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Index
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Alphabetic list of all
topics.
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Contents
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An organized outline of
all topics.
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WORLD ECONOMY
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INTERNATIONAL
CLASSIFICATIONS
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The world is divided into a
variety of regions, with various
economies. Countries can be
classified into developed
and developing countries.
There are many measurements of how
developed a nation is. The
developed countries like the U.S.,
Britain, France, etc. are countries
with high income, good health care,
and strong industry. Developing
countries, like India and Pakistan,
have less income and a smaller
production.
Of course, this
over-generalization is not a good
picture of specific countries. Most
countries in the world are
capitalist countries, which
have economies in which different
individuals and companies operate
businesses in hopes of making
money. We will spend most of the
time discussing capitalism. Some
countries are socialist
economies. In these economies, the
income is often relatively low, but
basic services like health care are
well-provided for. Other economies,
like those in the Middle East, are
high-income, but they do not have a
large industrial base. These are
the oil-producing high-income
economies. They derive their great
wealth from the export of oil, not
the production of manufactured
goods. There are also countries in
which the economy is difficult to
classify. The countries of the
U.S.S.R. that are making the
transition from socialism to
capitalism are experiencing great
instability and the economic
situation is difficult to gauge in
those areas.
The world can also be divided
along many other lines: geographic,
cultural, language, etc. Different
geographic areas split the world
into distinct economic zones, so do
people's tastes, etc. There is no
one classification of all the
world's countries that fits
everyone, and that is an important
point to remember.
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DEVELOPED WORLD-the nations
of the world with high-income, high standard of
living, and advanced industry
DEVELOPING WORLD-the nations
of the world that have relatively low income,
standard of living, and industrial
capacity
CAPITALISM-an economic
system in which individuals and companies
operate businesses in order to profit and make
money
SOCIALISM-an economic system
in which the nation as a whole, not individual
persons or companies, owns the means of
production (factories, farms, etc.) to serve
the nation
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NATIONAL ECONOMIES
COMPARED
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Economies are not measured by
how much they produce, but also
what they produce. Some countries
are just better at making certain
things than other countries. A
country has a comparative advantage
over another when it can make the
same product at a lower cost. The
opportunity cost for making those
products are small in the country
is small, while the opportunity
cost for something else is large.
However, another country may have a
greater advantage producing the
other product. (i.e., Country A can
produce 1 product A for 3 product C
while Country B can produce 1
product A for 2 product B; thus,
country A has a comparative
advantage in making product A while
country B has a comparative
advantage in making product B.)
Different economies also consume
different products besides
producing different products. Some
of this is determined by prices.
Remember, the supply and demand
principle determines how much of
any product people buy. People in
any country buy things that are
cheap. Prices of goods differ from
nation to nation, depending on the
state of supply. Also, as always,
people's preferences determine what
is consumed. People in China
consume a lot of rice while people
in Europe consume a lot of
bread.
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INTERNATIONAL ECONOMIC
SYSTEM
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In the modern economy, nations
are inderdependent on each other,
everyone trading with everyone else
to obtain wanted products.
Imports are the products
that a country buy from others
while exports are products
that a country sells to others. A
nation's balance of trade is
the difference between imports and
exports. When there are more
exports than imports, there is a
trade surplus; when there are more
imports than exports, there is a
trade deficit. There are also
debtor nations and creditor
nations. Some countries, like the
U.S. which has a huge trade
deficit, has to pay for these
things by massively borrowing
and/or selling off its own assets.
Creditor nations lend out money to
other nations and has a monetary
cushion to protect its economy. The
amount of import and export depends
on competitiveness and income. A
country that is competitive (its
products are cheap and readily
available) exports more.
High-income nations also import a
lot, because their people have more
to spend. Trade deficits often
cause a decline in income while
trade surplus cause an increase in
income. Those countries have
export-led growth, their economies
grow because they export more and
more.
International trade is
drastically different from domestic
trade. If you want to sell
something in your own country, you
just go ahead and sell it. The
international market is beset by
competition not only between
companies and industries but it is
competition between countries, and
that puts many hurdles in the way
of free exchange. Many countries
seek to answer their own fears and
public demands by suppressing and
stopping international trade.
Countries can put up a variety of
economic barriers against foreign
competition. Quotas are
limits on the amount of products
that can be imported and exported.
Tariffs are taxes put on
imports. Some quotas and tariffs
can be so strong as to make trade
impossible. There are indirect ways
to control imports, too. For
example, when two countries
regulations differ, trade is
hampered. (A product that meets the
home country's regulation may not
meet the regulation of another.)
These and other forms of limitation
on trade are all manifestations of
protectionism. Protectionist
policies come when a nation is not
competitive and thus foreign
competition would possibly put
domestic businesses out of
business. However, they generally
have the result of generally
inefficiency and high prices.
Often, barriers in one country
causes others to put up barriers,
too, resulting in a trade war.
Trade wars can be devastating. (The
Great Depression was caused in part
by a trade war, and that eventually
contributed to the beginning of
World War II.) To prevent barriers
and trade wars, many countries have
agreed to form organizations like
the WTO (World Trade
Organization), which resolves
economic disputes without resorting
to drastic and damaging measures.
These institutions of trade will be
discussed later.
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IMPORTS-the products that a
country buys from others
EXPORTS-the products that a
country sells to others
BALANCE OF TRADE-the
difference between a country's imports and
exports
QUOTA-a limit on the
quantity of products that can be imported and
exported
TARIFF-a tax on imported
products
PROTECTIONISM-the idea of
isolating a domestic economy from outside
competition
WTO-World Trade
Organization, and organization of countries
that maintains free trade
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