International Trade & Investment Theory
International Trade & Investment Theory
International Trade & Investment Theory
COMPARATI INTERNALIZ
VE DEMAND
ATI
ADVANTAG ON THEORY
E
RELATIVE FACTOR
ENDOWMENT(FACTOR ECLECTIC POLITICAL
PROPORTIONS) THEORY
1.
INTRODUCTION
1.1 TRADE
DEFINITIONS
Trade is the voluntary exchange of goods,
services, assets, or money between person or
organization and another. Trade will only be
complete if both parties of the transaction believe
that they will gain from the voluntary exchange.
International trade- voluntary exchange of
goods, services or assets between
residents(individuals or organizations) of two
countries.
2. CLASSICAL COUNTRY-
BASED THEORIES
2.1
MERCANTILISM
A country’s wealth, usually measured by its
holding of gold and silver, should be accumulated
by encouraging exports and discouraging imports.
Practices by- Britain, France, Netherlands,
Portugal and Spain.
Neomercantilists/protectionists –Modern
supporters of mercantilism; claim that a country
should create trade barriers to protect its
industries from foreign competition.
2.2 ABSOLUTE
ADVANTAGE
Introduced by Adam Smith
“A country should specialize in production and
export of goods which it produce most
efficiently, that is with the fewest labour hours”
Example of AA
theory:
COUNTRY RICE(1 TON) PALM OIL(1 TON)
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INDUSTRIAL CLUSTERS
A concentration of suppliers and supporting firms
from the same industry located within the same
geographic area
Examples include: the Silicon Valley, fashion cluster
in northern Italy, pharma cluster in Switzerland,
footwear industry in Pusan, South Korea, and the IT
industry in Bangalore, India
Can serve as a nation’s export platform
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NATIONAL INDUSTRIAL POLICY
Proactive economic development plan enacted by the
government to nurture or support promising industries
sectors.
Typical initiatives:
Tax incentives
Investment incentives
Monetary and fiscal policies
Rigorous educational systems
Investment in national infrastructure
Strong legal and regulatory systems (Examples: Japan,
Dubai, and Ireland)
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New Trade Theory
New trade theory, developed by many theorists
from the late 1970 to early 1980s, is a collection
of economic models in international trade. It
focuses on increasing return to scale and network
effect.
Economies of scale are an important factor in some
industries for superior international performance – even
when the nation has no clear comparative advantage.
Some industries succeed best as their volume of
production increases.
Economies of Scale and International
Trade: The New Trade Theory
Definitions:
•Economies of Scale: Reduction of average cost as a result
of increasing the output
•Increasing Returns: a unit increase in inputs results in
more than one unit increase in output
•Economies of scale is an important source of increasing
returns to specialization
•New Trade Theory supports the Comparative Advantage
theory by identifying economies of scale as an important
source of comparative advantage
The New Trade Theory
• Domestic market may not be big enough to realize
economies of scale for certain products
Ex: the aerospace industry dominated by Boeing and Airbus
How do they achieve economies of scale?
• First-mover Advantage: New Trade Theory suggests that a
country may predominate in the export of a good simply
because it was lucky enough to have one or more firms
among the first to produce that good
• First mover’s ability to benefit from increasing returns
creates a barrier to entry
Ex: Microsoft operating systems, Apple’s iPod, Google, etc.
INTERNATIONAL
INVESTMENT THEORIES
4.1 INTERNATIONAL
INVESTMENTS
Two categories:
Portfolio investments- passive holdings of securities
such as foreign stocks, bonds, or other financial
assets, none of which entails active management or
control of the securities’ issuer by the investor.
Foreign Direct Investment(FDI)- Acquisition of
foreign assets for the purpose of controlling them
DOMINANCE OF FDI-BASED EXPLANATIONS OF
THE INTERNATIONAL FIRM
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4.2
THEORIES
OWNERSHIP ADVANTAGE THEORY
“A firm owning a valuable asset that creates a competitive
advantage domestically can use that advantage to penetrate
foreign markets through FDI”
Contemporary theory explains that “FDI would not occur
under perfect competition and under approximately
competitive conditions.”
According to market imperfection theory, the FDI is made
by firms in oligopolistic industries possessing technical
and other advantages over indigenous firms.
OWNERSHIP ADVANTAGE
THEORY
Key sources of monopolistic advantage include
proprietary knowledge, patents, unique know-how,
and sole ownership of other assets, economies of
scale, superior knowledge in marketing, management
or finance.
Eg: Intel(Technology)
NTERNALIZATION THEORY
Explains why a firm would choose to enter a
foreign market via FDI rather than exploit its
ownership advantages
Explains the process by which firms acquire and
retain one or more value-chain activities inside the
firm – retaining control over foreign operations and
avoiding the disadvantages of dealing with
external partners
The concept of internalization theory is to transfer
the superior knowledge to foreign subsidiary and
obtain higher return or fee on its investment. It
comes into contract and provide authority to use its
competitive advantages in the form of license,
franchise or other form.
Transaction costs- costs of entering into
transaction(negotiating, monitoring and enforcing a
contract)
Eg: Honda
Dunning’s Eclectic
Paradigm
Three conditions also known as OLI model determine
whether or not a company will go abroad via FDI:
Ownership-specific advantages – knowledge, skills,
capabilities, relationships, or physical assets that form the
basis for the firm’s competitive advantage
Location-specific advantages – advantages associated with
the country in which the MNE is invested, including
natural resources, skilled or low cost labor, and
inexpensive capital
Internalization advantages – control derived from
internalizing foreign-based manufacturing, distribution, or
other value chain activities
ECLECTIC THEORY
FDI will occur when 3 conditions are satisfied:
OWNERSH LOCATIO INTERNALIZAT
IP N ION
ADVANTA ADVANT ADVANTAGE
• AGE
firm must • Business
AGE • The firm must
own some should be done benefit more
unique in a more from
competitive profitable controlling
advantage that foreign foreign
overcomes location than a business
competitions domestic one activity rather
• Eg: Brand • Eg: Labour, than hiring
name raw materials other local
companies to
provide service
4.3 FACTORS
INFLUENCING FDI FACTORS
INFLUENCING FDI
Exploitation of Economic
Natural Resources competitive development
advantages initiatives
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Implications of international trade
and investment theories
It can be grouped into three concepts:
Location Implication: Disperse production activities to
countries where they can be performed most efficiently.
Business person go for production where the efficiency of
productive forces is higher and profit is high. This is
explained by comparative advantage and HO models.
First mover Implication: The first mover strategist would
engage in substantial financial involvement when product is
new or market is new as explained by product life cycle
and ownership advantage theories.
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Policy Implication: In reality, the competitiveness can
be achieved by the joint efforts of private and public
participation in building competitive strength of the
business community as well as nations. This is
explained by Porter’s Diamond Theory. Both must
invest to upgrade their production and supportive
factors.
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