580 likes | 618 Vues
4. The Global Economy. Chapter Objectives. Outline advantages and disadvantages related to globalization. Explain why countries specialize and how this leads to international trade. Analyze the effect of multinational companies on the global economy.
E N D
4 The Global Economy
Chapter Objectives • Outline advantages and disadvantages related to globalization. • Explain why countries specialize and how this leads to international trade. • Analyze the effect of multinational companies on the global economy. • Describe the relationship between currency strength and the balance of trade. continued
Chapter Objectives • Cite examples to show how international trade affects the overall economy, businesses, workers, and consumers. • Describe what you can do to develop the skills needed to succeed in a global economy.
Flow of Goods and Services • Globalization—the process of becoming worldwide in scope continued
Flow of Goods and Services • Economic globalization is changing the way people communicate, shop, and conduct business • Understanding economic globalization will help you hold your own in the job market and in the marketplace continued
Flow of Goods and Services • International trade has existed for thousands of years • Most trade today occurs between businesses in different countries; not between individuals or nations • Trade is discussed in terms of imports and exports
What Is Traded • Finished products such as • food • furniture • toys • computers • Intermediate goods used to produce other goods such as • car parts • semiconductors for computers continued
What Is Traded • Services such as • banking • transportation • insurance • law • telecommunications • entertainment continued
What Is Traded • Investments such as • money and capital invested by businesses into building factories in other countries • salaries and wages paid by businesses to workers in foreign countries • purchase of securities, real estate, and other investments in other countries
Why Trades Occur • Each party in a trade benefits from the transaction • No country can produce all the goods and services that its people and businesses want • Countries specialize in particular goods and services and trade for what they cannot produce
Natural Resources, Climate, and Geography • These factors determine what a country can and cannot produce • Saudi Arabia produces oil • Countries with tropical climates can produce rubber, bananas, and things that only grow in that climate
Available Human Resources • Available human resources determine what a country can and cannot produce continued
Available Human Resources • Labor-intensive industries locate where labor costs are low • Industries requiring educated workers locate in countries with high literacy rates and systems of higher education
Consumer Preferences • Consumer preferences determine what a country produces • Some U.S. consumers like high-fashion clothing from European designers • Some U.S. consumers prefer foreign-made cars
Comparative Advantage • Comparative advantage explains why a country that can produce everything it needs still benefits from trade • Nations benefit when they specialize in activities for which their opportunity costs are lowest • By expanding into foreign markets, businesses can take advantage of economies of scale
U.S. Trade • The U.S. is world’s largest importer • Over 20 percent of world’s total output is from the U.S. • Millions of people around the world depend on the U.S. for their livelihoods continued
U.S. Trade • The U.S. • imports more manufactured goods than it exports • exports more services than it imports
Flow of Labor • Globalization has increased the flow of migrants • Migrants leave their homelands to • escape persecution, war, economic crisis, natural disasters, crime, corruption • seek better opportunities to work and earn a living wage
Impact of Multinationals • Much of globalization today is driven by multinational corporations • These are large companies, often comprised of many businesses • Subsidiary— a business controlled by another business
One Product, Many Origins • Parts and labor to make a product can come from many different countries • Outsourcing involves doing one or more aspects of a business in a different country continued
One Product, Many Origins • Offshore outsourcing occurs because businesses seek advantages in other countries • It benefits workers in other countries by creating new job opportunities • It hurts workers in the U.S. when jobs are moved elsewhere
Flows of Capital Investment • Flows of capital across borders is a major source of globalization today continued
Flows of Capital Investment • One-third of global trade is the movement of raw materials, goods, services, and product parts from one subsidiary of a multinational to another • International investment occurs when investors buy or sell the stocks and bonds of foreign companies
Collusion and Cartels • Some large multinational corporations dominate their industries and influence governments and global trade policies • A cartel exists when a group of countries or firms exert worldwide control over the production and pricing of a product or service
