labor in food production, • Marginal Product of capital in cloth production, and • Marginal Product of capital in food production

  34. Marginal Product of a Resource • See the Appendix to Chapter 4 of the textbook for more on the Marginal Product.

  35. Example: Level of Resource Use • Suppose an additional worker produces an additional 5 yards of cloth in one hour’s work. Then MP = 5. • Therefore, to make one additional yard of cloth, you need only 1/5 of a worker. • In general, the labor needed to make one unit of cloth can be calculated as 1/MP • Marginal Cost is the additional cost of an additional unit of output • Therefore, MC = w × (1/MP) = w/MP

  36. Price = Marginal Cost • If P > MC at the current level of production, additional production would increase profit • If P < MC at the current level of production, reduced production would increase profit • Therefore, profit is maximized only if P = MC • Therefore, if a good is being produced, P = MC must be true

  37. Real Wage and Real Rent • Therefore, P = MC = w / MP • Therefore, w/P = MP • This implies that the real wage in units of, say, cloth is the Marginal Product of labor in the production of cloth • Similarly, the real rent in units of food is the Marginal Product of capital in food production

  38. Real Factor Rewards and Productivity • In general, the real payment to a resource is equal to its productivity (or, marginal product) • This is the main conclusion of the Marginal Productivity Theory of Income Distribution

  39. Cloth production Wage-rent ratio, w/r Food production Machines per worker, K/L Factor Use and Factor Productivity—Labor-Abundant Country • We saw earlier that when autarky ends and free trade begins w/r rises in the labor-abundant country (Home). Therefore, • More capital is used per worker • in cloth production and in food production • This makes labor more productive… • …and capital less productive • Therefore, • w/PC and w/PF both increase, and • r/PC and r/PF both decrease. • Abundant resource benefits from globalization • Scarce resource loses Foreign Free trade Home Foreign : capital abundant, labor scarceHome: capital scarce, labor abundant Cloth: labor intensive productionFood: capital intensive production

  40. Cloth production Wage-rent ratio, w/r Food production Machines per worker, K/L Factor Use and Factor Productivity—Capital-Abundant Country • When autarky ends and free trade begins w/r falls in the capital-abundant country (Foreign). Therefore, • Less capital is used per worker • in cloth production and in food production • This makes labor less productive… • …and land more productive • Therefore, • w/PC and w/PF both decrease, and • r/PC and r/PF both increase. • Abundant resource benefits from globalization • Scarce resource loses Foreign Free trade Home Foreign : capital abundant, labor scarceHome: capital scarce, labor abundant Cloth: labor intensive productionFood: capital intensive production

  41. Trade: Who Gains and Who Loses? • In short, each country’s abundant resource benefits from trade and • Each country’s scarce resource loses from trade

  42. Cloth production Wage-rent ratio, w/r Food production Machines per worker, K/L Factor Price Equalization • Free trade equalizes the wage-rent ratio • Therefore, the capital-per-worker ratio in cloth production is also equalized • This equalizes the productivity of labor in cloth production in the two countries • This equalizes w/PC in the two countries • In a similar way, w/PF, r/PC, and r/PF each become equalized worldwide Foreign, autarky Free trade Home, autarky Foreign : capital abundant, labor scarceHome: capital scarce, labor abundant Cloth: labor intensive productionFood: capital intensive production

  43. Factor Price Equalization w/r r/PC PC/PF (K/L)F w/PC r/PF (K/L)C w/PF Australia high high high low high high low high autarky Free Trade Belgium low low low high high low low low autarky Australia: capital abundant, labor scarceBelgium: capital scarce, labor abundant Cloth: labor intensive productionFood: capital intensive production

  44. Factor Price Equalization Theorem • The Factor Price Equalization Theorem: When there is free trade in goods, the real reward for any resource (in units of either good) becomes the same in both countries! • An implication of this result is that if there is free trade in goods, resources will have no incentive to move from one country to another

  45. Factor Price Equalization Theorem • Heckscher-Ohlin theory implies FPE. • But does FPE imply that free trade will make everybody equally rich? • Certainly not! • Not every individual is endowed with the same amount of resources

  46. How accurate is the Heckscher-Ohlin theory? • Sadly, it’s not very accurate by itself • It explains North-South trade quite well… • But not trade within the North • But, if modified to take cross-country differences in technology into account, it fits the data well • So, a theory that combines the insights of Ricardo and Heckscher-Ohlin might be best

  47. The contribution of Heckscher-Ohlin theory • The theory’s main contribution is to point out that cross-country differences in relative resource availability can explain trade • It does not claim that differences in relative resource availability are the only reason why trade occurs

  48. We’re Done! • Any questions or comments?

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