Bachelorarbeit, 2010
64 Seiten, Note: 1,0
1 Introduction
2 Trade and Economic Growth - The Empirical Relationship
2.1 General Empirical Evidence
3 Sources of Economic Growth
3.1 Capital Accumulation
3.2 Productivity
3.2.1 Solow-Model
3.2.2 Research & Development (R&D) - Endogenous Growth
3.2.3 Learning by Doing
3.2.4 AK-Model
4 Openness in Growth Theory
4.1 Capital Accumulation - Trade and Neoclassical Growth
4.2 Trade and Endogenous Growth
4.2.1 Research and Development (R&D)
4.2.2 Learning by Doing
5 Static Comparative Advantage
5.1 Supply Side
5.1.1 Productivity Levels
5.1.2 Wages
5.2 Demand Side
6 Dynamic Comparative Advantage
6.1 A Model of the Dynamics of Specialisation
6.1.1 Infant Industry Argument
6.1.2 The Static Model
6.1.3 Learning by Doing and Productivity Dynamics- Endogenous comparative advantage
6.1.4 Dynamic analysis
6.1.5 Opening up to trade - Lock-in Effects of Trade Patterns
6.1.6 Expanding the Market Share
6.2 Welfare Analysis
6.2.1 The Static Model
6.2.2 Learning and Productivity Dynamics
6.2.3 Welfare Analysis
6.2.4 Static Welfare in Autarky
6.2.5 Static Welfare in Free Trade
6.2.6 Dynamic Welfare Effects in Autarky
6.2.7 Dynamic Welfare Effects in Free Trade
7 Conclusion
The primary objective of this thesis is to examine the impact of international trade on economic growth, focusing on both welfare effects and the mechanisms of dynamic comparative advantage. The paper seeks to answer how trade integration influences long-term growth paths and whether protectionist or free trade policies are better suited for developing countries under different theoretical frameworks.
3.2.1 Solow-Model
A more formal analysis will illustrate the aspects outlined in the previous section and introduce the Solow-Model. The Solow-Model is the most widely known growth model and explains growth as the result of capital accumulation, labour and technological progress. Production is described by a simple Cobb-Douglas production function
Y = F(K, AL) = Kα(AL)1−α. (1)
K is the capital stock, L the labour force and A ≻ 0 the level of productivity, which comes as “manna from heaven” and requires no input of production. Each of the variables depends on time t. The level of productivity is modelled as labour-augmenting or “Harrod-neutral”. Another possible Cobb-Douglas function would be Y = AF(K, L), which is called “Hicks-neutral”. The results of the Solow-Model are not influenced no matter which of the two kinds of technology is chosen. The share of capital is denoted by α. Since output depends positively on both capital and labour their exponents must be positive. It follows that α can only take values between zero and one (0 ≺ α ≺ 1). Otherwise 1 − α would be negative. The fact that α ≺ 1 implies decreasing returns to capital and to labour separately but constant returns to scale to all input factors together. The level of productivity A and the labour force L are assumed to grow at the constant exogenous rates g and n:
L(t) = L(0)ent, A(t) = A(0)egt. (2)
1 Introduction: Provides the motivation for studying international trade and economic growth, setting the stage for the paper's focus on welfare and long-term growth.
2 Trade and Economic Growth - The Empirical Relationship: Reviews major empirical studies to demonstrate the generally positive, though complex, relationship between economic openness and growth.
3 Sources of Economic Growth: Explores fundamental growth drivers, including capital accumulation and productivity, using the Solow, R&D, and AK models.
4 Openness in Growth Theory: Analyzes how trade influences growth determinants like capital accumulation and innovation through international knowledge spillovers.
5 Static Comparative Advantage: Explains trade patterns through the classic Ricardian model, focusing on supply and demand factors in a multi-good, two-country environment.
6 Dynamic Comparative Advantage: Discusses how trade specialisation can evolve over time, examining the infant industry argument and welfare outcomes of trade regimes.
7 Conclusion: Synthesizes findings on the role of trade policy, emphasizing that while trade generally aids growth, context-specific factors determine its ultimate impact.
International Trade, Economic Growth, Comparative Advantage, Solow Model, Endogenous Growth, Productivity, R&D, Learning by Doing, Infant Industry Argument, Welfare Analysis, Trade Liberalisation, Capital Accumulation, Specialisation, Openness, Trade Patterns
The paper examines the relationship between international trade and economic growth, investigating how openness affects welfare and long-term economic development.
Key topics include growth theory (neoclassical and endogenous), empirical evidence on trade openness, sources of growth like capital and productivity, and the transition from static to dynamic comparative advantage.
The central question concerns the impact of trade on economic performance and under which conditions trade liberalisation or protectionist policies are most beneficial for welfare.
The research relies on literature review, empirical evidence analysis, and formal mathematical modelling based on economic growth models like Solow, Ricardian, and Krugman/Redding frameworks.
The main body breaks down the theory of economic growth, analyzes how trade influences these growth factors, and builds models for both static and dynamic comparative advantage to evaluate welfare.
The core concepts are Economic Growth, International Trade, Comparative Advantage, Endogenous Growth, and Welfare Analysis.
The author describes it as a policy justification for protecting emerging sectors from foreign competition until they achieve sufficient productivity to be competitive on the global market.
'Learning by Doing' is used as a mechanism for endogenous productivity growth, where cumulative experience in production leads to increased efficiency over time.
The static model is extended to provide a foundation for dynamic analysis, allowing the author to study how trade patterns lock in and evolve due to changes in relative productivity.
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