International Monetary System • When buyers and sellers using different currencies want to trade, they must determine the value of one currency in relation to the other • Different types of currency are bought and sold on the foreign exchange market
The Foreign Exchange Market • An exchange rate tells you how many units of one currency it takes to buy units of a foreign currency continued
The Foreign Exchange Market • The value of the U.S. dollar is set by buyers and sellers in the foreign exchange market through supply and demand continued
The Foreign Exchange Market • Factors that affect exchange rates: • Political and economic stability—stable countries draw foreign investors • Interest rates—higher interest rates draw foreign investors, raise demand for a currency • U.S. dollar is the international reserve currency
Buying and Selling U.S. Dollars • The foreign exchange market/rate affects you when you • travel to another country and must exchange dollars for foreign currency • buy goods and services made in other countries or by foreign companies • conduct business in another country
Trade and Exchange Rates • When the U.S. dollar is strong, • goods and services imported into the U.S. cost less • U.S. consumers get more for their dollars and buy more imports • foreign buyers get less for their money continued
Trade and Exchange Rates • When the U.S. dollar is weak, • goods and services imported into the U.S. cost more • U.S. consumers get less for their dollars and buy fewer imports • foreign buyers get more for their money
The U.S. Trade Deficit • Balance of trade is the difference between total imports and total exports; recorded in balance of payments • Trade deficit develops when a country buys or imports more than it sells • Trade surplus develops when a country sells or exports more than it buys continued
The U.S. Trade Deficit • The U.S. has run a substantial trade deficit since 1976 • The U.S. has the largest deficit and China has the largest trade surplus • Other countries accumulate U.S. dollars with which they buy more U.S. goods, services, and investments
Government’s Role in Global Trade • Governments regulate trade • Free trade is policy of limited government trade restrictions • Protectionism refers to government policies that restrict trade
Why Nations Favor Free Trade • Stimulates growth and raises productivity and living standards in free-trade countries • Allows countries to specialize in goods and services they produce most efficiently and trade for the rest • Gives consumers a greater selection of goods and services at lower prices continued
Why Nations Favor Free Trade • Generates innovation as a result of global competition and the exchange of ideas and technologies • Creates new investment opportunities • Promotes cooperation and peaceful relations among nations that are trading partners
Why Nations Favor Restricted Trade • To protect domestic industries and jobs from foreign competition • To reduce dependence on foreign imports • To control the export of products and technologies that can threaten national security • To address unfair trade practices of other countries that hurt domestic companies
How Governments Restrict Trade • Trade barriers include • tariffs on imports • import quotas • non-tariff barriers • embargos
Subsidies • A form of protectionism • Government gives payments, tax breaks, or other incentives to domestic businesses and industries • Subsidized goods can be offered at lower prices, giving them an advantage over imported goods
Currency Manipulation • When a currency is devalued, • exports become cheaper in world markets • exports and foreign investment increase and imports decrease • unfair competition is created
Trade Organizations and Agreements • Create economic opportunities for participating nations due to free trade and investment • Example: North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA) • U.S., Canada, Mexico continued
Trade Organizations and Agreements • European Union (EU) is a powerful organization of 27 countries • 15 EU countries share a common currency
World Trade Organization • The World Trade Organization is an international organization created in 1995 • Consists of 151 member nations • WTO’s mission is • to establish fair trade practices • to mediate trade disputes among member nations
Other Important Global Organizations • World Bank • International Monetary Fund (IMF) • G-20 • United Nations (UN)
In Your Opinion • How does globalization affect your life now? How will it affect you in the future?
Globalization and You, the Student • You already buy goods and services from other countries • Globalization will present you with both opportunities and challenges
As a Worker • You may work for a multinational corporation with subsidiaries in other countries • You may work for a foreign-owned corporation in the U.S. • Your managers and coworkers may be foreign-born continued
As a Worker • As an entrepreneur, you may sell your products and services in other countries • You may lose your job if your employer • outsources your job • cannot compete with competition from foreign companies
What You Can Do • Continue your education • Consider science- and math-related occupations • Keep your skills sharp • Learn a foreign language • Learn about world affairs • Travel or live abroad