The international marketThe importance of international tradeThe reason why countries tradeadditional income from the sale of goods/servicesselling abroad brings in money from other countriesquality of life of all countries involved can be improvement of foreign trade = purchase and sale of goods/services between different countries of the world Import = purchased from another country – outflow of funds Export = sold to another country – inflow of funds Visible trade = import and export of goods Invisible trade = import and export of services (tourism, transport, insurance...) principle of comparative costs: difference between climate or natural resources countries must trade to obtain goods that they cannot produce themselves specialization and differentiation in materials raw materials for which they have a comparative advantage (low production costs) they import raw materials from countries where production is comparatively cheaper Trade balance (trade gap) = records the value of the countries' imports and exports favorable - when exports exceed imports ( a surplus has been created)adverse (unfavorable) – when imports exceed exports ( a deficit has been created) Balance of paymentsvisible = goodsinvisible = services= a statement of the difference in the total value of all payments made to other countries and the total payment received from them includes visible and invisible payments shows whether the country is making a profit or a loss in its dealings with other countriesfavorable countries – net capital inflow (the country has earned more than how much it spent)adverse – net outflow (the country spent more than it earned)current account=records trade in goods and servicescapital account=records flows for investment and saving purposesCorrection of trade balance deficit temporary measures: • take borrowed from the International Monetary Fund (IMF) • obtain loans from abroad • draw on gold and foreign exchange reserves • sell off foreign assets!!! increase in exports!!! government: offer incentives to businesses (tax breaks, special credit facilities, subsidies) Devaluation = decrease in the value of the currency compared to other currencies makes imported goods more expensive and exports cheaper Deflation if the people's income or their spending power is reduced, they will buy fewer products (imports) controls on wage increases, restriction of credit and hire purchase, increase in interest rates, increase in taxes Exchange control = the central bank places a limit on the amount of foreign currency that can be purchased supply of domestic currency on the market is reduced increase in the price of the currency Import control = use of tariffs and quotas tariff = a duty or tax on imports to increase costs and discourage imports purchasing quota = numerical limit on the number of goods that can be imported
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